The adage that defense wins NBA championships certainly didn’t prove true for the Grizzlies and Cavaliers, who were quickly eliminated from the playoffs after finishing the regular season with the best defensive ratings in the Western and Eastern Conferences, respectively, writes John Hollinger of The Athletic. As Hollinger points out, both teams actually played good defense in the first round but struggled on the other end of the floor, finishing ahead of only Brooklyn in offensive rating in round one.
The Grizzlies were hurt by playing multiple non-shooters – the Lakers gave plenty of space to Dillon Brooks and David Roddy – and missed the presence of Steven Adams and Brandon Clarke, who could have grabbed offensive rebounds and generated second-chance points.
As for the Cavaliers, while Donovan Mitchell and Darius Garland bore the brunt of the blame for the team’s offensive struggles, the team got very little from its frontcourt starters (each of whom averaged single-digit points per game) and from its reserves, Hollinger notes.
Hollinger explores ways in which the two teams could make roster upgrades this summer, suggesting that the Grizzlies will face a decision on whether to sacrifice some youth in order to acquire a reliable veteran or two. The Cavaliers, meanwhile, should have the cap flexibility to re-sign Caris LeVert and use their mid-level exception without surpassing the tax apron, and could shop Cedi Osman and/or Ricky Rubio for wing upgrades, Hollinger writes.
Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:
- Sam Vecenie of The Athletic has updated his top-100 big board for the 2023 NBA draft, moving UCF’s Taylor Hendricks all the way up to No. 6, Michigan’s Kobe Bufkin up to No. 11, and G League Ignite forward Leonard Miller to No. 13.
- A panel of ESPN writers, led by Brian Windhorst, breaks down the 2023 World Cup field, observing that Team USA ended up with a pretty favorable draw, while Group H (headed by France and Canada) looks like the proverbial “group of death.”
- A separate group of ESPN reporters, including Dave McMenamin, Ramona Shelburne, and Tim Bontemps, participated in a discussion about the playoffs so far, identifying their early postseason MVP (Heat star Jimmy Butler), debating which injury will have the biggest impact on the rest of the playoffs, and naming their dream conference finals matchups.
- None of them are still alive in the postseason, but rising stars Anthony Edwards, Ja Morant, and Zion Williamson are the top three picks in a hypothetical “23-and-under” mock draft conducted by James L. Edwards, Tim Cato, and Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic. Evan Mobley, Jaren Jackson, and Tyrese Haliburton were the next three players off the board.
That 23 and under was a mess. They seemed to have forgotten about a lot of top NBA players under 23. like Josh Giddey, Jalen Green, Benny Mathurin, Jaden Ivey, Sharpe, Smith Jr etc.
But included players like Jaden McDaniels, Quickley, Trey Murphy and Chet (who hasn’t even set foot in the NBA yet). It’s not a great assessment of the young talent it the league with 3 of the ROTY runner ups this year and last, and two all rookie 22 players. And possibly 4 all rookie 23 players. Silly list.