The Cavs are 3-2, with one loss coming on the road in OT against a quality team. A much better start than I expected.
The Cavs are hitting 42.3% of their 3's, which is unsustainable. Boobie is leading the way at 61%. It seems like the PG's can take the ball into the paint, draw in the defense, and kick it out for an open 3-pointer anytime they want. I expect opponents will adjust their defenses to reduce the number of open looks.
The Cavs are averaging 102 ppg, which is way more than I expected. I thought this team would struggle to score, but that's not been the case. I didn't look for Irving to score 18-20 ppg this early in the season.
On the downside, the Cavs are hitting only 65% of their free throws. That cost them a win against Indiana, where they missed 13. TT has been the biggest offender, but I think most of the roster is below their career norms. They can beat the Detroits, New Jersys, and Charlottes without hitting the free throws, but it will cost them against better competition.
McLeod mentioned that the Cavs are leading the league in preventing fast break points, allowing only five per game. They're forcing opponents to grind out points in the half court offense and all but eliminating easy transition buckets.
The Cavs have outscored their opponents in the second half in four of five games. This may be due in part to Scott using 10 players, which keeps everybody fresh for the second half.
Would you trade Irving and Sessions for any pair of point guards in the league? Between the two they're averaging 25.8 points, 11.8 assists, and 7.4 rebounds per game. Those are Magic Johnson numbers, except Magic didn't play 48 minutes. As Irving gains experience those numbers should only improve.
Biggest disappointment has been Casspi. He's the worst Cavs starter I've seen since - Larry Hughes? Mike Sanders? Walt Wesley?
Once Casspi settles down and gets back to his career norms, modest as they are, the starting unit will be a little better. But right now he's a disaster.
Now that the league has some film on this year's edition, we'll see if the Cavs can maintain this level of play. The main change I expect is that defenses will stay on the 3-point shooters rather than collapsing into the paint, opening things up underneath.

