Monday, July 8, 2013

Dwight's A Talented Diva Who's Made Plenty Of Mistakes. Houston Isn't One Of Them.

Dwight's A Talented Diva Who's Made Plenty Of Mistakes. Houston Isn't One Of Them.

By: Jason T. Davis  @WisdomOfSports


 Here are the facts: 
Dwight is Dwight...whatever that means
1. Dwight is a beast at basketball and a rare commodity.
2. Dwight has no idea how to make things easier on himself in any situation.
3. Dwight finally made the correct decision for both his personality and his basketball career.

For all his faults and questionable moves, Dwight is a great player and a winner. He has no rings as of yet, but he leaves it all on the floor. He's had his issues, but he plays hard. He's also been vocal about wanting that Larry O'Brien trophy his entire career. Although I admit, he makes it hard to believe him.

It's only fair to question both his heart and hunger. Some think he wants it, some don't. The numbers however, they stand alone.

His numbers have been off the charts his entire career. That much we can't ignore or forget. The man impacts the basketball game like no one else in the league, minus LBJ. It's not even close.

Still, there's the thought that we shouldn't have to question the hunger of maybe the most dominant force in basketball next to Lebron James. Shouldn't something like that be crystal clear with a superstar of his magnitude? Dwight simply lacks leadership and probably the adequate amount of hunger. Dwight doesn't act like what you want a great big man to act like. He certainly doesn't act like a champion. Let's be honest, the man is a DIVA. His antics and child-like nature keep us confused, furious, and somewhat annoyed on a daily-weekly basis.

What is it about Dwight that makes us question his hunger or dedication? He's made it very clear a ring is his primary objective, so why do so many not believe him? Is it his lack of growth on the offensive side? Shouldn't he be a whole lot better than he is by now? Does this lead us to believe he's less dedicated to his craft than he should be? Does it make us think he doesn't want it as much as he claims to?

Could it be his attitude or jolly spirit? Maybe if he wasn't smiling and laughing all the time we'd believe he wanted it more. Jordan wasn't smiling about losing. Kobe, Shaq, Bird, they weren't laughing or smiling about losing either. Dwight did ask for a better team, but he did it in a pathetic and cowardly way. He did make it to a Finals, but he lost to the Lakers. Most just don't feel he's the type of leader that can take his team to the promised land. He can be a huge part of that championship run and that's what he intends to do.

None of this ever seemed to bother us before. Now it's under a microscope. It's transparent to the entire general public. Dwight can thank his attitude and actions over past few seasons for that.

Does Dwight deserve all of this? I say, "yes."

Young Dwight and Noah.
He's clearly dug his own grave with fans/media/past organizations. He deserves everything coming to him due to his attitude, the way he's treated people, and a blatant lack of growth with the ball in his hands. When we as sports fans see that kind of dominance, we demand that you take it to the next level and hold yourself in the highest regard. Whether that be showing us your hunger or constantly bringing it with that quiet confidence. You have to be able to motivate your teammates and get the most out of them, not lose their trust and call them all out. Give us Duncan or Kobe, Magic or Michael, but not neither. There's been different links between greats: they all gave every inch of themselves to the game and their team. Dwight puts up numbers, but it takes much more than that to motivate men and make them better.

No one harps on Dwight if he stinks, but he doesn't. He's a dominant force in his sport. To be scrutinized this much you have to either be great or polarizing. Dwight is both.
The general public doesn't accept that kind of behavior or mind state from a main leader in his sport.

There was a time when not Lebron, but Dwight, was regarded as the greatest"physical specimen" in the NBA. His build and agility was like nothing we'd ever seen before. Every night was a show. Every night was a privilege for a fan of the game. You don't hear those comments or viewpoints anymore. That's because Dwight has turned people off.

Maybe the expectations aren't fair to Dwight. Maybe we should all back off what we believe he should be. Maybe not.

When it's your profession and you're that amazing at it, do you owe it to the fans to take it to the highest level possible and handle yourself with grace? More importantly, do you owe it to yourself? Should the truly great athletes have that innate fire within them? It's not for me to answer.

Dwight knows this much, there's only one way to cement your legacy: WIN. These past few years could fade away if Dwight lays down a foundation of success in Houston. Remind you of anyone else?

Dwight knew that if he wants to win, and win somewhat soon, Houston was the only option on the board. Kudos to him for finally making the correct move.

