Dayton Daily News

Cavs GM gambles on two Knicks

- ByTomWithe­rs

Once LeBron James gets his knee and back healthy enough to play again, the superstar will rejoin a Cavaliers team that has undergone some rehabilita­tion as well.

The Cavs have started the new year with yet another new look.

On Monday night, general manager David Griffin addressed his team’s sore need for bench scoring and a defensive stopper by acquiring guards J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert from the New York Knicks in a three-team trade that sent mystifying guard Dion Waiters from Cleveland to Oklahoma City.

With the Cavs underachie­ving — they lost to the 5-32 Philadelph­ia 76ers on Monday without James and Kyrie Irving — and amid ongoing chemistry issues, injuries and concerns about coach David Blatt, Griffin pulled the string on a deal that should have immediate, short-term impact and perhaps set the table for another roster move.

The Cavs remain in search of a rim-protecting center and have made inquiries about Denver’s Timofy Mozgov and Memphis’ Kosta Koufos. Cleveland used its disabled player exception for losing center Anderson Varejao (torn Achilles) for the season and still has a $5.2 million exception to obtain a big man.

Griffin, who also got a protected first-round pick from the Thunder, has shown a fearlessne­ss when it comes to doing whatever’s necessary to improve his team.

This trade was his second involving a first-round pick since James re-signed this summer. In July, he swapped Andrew Wiggins and Anthony Bennett — both No. 1 picks to get Kevin Love.

In dealing Waiters, the No. 4 pick in 2012, Griffin again made it clear he’s not averse to risk.

For now, Smith and Shumpert, when he recovers from a dislocated left shoulder, can help Cleveland get back on track.

Smith is a talented scorer who also has a reputation for being self-centered and a less-than-ideal teammate.

James knows Smith, who has a $6.4 million player option for next season, well as the two worked out together during past offseasons. Their relationsh­ip should help with Smith’s transition to a team that needs him to drop his ego and some shots.

Shumpert earned his reputation as a relentless perimeter defender, something the Cavs desperatel­y need to handle bigger guards and small forwards. The 6-foot-5 Shumpert should start alongside Irving, who has been dealing with back tightness and skipped the team’s trip to Philadelph­ia.

The Cavs are about to enter one of the season’s most challengin­g stretches.

After hosting Houston today, Cleveland will head to the West Coast for five games in seven nights.

 ??  ?? J.R. Smith (left) can provide scoring punch off the bench, while Iman Shumpert’s strength is his defense.
J.R. Smith (left) can provide scoring punch off the bench, while Iman Shumpert’s strength is his defense.

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