As the Spurs proved in the June Finals, the Cavaliers offense has room for improvement. It can even be argued that the offense regressed last season. On the flip side, the defense was much better and before this point had only looked good in spurts since the departure of Mike Fratello as Head Coach. What Coach Mike Brown has done for the Cavaliers is taught them to play defense when they do not have their best stuff. While dominance earns the spotlight and media attention, championships are earned through challenges and struggles. Basketball teams at all levels often miss this point. Honestly, the Cavaliers have always been able to play good defense; the problem is that they only played solid D when the situations were in their favor and they were in a rhythm. When the team hit a slump or suffered an injury, the defense disappeared. Now, Brown has the team playing solid defense no matter what (again, aside from the Finals when they forgot how to angle and cut off Tony Parker's path). This season, Coach Brown needs to carry this defensive wisdom into the offensive philosophy. When the Cavaliers learn to rebound and score consistently in tough times, they may very well be a championship team.
In accordance with the release of the new NBA 2K11 basketball video game, legendary Chicago Bulls shooting guard Michael Jordan has returned to the media's spotlight. That is, Michael Jordan has caught the sports world's attention by saying that today's NBA rules would have allowed him to score 100 points in a game. No one is questioning Michael Jordan's uncanny ability to make plays, create shots, and score points. Michael Jordan is right in saying that, overall, today's rules favor offensive players, particularly guards. Much less contact is allowed in defensive play; some of what was legal when Jordan played (such as forearms and handchecking) is now deemed personal foul-worthy. Furthermore, with a 30-team league, talent is spread out more than it used to be, and players--while on average are more athletic today--come into the league much less fundamentally sound. However, Michael Jordan has forgotten about the re-emergence of zone defense in the NBA. True, ...