The Rockets were the perfect fit. The Lakers were the worst fit. Once you look past the city and the legacy of players and rings, there's no other reason to stay. In another year, with another roster and coach, maybe Dwight stays.

Should we give him a cookie now? Wait, no. He wants candy.


If you deny his talents, you're simply wrong

I don't want to start questioning his numbers. I really don't. The guy was the staple of a franchise for years. He brought them out of the pits of the league following Shaq's exit. He's put up numbers on both ends of the floor, even without much of a post game. The guy's simply a beast on the court.

He rushed back from back surgery to play the majority of this past season, his sole season as a Laker. His numbers were down some and his free throw shooting was abysmal, but he was continuously hurt throughout. You have to look past this one season to examine his dominance over the league.

Here's a reminder:

--ONLY NBA player EVER to lead the league in Blocks & Rebounds in the same season Twice--And for two years in a row
 --3x Defensive Player of the Year
Dwight with his 3 DPOY awards
--Youngest player in NBA history to average a Double-Double
--1st player out of high school to play all 82 games.

His Averages:
06-07--18ppg, 12rpg, 2bpg
07-08--20ppg, 14rpg, 2bpg
08-09--21ppg, 14rpg, 3bpg
09-10--18ppg, 13rpg, 3bpg
10-11--23ppg, 14rpg, 2bpg
11-12--21ppg, 15rbg, 2bpg

C'mon....you going to deny those numbers?

--Missed 1st game of his CAREER after 351 Straight Games Played
--Most NBA games Started since 04-05--Dwight Howard 1st w/ 696. Lebron 3rd w/ 685

Those numbers/stats are unbelievable, especially with the durability shown throughout his entire career. I don't have to defend them, and neither does Dwight.

I'm not going to defend his remedial post moves or ridiculously poor free throw shooting, there's no excuse for those. Both should have gotten much better by now, but don't pretend like the guy has no offensive skill set. He isn't "The Dream," but he isn't Robert Sacre either. The man and his game aren't perfect, but that's no reason to diminish what he can do on the basketball floor. It should be embraced if we can manage to keep our attention on the court.

The Magic and Lakers knew what they were losing. They knew that a big man of his quality doesn't enter the league very often, much less grace your organization with their presence. Look around the NBA, do you see anyone with his kind of body or consistent numbers? The man knows how rare he is and maybe that's part of the problem.

Despite the skill, Dwight always finds a way to step on every one's heels, including his own. His behavior and indecision have left multiple coaches, teammates, fan bases, and franchises scorned and disgusted.

The Dwightmare is real

Dwight tweeted this photo of him and Harden shortly after his decision was final
As of late, Dwight has consistently made it harder on himself than it has to be.

He has this unorthodox approach and personality that can drive fans, media, coaches, and ownership nuts. Everyone's left scratching their heads. He's an impossible guy to put your finger on. 

Everyone used to focus on all the things he did well before he gave us a reason to dislike him. He hadn't shown us the blatant immaturity.

Remember, he did win Rookie of the Year with braces on his teeth. Everyone was in awe of his abilities. He was the man-child that had braces but owned the entire league in the paint, especially defensively. He didn't get picked on or dissected by the media or the fans. There was no reason to.
He hadn't ruined relationships yet. He hadn't acted like an incompetent child yet. He hadn't even been in the league long enough for us to have time to sway to the other side. We were just enjoying this freakish kid. There was no one else like him.

Oh, the times they are a changing.

Sadly, and maybe appropriately, the majority of the focus in recent years hasn't been on Dwight's game(besides FT shooting). Like Lebron, Dwight showed us a side of him we hadn't known. His popularity and image took a giant hit, but he has no one to blame but himself.

And so it begins...

After saying he wanted to be traded to the Nets for months, Dwight changed his mind on the last day of free agency and decided to opt back in for another year with the Magic. This guaranteed he would stay through the remainder of the 2011-2012 season and the entire 2012-2013 season.

The Magic had a trade ready with the Nets, but they withdrew based on Howard's change of heart. That's a lot of negotiating time wasted. It was only a sign of things to come. After all the whining and grumbling, he chooses to opt back in. The team and coaches had already been spurned enough by Dwight's big mouth. The Orlando waters were now poisoned.

Shortly after, coach Stan Van Gundy confirmed the report that management had stated Dwight wanted him fired. Dwight denied the report of course, but the damage was done. Of course, this didn't create any animosity between star player and head coach. Why would it? Especially since right when the coach was verifying the story, Dwight came over and gave him a hug. Dwight was unaware of what the coach had just said. Dwight and his camp saw it all later and were not pleased, they were very embarrassed and hurt.

