Bricklayer
Don't Make Me Use The Bat
At this point it seems entirely possible Kevin Love is done with the Cavs, and they may want to move on from the monster contract they just inked him for. Until they got a full strength test vs. the Warriors, I was less convinced. But he hasn't worked, and now may be out again while they lose again. Doesn't have to be true. The attraction of trying to ape the Heatles structure may keep LeBron in his corner, but its easy to see how the Cavs will be looking ahead at 4 more years of $20+mil, with a league leading mega-tax paying payroll (getting less with the huge boost in cap this summer), and go...uh uh.
So...several questions really must be asked:
1) Has Love Been Boshed? Or is he in premature decline? He's only 27. Rep is injury prone, but actually has played 75+ games 3 straight seasons now, just suffered high profile freak accidents in the playoffs.
2) If he's just been Boshed, could he ever recover to be what he was? Or is he so naturally passive/wussy that this is his comfort zone now.
3) Is the problem for him the Bron/Kyrie dynamic, or would he struggle alongside any star?
4) Is the defense so catastrophically bad he would scuttle improvement in that area (with the proviso he obviously is playing on a pretty good defensive team (10th) this season. Given that a major option for us to occupy the same role would be Ryan Anderson, are we even worrying about defense on the 3rd big?
5) Should we even be looking for another star to open up high end possibilities, or just building a rock solid defensive club of roleplayers guaranteed to change the culture?
6) What would it take to get him? Assuming the Cavs want out from under his contract, how stiff a market is there after these last two years? Rudy and Kosta would match contracts. Both guys are both on very good contracts for the new CBA though. Underpaid.
The argument would of course be, that if Kevin Love returned to being Kevin Love once freed from Cavs prison, he and Cuz would be the most prolific frontcourt in the game. When Cuz was out, we'd finally have another star to turn to. Why pay Ryan Anderson $18mil rather than Love $20? Cuz/Love = could likely run some Princeton sets too if that's what we wanted to do. Cuz/Love and Willie/Love means he'd always be out there with a defensive big. You resign Rondo to keep the bigs happy, and its more like Rubio for him than Kyrie's selfishness.
The arguments against are obvious. Defense, wussyness.
So...several questions really must be asked:
1) Has Love Been Boshed? Or is he in premature decline? He's only 27. Rep is injury prone, but actually has played 75+ games 3 straight seasons now, just suffered high profile freak accidents in the playoffs.
2) If he's just been Boshed, could he ever recover to be what he was? Or is he so naturally passive/wussy that this is his comfort zone now.
3) Is the problem for him the Bron/Kyrie dynamic, or would he struggle alongside any star?
4) Is the defense so catastrophically bad he would scuttle improvement in that area (with the proviso he obviously is playing on a pretty good defensive team (10th) this season. Given that a major option for us to occupy the same role would be Ryan Anderson, are we even worrying about defense on the 3rd big?
5) Should we even be looking for another star to open up high end possibilities, or just building a rock solid defensive club of roleplayers guaranteed to change the culture?
6) What would it take to get him? Assuming the Cavs want out from under his contract, how stiff a market is there after these last two years? Rudy and Kosta would match contracts. Both guys are both on very good contracts for the new CBA though. Underpaid.
The argument would of course be, that if Kevin Love returned to being Kevin Love once freed from Cavs prison, he and Cuz would be the most prolific frontcourt in the game. When Cuz was out, we'd finally have another star to turn to. Why pay Ryan Anderson $18mil rather than Love $20? Cuz/Love = could likely run some Princeton sets too if that's what we wanted to do. Cuz/Love and Willie/Love means he'd always be out there with a defensive big. You resign Rondo to keep the bigs happy, and its more like Rubio for him than Kyrie's selfishness.
The arguments against are obvious. Defense, wussyness.
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