The Point Four-ward: A Merciful End to the Regular Season

2015-04-15 Off By Robert Attenweiler

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Four points I’m thinking about the Cleveland Cavaliers on the final day of the 2014-15 NBA regular season…

1.) While the Celtics won’t be pushovers in the first round, it’s clear why the Cavs would prefer to play a relatively young Boston team over a resurgent (until the last two games, anyway) Brooklyn team and a Pacers team who have given the Cavs problems all year and just got their star player, Paul George, back for the stretch run and likely beyond.

The Celtics are hot at exactly the right time. Winners of four straight and seven of the last ten, head coach Brad Stevens’ squad ranks third in points per game (111.5), third in assists per game (26.3) and first in steals (13.3) over the ten game span prior to Tuesday night’s game against Toronto.

Also, in the month of April the Celtics have been allowing only 97.4 points per 100 possessions, good for fifth best in the league. They feature a dangerous scorer in Isaiah Thomas (20.7 points and 5.5 assists in April) and some lively big bodies in Brandon Bass and former Cavalier Tyler Zeller to go along with an absolutely dogged perimeter defense led by Avery Bradley and rookie Marcus Smart.

2.) Oh, and then there’s Stevens who has been drawing well-earned praise for his work with somewhat patchwork rosters the last two seasons as the Celtics often seemed stuck between deciding to blow it all up or trying to rebuild on the fly.

Give Stevens and Celtics GM Danny Ainge credit, though. They decided to make a run at one of the final playoff spots in an Eastern Conference that is decidedly top heavy and they got it done.

But, if you’re the Cavs — if you’re LeBron James, specifically — who on this Celtics roster scares you?

There are plenty of guys — Thomas and Smart, specifically — who can scare you in moments… or could have a big game or two. But, who on the Celtics scares the Cavs over a seven game playoff series?

Many of the players the Celtics will be counting on are young and lacking playoff experience. Bradley and Bass are holdovers from the Paul Pierce/Kevin Garnett Celtic playoff teams, but Thomas has spent his entire career losing in bunches in Sacramento, this is Smart’s first turn through the league and Cavs fans had the pleasure of watching the zero post-season minutes logged by Zeller in his career.

3.) Now, that’s the same criticism that many have been applying to a Cavs team that depends heavily on playoff neophytes Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love. While that may be true, there is a little matter of the Cavs having a two-time NBA champion — a player who has played in each of the past four NBA Finals — in James.

The Celtics just don’t have that guy yet, let alone players with the star credentials of Irving and Love.

The Pacers, on the other hand, have George back and players like David West, George Hill and Roy Hibbert who have battled James very well over the past two years.

4.) As of Tuesday, the Celtics magic number to clinch the seventh seed and a first round matchup with the Central Division Champion Cavaliers sits at one with two games remaining for both the Celtics and the Pacers. If the two teams wind up tied, the Celtics own the tiebreaker having won the season series against the Pacers 3-1. [Update: with their 95-93 win over the Raptors on Tuesday, the Celtics have clinched the number seven seed in the playoffs and will face the Cavaliers in the first round.]

If Cavs fans want an extra wrinkle into their rooting interests on the final day of the season, consider this: the Chicago Bulls, currently seeded third, could still finish Wednesday in fourth place, meaning that the Cavs and Bulls wouldn’t meet in the playoffs until the Eastern Conference Finals. If the Bulls stay in third, they could meet the Cavs in the second round.

Toronto owns the tiebreaker over the Bulls by virtue of the Raptors winning their division.

Not only do the Cavs recognize the advantage in avoiding the Bulls and Pacers in the first two rounds of the playoffs, they have to like the prospect of the Atlanta Hawks having to play two potentially very tough series against those teams before they could meet the Cavs (also, of course, potentially) in the Conference Finals. [Update: the Raptors loss to the Celtics mean that Toronto will get the third seed only with a victory in their season finale against the Charlotte Hornets and a Chicago loss against Atlanta.]

Next stop, Cavs fans, it’s the playoffs!!

 

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