Former Magic Head Coach, The Master of Panic: Stan Van Gundy
Dwight then went on to miss the end of the 2011-2012 season with back surgery. Some thought he had finally quit on his organization.

 He followed that up by going back on his contract and demanding a trade once again to the Nets. Dwight wouldn't consider the Bulls or any other team, severely  limiting the Magic's options of what they could receive in return. Just another slap from the prepubescent teen.

And Drama was his name-o.

We were been blinded by his physical prowess and giant smile. His true colors were now revealed.

In the midst of this circus, Dwight continued to voice his concerns to management regarding the roster. He was adamant that the Magic needed to put a more talented team around him. In the process, he did a thorough job of ostracizing himself from his teammates and the Orlando community. It was over in Orlando. No one even wanted him anymore. They wanted him gone.

In August 2012, Dwight was finally traded to the Lakers. Unfortunately, the saga continued. Wrong coach, wrong team leader, wrong system, and the wrong media market. Dwight seemed excited at the idea of being a Laker, but not exactly thrilled to be with these Lakers.

The Lakers roster suffered injury after injury and things continued to go downhill from there. Dwight rushed back from back surgery and continued to play through a bad shoulder time and time again. They barely made the playoffs and abruptly suffered an early exit. Was the experiment over though? Most thought Dwight wouldn't leave the 2nd most storied franchise in the NBA for any reason. Right?

When the tumultuous season finally came to an end, the Lakers wanted Dwight to commit to the franchise, and rather quickly. Dwight was not concerned and decided to have all his meetings and take his time. He met with the Rockets, Mavericks, Warriors and the Lakers last. Following their pitches, Dwight retreated to the woods of Colorado to mull it over with his team.

In the end, Dwight chose the Rockets. Lakers fans have been in an uproar since and the media is enjoying the frenzy.

The Dwightmare had ended. Everyone can now wake up.

Why Not The Lakers?

For once let's give the man-child some credit. He knew the pros and cons of his situation and made the best decision for himself. The Lakers are a storied franchise but happiness is happiness. The timing was just off.
The late Dr. Jerry Buss and new owner Jim, his son.

To begin with, the Lakers hired a coach Dwight didn't want. He made that clear, and he even chose the coach Kobe favored. Jim Buss? He didn't care. He couldn't put his ego aside and make the best decision for the franchise. He couldn't put his shaky past with Phil behind him and simply remember the winning. He was being a fool. When you can hire Phil, you hire him. Jim Buss has no idea what he's doing turning down the Zen Master for D'Antoni. It ultimately may have cost them Howard, and it appears to have wasted the end of the Kobe era.


Dwight doesn't dislike D'Antoni, he just hates his system. He feels it doesn't use his skill set properly  and it certainly doesn't give him the ball in the post 20 times a game. Some would argue that Dwight's offensive game isn't good enough to warrant that many touches in the paint. They'd probably be correct but its neither here nor there.

D'Antoni has never even reached an NBA Finals. What's the hype about?
D'Antoni also benched Pau Gasol, stating he wasn't a good fit for the system. It didn't sit well with Pau. This is a 2-time Lakers champion and one of the most talented bigs in the NBA. Even if he is a bit older, his passing abilities alone made him a pretty nice fit with Dwight. Pau fed him all day when the defense collapsed. D'Antoni later realized his mistake and reinserted Pau into the starting lineup. This led to their run to the playoffs, which didn't even seem plausible at the time given their lack of chemistry, coaching decisions, and injuries to vital players like Kobe and Nash.

D'Antoni just isn't one of those coaches who can/will change their system to help win with a superstar of another caliber. He knows no other way, which is a problem. A coach needs to be able to adjust to playing styles and tweak their system accordingly. D'Antoni isn't a talented enough coach to do either.
Kobe pitched to Dwight, but never really liked him either. "Adios, man."

Newsflash: Dwight never liked Kobe. Kobe never liked Dwight.

Howard isn't that kind of blood-thirsty, tough-minded, vocal leader. He isn't MJ, Kobe, Magic, or even Shaq(still can't believe he took his nickname:Superman). He doesn't show his hunger. There's no menacing scowl or "I'm not friends with my competitors" attitude. He has no Mamba in him. Maybe he has no "leader" in him. I can tell you this: Dwight doesn't want to the "The Guy" in LA and doesn't want to be the guy who ran Kobe out. Even though he asked for them to let Kobe go in a year.

