HardenGoat wrote:yoyoboy wrote:HardenGoat wrote:Some of you need to take the team context into account more. Cavs are a much more stable and matured franchise. OKC has been dealt major injuries. Houston is a mess because they are a tanking young team and have the cheapest owner in league history. Put Mobley on there and see what happens to his stats.
Would anyone have said this before Mobley came along?
What about Mitchell? He’s a stabilizer on and off the court. The team has been building for several years now and getting him was a huge piece of the puzzle.
No doubt, but I would argue that Mobley’s arrival last year was the biggest contribution to us doubling our win total and transforming our defense.
Allen, Garland, Wade, Osman, Okoro, Love, Stevens, Coach JBB…7 of our 10 highest minute rotation guys and our coach were here in that 20-21 season when we posted the 25th ranked defense in the league. And we got up to 7th last year and 2nd this year. And the other 3 major additions were LeVert and Mitchell, who have by the numbers been some of the worst defenders in the league the last few years, and then Mobley. Excluding Rubio who would be included as a rotation guy because he’s been injured. Of course we can’t discount the natural improvement from guys like Garland and Allen, and not playing Sexton was addition bu subtraction, but it’s very clear that Mobley’s presence with his mobility, switchability, and great positioning has allowed wonky lineups to work. The three big lineup last year, the two small guard lineup this year… I mean especially this year who would expect a team with two 6’1 guards with reputations as terrible defenders and a gaping hole at SF to be the 2nd best defense in the league?
I think Mobley at certain points was a little overhyped last year as people painted him as the surefire next generational big. But now he’s actually underrated in terms of his value to the Cavs.