The Cleveland Cavaliers had to wait to find out who their opponent would be when they host the first round of the NBA Playoffs, and they will find they are about to get an early lesson about playoff intensity.
The Miami Heat will open the series tonight at Rocket Arena and will be making their sixth consecutive playoff appearance. Yes, they lost in the first-round last season but made the Finals the year prior and in 2019-20, and went to the conference finals in 2021-22.
This is not to say the Cavs won’t win the series, because they should, but the Heat have been there before and have perhaps the best coach in the league in Erik Spoelstra.
Miami is a solid defensive team, ranking 9th in defensive efficiency, but their offense is only 21st. The Cavaliers are actually the better defensive squad, ranking 8th. However, they had the best offense in the NBA this year.
They are led by the physical Bam Adebayo, who has played 74 playoff games in his career, and sharpshooter Tyler Herro, who averaged 23.9 points per game. They added former Cavaliers’ first overall pick Andrew Wiggins in the trade for Jimmy Butler and got defensive stalwart Davion Mitchell in the same transaction.
And rookie Kal’El Ware can be a force inside the paint as a good defender and shot blocker.
This will be a good test for Kenny Atkinson’s Cavaliers because we would expect the Heat to play very physical which is probably the biggest worry fans and experts have about Cleveland. How will they stand up against a physical team?
Davion Mitchell’s presence on the floor could pose problems for Darius Garland and Donovan Mitchell, more so the former. Garland has had issues against physical defenders in earlier playoff appearances, and he will be presented with this challenge right off the rip.
Spoelstra is known for doing some different things to take advantage of the opponents’ weaknesses, but we feel the Cavs are in a better position with Atkinson to counter those moves. No rap against J.B. Bickerstaff, who did a marvelous job with the Pistons this season, but in our opinion, he was slow to adjust at times to what the opposition was doing.
Besides, the wine and gold offense is pretty diverse. Like a lot of NBA teams, it is not primarily pick and roll oriented. Atkinson made Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen playing together effectively on offense by using player movement.
Cleveland does a lot of big-to-big passing, and a lot of flex cuts off the ball to get lay ups with the defense spread to guard the three-point shot, which the Cavs made at a 41.5% clip as a team.
They are deep too. We would expect Atkinson to stay with his nine or ten player rotation until someone forces their way out of playing time, either offensively or defensively.
The Cavs have been on cruise control for pretty much the last three weeks or so, but we anticipate them being ready right away tonight. They understand last season ended in disappointing fashion and they also realize they have a chance to put another banner up in Rocket Arena.
We think it is a good tone setter to play a team with the Heat’s pedigree right off the bat. The Heat was good defensively, but the Cavs have more weapons on offense. The series will be challenging but that good.
No better time to get in playoff mode than the first series.