You can be certain that Dwight doesn't want that type of leader above him, either. A certified legend always putting that kind of pressure on him? That scares the kid. He doesn't want to be pushed that hard.

It definitely didn't help when Kobe called out Dwight for not playing through the shoulder injury.

Dwighty no likey.

Now keep in mind, this isn't the old Kobe. He's played a lot of minutes and coming off Achilles surgery is no joke. His numbers were still very good despite field goal percentage, but the Mamba has logged a lot of minutes on those legs. No one knows exactly what he'll be after learning how to walk again at this stage in his career.

Dwight wants to set his own legacy with others who haven't cemented theirs.

Don't bring up the contract. The extra year on the potential Lakers contract is almost a mute point due to that fact that as long as Dwight is playing basketball, someone will have him on their team that year. He'll be under contract somewhere. He may lose a few million in the end, but he can make that up elsewhere. There's also no state income tax in Texas. That's a pretty big deal financially.

Dwight liked the medium pond of Orlando. It was hot, like his hometown of Atlanta, but it wasn't the media hot spot that L.A. is. He was embraced, not ridiculed. Anything he did in Orlando was gold. The smaller markets are just happy you're there if you're amazing. They don't want to scare you away with knit-picking. L.A. is a monster that not all athletes can handle. Shaq just eluded to this same point Saturday claiming that Dwight doesn't want all that pressure. Stating he basically had to run from it.

Why The Rockets?
With James Harden, the Rockets took a giant leap towards the days of 1994-95

Houston was a no-brainer. In fact, I would've felt bad for the guy if he picked any of the other teams after him, including the Lakers.

The Rockets had the best and youngest star to offer Dwight: James Harden.

James is one chill fella. He dates a stripper, makes money off his facial hair, stays out of trouble, and handles his business on the court nightly. You absolutely never see him yelling at his teammates or questioning their toughness. He's the kind of star that can take over at any point, but will defer if it's working for someone else. All his teammates and coaches adore him. He's the anti-Kobe in every way: personality, age, reputation, mentality, communication and even leadership style. Sounds perfect for Dwight.

Coach Kevin McHale is one of the best big men to ever play the game and he really understands players. He knows how to spot and handle talent/egos. He saw the greatness in Kevin Love and swapped him for OJ Mayo on draft day. Stinks for Memphis. You never hear his players calling him out during or after their time under his reign. McHale's personality is a great fit for Howard. They'll pair very nicely together.

McHale, Rockets Coach, was a great player during the 80's for the Boston Celtics
Dwight and Van Gundy's relationship was very strained in Orlando. Remember when Shaq called SVG "The Master of Panic?" It was spot-on. There's a reason Riley decided to replace him on the sidelines and go on to lead that Heat roster to a title. Dwight loves McHale, so it should be a graceful transition.

Daryl "The Wizard" Morey: He might be the best GM in the NBA. At this time last year, Kyle Lowry and Kevin Martin were the Rockets' best players. Now there's Lin, Parson, Harden, Asik(at least for now), and Dwight. That's an insane upgrade in one short year.

The Rockets are on their way up, the Lakers are quickly on their way down. That seems pretty clear to an unbiased fan.  One team is young, one is old. One has a stale leader, one has a fresh leader. All Lakers fans really need to accept that they need to rebuild. It's a reality for at least a few seasons.

With a young core and a GM who knows how to build in the new CBA, the Rockets should be very good for a long time. They're not there yet, but they're very close.

Lastly: "The Dream"

Hakeem might be the most talented offensive Center to ever play
Hakeem "The Dream" Olajuwon had some serious influence on Houston's pitch to Dwight. He's offered his training services to Dwight basically year round when he's in town. Dwight supposedly kept mentioning two names during his interview with Stephen A. Smith: McHale and Olajuwon.

Howard's much better than he used to be offensively. Maybe he can even take it to another level. That still remains to be seen after nine seasons, but anything's possible in the world of Dwight Howard.

Can he improve his personality and decision making? Yes. Will he? Who knows, but this is certain: Winning cures all.

The point remains as follows:
-Dwight is a special talent regardless of his basketball or decision making/working relationship deficits.
-Dwight has made a mockery of his word, his name, and his relationships with former teammates/organization employees and deserves the backlash that's come his way.
-Dwight has finally made the correct decision for both his personality, and his chance at winning a ring.


