
| Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert tweets his… | |
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert used his Twitter account last night to angrily respond to reports that he helped derail potential progress in the NBA labor negotiations.
In the process, it appears he also invented a word to describe his online detractors. “Some of these NBA ‘bloggissists’ flat-out make stuff up and then try to dupe readers into believing their fiction is real. Sad & pathetic,” Gilbert wrote. An ESPN.com story, citing anonymous sources, stated that Gilbert and Phoenix’s Robert Sarver expressed discontent with many points of a proposal from the players union during a meeting Tuesday in New York. According to the report, owners were seriously considering “coming off their demands for a salary freeze and would allow players’ future earnings to be tied into the league’s revenue growth, a critical point for players. The owners also were willing to allow the players to maintain their current salaries without rollbacks,” sources said. Gilbert and Sarver aired their dissatisfaction in a three-hour owners-only meeting. Sources told ESPN that the New York Knicks’ James Dolan and Los Angeles Lakers’ Jerry Buss were unhappy with the hard-line stances of Gilbert and Sarver. The meeting ended Tuesday with no progress reported by either side. Union President Derek Fisher wrote in an email to members, obtained by Sports Illustrated, that a rift existed between the owners. Fisher’s email, coupled with the ESPN story, put Gilbert and Sarver in the spotlight, making them targets for pundits. Following an NBA owners meeting in Dallas last night, NBA Commissioner David Stern denied there is a split among the owners. “I don’t know what the basis of Derek’s belief is,” Stern said. “But I can tell you, having just come out of the meeting, the vast majority of owners are indeed in favor of a ‘hard-cap system,’ as Derek refers to it. Having said that, they authorized the committee to be ready to negotiate on all points, and the committee is.” Gilbert has lashed out in the past, most famously in his letter to the team’s fan base in July 2010, ripping LeBron James after his decision to join the Miami Heat. The Cavs owner has remained quiet about the work stoppage that threatens the start of the season. The NBA had issued a memo before the lockout began July 1, warning that any team owner or employee who discussed the lockout or any player during the work stoppage could be fined up to $1 million. Feel free to leave your comments below. Posted in nba, Uncategorized | Comments Off
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| Mo Williams, no longer with the Cleveland… | |
In a recent interview on ESPN LA with Max Kellerman and Marcellus Wiley, former Cleveland Cavaliers guard Mo Williams was asked about LeBron James, Dan Gilbert and his time in Cleveland. Williams, now with the Los Angeles Clippers, says Gilbert is a great owner despite talk of Gilbert as one of the owners who is tightning the lock in the lockout.
But the station wanted more from Williams. He was asked why did Gilbert blow up the team instead of trying to find a way to keep Williams and LeBron together.
Comment Below!. Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
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| Cavaliers Pick: Deal It Or Keep It? | |
About 11 months ago, the irate owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers Dan Gilbert promised fans his team would win an NBA championship before LeBron James. That famous rant cost Gilbert a $100,000 fine from the league, but for now at least, he hasn’t been proven completely wrong.
James made the Cavaliers a contending team, and with the roster Gilbert funded only another player of James caliber would return that team to the finals immediately. As obtaining another James was not on the horizon, Cleveland reluctantly started the rebuilding process. The Cavaliers do have an advantage over many other teams as they rebuild. Gilbert is not afraid to spend money, and at the trade deadline, Cleveland traded Mo Williams to the Clippers for Baron Davis and the Clippers’ unprotected first-round draft pick. By taking on about $12 million in additional salary commitments, the Cavaliers acquired the pick that would become first overall at the NBA draft lottery. Lottery luck has ensured Cleveland has their choice of Duke’s point guard Kyrie Irving or Arizona’s forward Derrick Williams. The first overall pick of the 2011 draft will not be traded. With the second-worst record in the NBA last season, the Cavaliers had their own lottery pick, but that pick dropped to fourth giving the team two picks in the top four of this year’s draft, hadn’t happened since the Houston Rockets did it in 1983. Cleveland received a $14.5 million traded player exception when James joined Miami in a sign-and-trade deal and Gilbert has proven his willingness to spend big on his team. Therefore the obvious question becomes, should the Cavaliers use the fourth pick in the draft plus the trade exception to go after an impact player who could accelerate the team’s return to contention, or should