Basketball has been declared at times as the jazz of sports. It is spontaneous. While certainly there is a coaches’ blueprint to a free break, many times the players make it up as they head to the basket.
We always favored getting the ball to the middle of the floor, with two other players filling the wings, with spacing being important so one defender cannot cover two players. But really, once the player with the ball heads up the floor, there is room for creativity, as long as the ball gets in the basket.
It’s a joy to watch teams playing the game by moving the basketball around by passing. Some of our favorite teams were that way. Before the Cavaliers existed, we loved watching the Knicks of the late 60’s, with Red Holzman preaching “hit the open man”, led by Walt Frazier, Dave DeBusschere, and Willis Reed.
Even though the Cavs went to the playoffs the first time in 1975-76, the team that won the NBA title the following year, fellow expansion team Portland led by Bill Walton, operating the offense from the high post, and Maurice Lucas providing muscle and toughness, passed the ball incredibly.
Walton’s nagging injuries probably kept them from a long run at the top.
The 1985-86 Celtics, with Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Dennis Johnson, and Walton as a sixth man, were another team who won playing a beautiful style of hoops.
We think about this because even though this year’s edition of the Cavs has been an early surprise, starting out 3-3 despite just two home games, some fans don’t like how they are winning.
Keep in mind, those three wins came against playoff teams from a year ago: Atlanta, Denver, and the Clippers.
The problem is the lesser role being taken offensively by Collin Sexton, and right now, it is working for the wine and gold.
Sexton’s shots are down from 18.4 per contest to 13.6 this year. And so far, it’s been good for the wine and gold.
Last year, only five players averaged 10 or more shots per game, and two of them were Andre Drummond, who played just 25 games with Cleveland, and the other was Yogi Farrell, who played only four.
This year, five players who are entrenched in the J.B. Bickerstaff’s rotation all average at least 10 shots. Besides Sexton, Darius Garland, Ricky Rubio, Lauri Markkanen, and rookie Evan Mobley all get that many looks.
That’s what happens when you add more talent to the roster.
Also, it doesn’t appear Sexton is buying in to the offense being played by Garland and Rubio. Garland’s assist numbers are up from 6.1 to 8.2 thus far, and Rubio’s 6.6 helpers per game are two more than Matthew Dellavedova provided in his limited time last season. He was second on the team in assists.
Sexton’s numbers have dropped from 4.1 in 2020-21 to just 1.9 this season. Big men Mobley and Kevin Love are averaging more.
The four year guard from Alabama’s role is changing. He’s on a team with more talent, and has to adjust.
What we don’t understand are the fans who seem disappointed by this changing role. They seem to want the guy who scored 24 points per night on a team that frequently were non-competitive.
Basketball can be individualistic in terms of moves and dunks, but it’s still a professional sport, and winning is the ultimate goal. If the Cavaliers are better with Collin Sexton taking less shots, that’s fine.
And for sure, there will be games the team needs Sexton to score 35 points to win. And he needs to be ready to do that.
By the way, the year Kobe Bryant took the most shots in his career (27), the Lakers went 47-35. The seasons in which the Lakers won their last two titles with Bryant? He averaged about 21 shots per game. Reason? The team was better.
This Cavalier team seems to more good players. Mobley is pretty good for a rookie. Rubio is a solid veteran. Garland continues to improve.
Fans (and Sexton himself) need to be more concerned with the number in the win column increasing, even if the number in the scoring column is dropping.