~Jason T. Davis  @WisdomOfSports

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Nerlens Noel: The Choice By Default? The Cavs Tough Call and the Decisions to Follow

Nerlens Noel: The Choice By Default? The Cavs Tough Call and the Decisions to Follow

Kentucky's Nerlens Noel is predicted to be the Overall No. 1 selection by the Cavs

By: Jason T. Davis @WisdomOfSports

If you're an NBA fan and you're not a fan of the NBA draft, I feel sorry for you. Now even I understand not everyone wanting to sit through the tedious event on television. I also understand that most viewers don't even know the names being selected, but that's not the point. The point is that despite one's knowledge of names or aspirations to sit through roughly 4-6 hours of drafting, we should all be fans of seeing young men achieving their goals and fresh new stars entering the league. This time of year is like Christmas to a hoops fan. You get to watch the playoffs/NBA Finals, and you get to witness the culmination of this years crop of youngsters enter the league you so love. For a fan of basketball, it's pure elation. For a fan of a specific team, it can end up as pure agony, but it begins as pure joy.

For that one night, everything is still unknown. Every pick Could be an All-Star, every second rounder a sleeper. There's so much optimism and excitement in the air before anything has even had time to settle. The teams holding the higher picks always have more to think about. They're losing teams. They desperately need to find the diamond amongst the pebbles. There's still no true way of knowing. There's no algorithm that will solve the questions surrounding a pro prospect. There's only the gusto to pull the trigger. In just a few short weeks all the NBA teams will be rolling the dice on whomever they perceive to be their guy, but eyes are on one team in particular. That would be the Cavaliers and their No. 1 pick.

In a year without a true No. 1 choice, the Cavs must rely solely on their gut and analysis. No Rose, no Griffin, no Yao, NO LEBRON. This one will go down as a memorable one in my eyes and for the Cavs sake, I hope it's remembered as a fantastic decision on their part. One which will have moved the franchise forward for a long time. Now the question is who? Who will they take in this giant question mark of a draft?

We all know what the draft is. A guessing game. A gambling man's game. It's a crap shoot and when it goes wrong, it can set a franchise back years, even decades(Greg Oden over Durant, Josh Childress over Deng, Darko over Melo/Wade/Bosh, Marvin Williams over CP3/D-Willy). When it goes right? It can define a franchise and at times even build up a city(Durant/Oklahoma City, Duncan/San Antonio, Shaq/Orlando, Lebron/Cleveland, Jordan/Chicago). The list of the bulls-eyes and busts are as long and tedious as the draft process itself. Having the overall number one pick in a year of complete unknown only makes the stress of getting the right guy even higher. But remember, fans don't need you to grab the most popular pick, they need you to make the right pick. That however, is a very difficult thing to do. The Cavs have a history of doing it right, but those were relatively easy options.

The Cavs had pretty clear choices in their two most recent No. 1 selections. Lebron was a specimen
Irving and Waiter lead the Cavs talented young Crew, along with Thompson
the NBA had not seen before and was a guaranteed lock at No. 1 in his Junior year of high school.  It was a no-brainer and changed the entire city, especially financially. Kyrie, on the other hand, did have some questions around him, but for the most part was a lock as well. There were questions as to how good he could really be and how he'd hold up physically. Could he be on the CP3 level? That was the hope. Turns out, he has a lot more offensively to offer than CP3 even does. The kid's a star. The concerns over his health and ability to withhold a long NBA season were somewhat fair. After all, he did break a bone in his foot and sat the rest of the Duke season before coming back for the tourney to play a couple games. That draft class, at the top, looked weak though. He was clearly ready to at least lead an NBA team and the Cavs needed a PG and leadership regardless. Luckily for them, they got much more than a 'game-manager.'

This year? The Cavs will have scrutiny no matter what route they take. They have a very difficult and defining choice in front of them. There is no clear-cut guy this time. It's obviously more of a gamble than most years and the Cavs, like they've done in recent history, will have to pull the risky trigger on someone that night. Good news? They are one franchise that is not scared to go with their gut.

Cavs and the Common Draft Speculation

The Cavs have a huge decision to make, bigger than most years. I know they may be listening to trade offers, but who doesn't listen? I don't hear that they're listening too closely though. Obviously I could be wrong, but it's my opinion that they will keep the pick and grab a young player. The Cavs seem inclined to build with young talent, and in this years uncertain draft, most teams are not interested in giving up proven assets for a possible bust at the top. For argument's sake, let's say they keep the pick and use it.