the team keep the pick and rebuild slowly through the draft? As of now the Cavaliers roster has no depth. The over 30-year-olds Baron Davis, Antawn Jamison, and Anthony Parker (free agent) could significantly boost the team’s win totals if healthy, but this is fool’s gold as none of these players will be around when this team is ready to compete. The 25-year-olds Daniel Gibson and Ramon Sessions would be decent back up guards for Kyrie Irving next season, and the 28-year-old Anderson Varejao is a good energy guy, but after that, the Cavaliers are a team of recent late-first and second-round draft picks plus a collection of undrafted players. This is not a team where one could add a quality starter and leap into contention. While some of the team’s young players may develop into decent backups or even starters, the Cavaliers do not have enough high potential youth to rebuild and need to hang onto their draft picks. If possible, the team should even acquire additional lottery picks for this year and next. The only trade involving the fourth pick should be as part of a deal to acquire the second pick from Minnesota. Everyone anticipates that the Cavaliers will select Irving first overall. This should leave them with several interesting center and small forward prospects to choose from with the fourth pick. Jonas Valanciunas, Lithuania, Center The 6’11″, 19-year-old center played at the highest level in Europe last season and is considered to be a good pick-and-roll player, however the rest of Valanciunas’ game is still raw at both ends of the floor. Enes Kanter, (Kentucky) Turkey, Center The 19-year-old Kanter has center-worthy measurements at 6′ 11.25″ tall, 259 lbs, and a 7′ 1.5″ wingspan, however he was ruled ineligible by the NCAA last year and didn’t play in any games for Kentucky. Kanter worked out for the Cavaliers this past week. A very intriguing prospect, Kanter is not a sure thing. Bismack Biyombo, Congo, Power Forward/Center Biyombo came out of nowhere when he joined the senior roster of Baloncesto Fuenlabrada in January, averaging 6.4 points, 5.1 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks in 17 minutes, and has shot up draft boards everywhere. Still only 18 years old, Biyombo is 6′ 9″ tall and 243 lbs with an incredible 7′ 7″ wingspan. This is a guy to watch. Kawhi Leonard, San Diego State Sophomore, Small Forward The top-ranked wing player in his draft class not named Derrick Williams, Leonard averaged 15.5 points, 10.6 rebounds, and 1.4 steals for the Aztecs last season and projects to be a very good defender at the next level. Jan Vesely, Czech Republic, Small Forward NBA teams have been following the 21-year-old Vesely for some time and his play around the rim has drawn (generous?) comparisons to the Clippers Blake Griffin. The athletic 6′ 11″ small forward’s game may be even better suited to the NBA. It would be understandable if the Cavaliers were underwhelmed by their choices with the fourth overall pick in the 2011 draft. Usually a pick this high would involve a player who would be more of a sure thing and less of a prospect. In this situation, Cleveland should be acquiring the most proven center available with a high upside and that choice will lead them to taking Valanciunas, if he’s still on the board. Since the Cavaliers own the first overall pick, they control the board, and if they are willing to make a bold move in an attempt to maximize the talent from their first and fourth draft picks, the Cavaliers could get all they want from this draft. There is just enough doubt and discussion for the Cavaliers to select Williams ahead of Irving and put even more pressure Timberwolves to do something with the number two pick. Minnesota has just signed the fifth pick of the 2009 draft Ricky Rubio and still has the sixth pick from that draft Jonny Flynn on their roster. Both of these players are point guards. If Minnesota selects Irving, the pressure to do a draft day deal will be intense, and Cleveland would be happy to trade them the number four pick. If Minnesota picks a center based on need, then one of Irving or Brandon Knight will fall to the Cavaliers at four. Bold moves can produce bold results, and when a team is trying to rebuild an entire roster, no move is too bold. In the event Minnesota takes Irving and will not do a deal with Cleveland, Williams is still a solid first overall pick in this draft, and the Cavaliers can do no worse than obtaining the NCAA champion UConn Huskies’ point guard Kemba Walker with the fourth pick. If Gilbert wants the Cavaliers to be built into contenders again, he is not going to give away his top draft picks. Cleveland needs to acquire as many young players with star potential as possible through the draft this year and next. The Cavaliers should make a bold move and control this draft by taking Williams first overall and then do whatever it takes to use their fourth pick as bait to acquire Irving. Send me your comments or questions about what the Cavaliers should do, the NBA draft, the Toronto Raptors, or anything else in the NBA to That’s all the news for today. |
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