No one's saying Noel will be a bust per say, it seems too illogical. He has too much talent to wind up a true "bust." The questions surrounding his offensive skills and his ability to put on more mass are there, and they're valid. He needs to add weight, specifically muscle. He's a legit 6'11. Of course, that high-top does help.

Let's not forget about his most current issue and the defining red flag: His health. The man was having a great Freshman season at Kentucky until he tore his ACL around halfway through. At the time, he was being talked about as a probable lock at the No. 1 pick. This was due to his "Anthony Davis-like ability" and simply the extreme question marks surrounding everyone else in this year's draft. In 24 games started/played, Noel averaged some pretty nice numbers: 11 ppg 10 rpg 2 spg 2 apg & 4 bpg. The man showed his defensive skills and knack for blocking shots. He also brought a lot of energy and always seemed to be under control. He's also still very young(19). Couple that with an uncanny ability to protect the rim and he looks like a great decision. Still, the uncertainty remains.
Davis averaged 14pts, 8rbs, 2blks in 64/82 games played this year

This year kind of smells like last year's draft. Get an athletic big man who can protect the rim by nature. It does sound really nice: A young giant who appears to be the kind of piece that a team can build around for a decade or so. Kentucky comparisons aside, he looks to be this year's Anthony Davis. The Hornets weren't going to miss out on such a staple piece to build around in last years draft. Especially given the concerns regarding the other top picks. Davis' weakness is his body type. He's lean, kind of weak, and can be prone to injury. This sort of raises the worry regarding Noel. Davis played well his rookie season, but he kept getting nicked up throughout the year with minor injuries, and it has some people starting to wonder about his durability in the paint. Is he capable of taking that kind of beating for and extended career? I guess we'll see. Either way Davis is a freakish big man that a team can put great pieces around. He has great character, work ethic, natural abilities and can find his role with anyone on the court. He naturally blends in with his teammates. Sound like anyone else to you?

Cavs management and fans are hoping that if they choose Noel, he will keep putting on mass, rehab that knee back to normal, and become the interior defensive force he is predicted to be.

The interesting dilemma is not that the Cavs shouldn't take Noel, it's if they should take someone else instead? Is an injured, shot-blocking, skinny, non-shooter worth the overall No. 1 pick? Can you find that elsewhere? Future free agency or even a future draft? Hell, they also have the 19th pick THIS year! Maybe they grab Jeff Withey out of Kansas or Dieng out of Louisville to help protect the rim. They have options and the Cavs will make the move they feel is best, that's certain. They took Waiters last year over Barnes. It shocked quite a few people. They surprised the WORLD the year prior with Tristan Thompson at #4(which I applauded given his raw ability at only age 19). Point is, they really don't care what anyone else thinks of a prospect. That can be a very good attribute for a franchise. As long as you're not David Kahn, former Wolves GM.

Georgetown's Otto Porter is considered the Safest pick in this draft
Other Options?

The other side to the "Noel" coin is they take whoever they feel is going to be the best pro, regardless of position. The odds are someone in the first 20 guys will be a better pro than Nerlens. He could be a nice big, but there will be better players from this crop. For me personally, a clear cut choice for the Cavs if not Noel, is Otto Porter from Georgetown. The long SF would be a great fit with Kyrie at the PG, Dion Waiters at the SG, and Tristan Thompson at the PF. With his mid-range game and ability to lock down defenders of multiple positions, you'd compliment your two scoring guards greatly, and allow Tristan to become a true PF. You'd have quite the young nice core in Ohio and NO ONE would snide at the pick. At least not right away. Sometimes the safe pick is the best. Sometimes.

Otto Porter is basically being talked about as the "Only Sure Thing" in this year's draft. Couple that with the fact that the Cavs need a legit SF, it's a pretty tempting idea. Take the so-called "sure-thing" at a position of need over the athletic center covered in question marks. It sounds pretty logical, given Otto pans out. I like either move if management handles it the right way. I'd like to see them grab Porter, but I'm more than fine with them grabbing Noel. If they see Porter as a "Kawhi Leonard/Paul George hybrid type," get him. If they don't and want the beast rim protector, that sounds great too. Although, Otto isn't the only name being thrown around at the top of the draft board. The most talked about No. 2 pick is someone else. Someone with lots of raw ability. Perhaps he's in the mix in Cleveland as well.

McLemore's athleticism and shooting have made him climb this draft
Kansas' Ben McLemore is the No. 2 pick in just about every mock out there. Some say Orlando would like to move that pick and I believe it. However, that remains to be seen. Ben has the prototypical size for a SG in the NBA, and the athleticism and range to match it. The kid can do it all on the ball court. It's no surprise he's sky-rocketed up the charts amidst all these questionable players. Some mocks even have him going to Cleveland at No. 1,  although very few. He does play Waiters' position, which could be an issue. It could also be a great thing. Personally, I saw a lot of Kansas games and just didn't see him take over enough for me to have a grip on how good he truly is or possibly could be. He definitely has a lot of upside and the ability to score in bunches, but it was hard to tell on that Kansas team whether he can become a future All-Star or not. His athleticism is no joke. The man can absolutely soar through the air and slam with authority. He also can shoot from anywhere and gets hot like a video game. He did however disappear in a lot in games, especially late, which drew poor reviews from some scouts. That can all change though in my opinion, given time and confidence.

The Cavs drafted Dion Waiters as their future SG last year, but if they feel Ben is elite they'll have no issue drafting him and putting Dion on the bench as their Sixth-Man option. Dion showed his talent, that's for sure. The kid is tough, crafty and can score as well. He could stand to lose some more weight and continue to evolve his offensive game. His defense could use some work too.

No one's quite sure where the Cavs heads are at on him at this point. They may just see a really good bench scoring option when they look at Dion. Every bench needs scoring, especially the Cavs. The duo could possibly work out, and if Ben turns out be a star player the Cavs would be praised for the ballsy pick. It all depends on what the Cavs management and scouts see in Ben. As I eluded to earlier, the Cavs have no problem going against the conventional pick and taking who they feel is the best player on the board. They're one team that always seems to go with their guy despite the public opinion. If they want him, they'll grab him.

I understand that Cavs owner Dan Gilbert made the statement that he doesn't want to be in the lottery again anytime soon, but that isn't up to him. Also, I think he's being a bit short-sided. The Cavs are on the bottom of the NBA totem pole and next years draft is one of the most touted in a decade. Gilbert just needs to cool his jets a bit when it comes to competing right away. Patience is a good thing in this situation. The Cavs young core needs to develop, and the team isn't going anywhere anyway. They're nowhere near a 'championship level team' and not getting there in the next few years. They're just trying to become a 'playoff level team.' There's no rush to winning, especially with this loaded draft ahead. They can have their young core improve their skills by playing good minutes for another season, not necessarily by winning a lot of games. If I were the Cavs management, I'd want a shot at a lottery pick in the 2014 NBA draft.

I understand the Cavs want to be better and win more games now. I understand they want to be back in the playoffs, regardless of if they can realistically win the ring that year or not. I understand the years of championship-less seasons the people of Cleveland have had to bear. I get all that. I'm just saying that you don't get this opportunity too often and if you handle it correctly, you could be set up for years of playoff basketball in the city of Cleveland. They have a chance to stack young talent now. Focus on that. They're getting the opportunity often since losing Lebron, and they need to capitalize on it while they can. The reason I say this is this:

-As a franchise, the one thing you NEVER want to do in the NBA is HOVER-

Don't hover. Don't hang out in the middle. You either want to play so poor you can inject a ton of star youth, or you want to be great and competing for at least conference final contention year in and year out. That's it. The middle years will kill you. Blowing a bunch of lottery picks will kill you too, but that's a lesson for another time.

The Cavs should be focused on stockpiling as much young talent as they can while they're lucky enough to be on the bottom. They'll be in the middle of the Eastern Conference pack before too long, drafting in the possible late teens/early 20's, and far away from getting a possible 19 year old star. The Cavs need to pick well at #1 and #20 and not worry about winning next year. Just allow their talent to expand and grow on the court and don't focus on wins/losses at this point. I think they're 2-4 seasons away from being contenders and it could do them a lot of good to think that way as well. After all, we know how great Dan Gilbert is at luring established talent to come play in Cleveland. He got so many great players for Lebron during his 7 seasons there(Darius Miles, Mo Williams, Larry Hughes, Antwan Jamison). Get the stars young and cheap. And make sure you get plenty of them.

Let's Say Noel

For the sake of fun, and this blog, I'm going to talk about the benefits of the Cavs drafting Noel:

If I'm the Cavaliers and draft Noel, I first take a few weeks to perform all the introductory things that are necessary with a new rookie. I then go out and tell Noel and his family that he will sit out his ENTIRE rookie season to rehab his knee and learn the ways of the NBA. I would then set up a press conference to tell the media immediately. I'd take the questions and move on. I wouldn't let it linger.

He'd now have full access to NBA staff/trainers, and he could learn the professional game/lifestyle while building rapport with his teammates in practice. I'd make it clear that this rebuilding process is all about the long-term and we will err on the side of caution. There's no reason to rush him back to a shitty team where he'll play on a minutes restriction. The issue with Rose was that they cleared him in February and kept him as a possibility even throughout the playoffs, which was a mistake. I understand they weren't sure, but at some point just end the circus and say, "You're not coming back until next year. It's too late now."

Remember when Blake Griffin broke his kneecap in summer league before his rookie season and missed his entire rookie season? Most people don't. Most say, "Oh, yea! I forgot!" I understand Blake had no choice given the timing of the injury, but even if he was ready in February, do you think the Clippers rush him back on that crap team? An overall No. 1 pick and a potential building block for the franchise? Maybe because it's the Clippers they do, but the Cavs shouldn't.

I understand Noel's projected to be ready to play by maybe as early as December/January. This is just  what I would do if I ran the team and selected Noel. I know it's dramatic, but I would do it if I were the GM. I also understand that given the Cavs do draft him, they will more than likely choose to play him in the second half of the season. I'm not saying it's a bad thing. If he's truly ready by January, why not play him and give him some minutes for the last few months. You can't live scared of another injury. I'm fine with that. It's just that I think this team should be concerned long-term about his health and their franchise winning.  I'm not all crazy. I do have some reasons for sitting him out that would benefit the Cavs. As a GM, this would be my thinking if I take him. This would be my thinking if I say him his rookie season.

My reasons:
1. He gets to take his sweet time getting back to normal----We all have different bodies. We're not all Adrian Peterson, and basketball players put quite a bit of turn and slash on those knees. Nerlens has a very long career in front of him and the Cavs are losing a ton next year anyway. Why not lose more and give the kid an ample amount of time to get it better than it ever was. I don't think it hurts him to watch NBA basketball closely and rehab all year. I also don't think it hurts the Cavs.
2. He  gets to spend a year watching what the players do on the road and during games on the bench.
----He's a young man suddenly with a lot of money and he's traveling the country. It could be good experience for him to get to watch the other guys for a year or so and grow. it's also a big deal to experience an NBA locker room and huddle for a year. It couldn't hurt, Larry Hughes is gone. 
 3. He will get a year of NBA knowledge and practice time.
----It did Blake a lot of good. He won Rookie of The Year the following season. Nerlens would learn a lot from his players and coaches and still build the fluidity with his teammates through practicing all season.Win-win.
4. He will get ample time to rehab his knee with NBA medical staff. 
----Don't even consider rushing him to give him 12 minutes a game. Why??? To win a ring next year??
5. A sneaky benefit: The Cavs used a 1st rounder on Tyler Zeller last year. This would give him        another year of serious playing time to become the great backup center they believe him to be. It would definitely improve his skill set and defense to get major minutes next season while Nerlens rehabbed.
6. Lebron Sweepstakes?
----I get that it's a total long-shot Lebron comes back in 2014 when he's a free agent. I also know that winning is what he cares about. The Cavs want as many great, young assets and free money that they muster. He's won with less.

And the Final Reason!
Andrew Wiggins is the most touted H.S recruit since Lebron
 7. 2014 Draft: This draft is the most talked about since '03 with Lebron, Melo, Wade, Bosh and others. Any team, great or poor, should be hungry to have a bite of this pie if possible. With the new CBA, guys on rookie contracts who can contribute are like Gold. Drafts like this don't come around often and that's becoming even more apparent now with the "one and done" rule. Dan Gilbert should just put his "no more lottery" mindset away for just one more year. That's all I'm saying...

If the Cavs decide to go the Nerlens route, which almost every mock draft has them doing, the fans should be very excited about the future despite the uncertainty. If they grab someone else, they should be just as excited. Every pick in every year is uncertain. Even the guarantees could get injured or lose their way mentally/emotionally. No guarantees in gambling. No guarantees in sports. You have to just trust your management. You can only hope the organization has done their homework. For the Cavs, the time to lose is now. Stack up on young talent while you can, Dan Gilbert. You never know when they'll up and leave you for nothing in return. 

~Jason T. Davis  @WisdomOfSports