The Cavaliers didn’t waste time getting their first free-agency business done, and there was a reason for that urgency: the Indiana Pacers were reportedly ready to make a run at Thomas Bryant.
Cleveland reached a verbal agreement on Monday to bring Bryant back as Jarrett Allen’s backup, and the move came together before the market could fully open. Teams are allowed a window to negotiate with their own free agents before 6 PM ET on June 30th, and the Cavaliers used that head start to keep Bryant from testing the market.
That matters because Bryant wasn’t just a familiar face in Cleveland. He was also familiar to Indiana, the last other team he played for. Before joining the Cavaliers last season, he backed up center on the Pacers squad that reached the NBA Finals, a run that included a five-game embarrassment of the Cavaliers in the second round.
Bryant may have brought a little more than experience, too. Cleveland signed him last summer and went on to reach the Eastern Conference Finals, winning a pair of seven-game series before the New York Knicks swept them in round three.
Beyond the good fortune angle, Bryant has earned his place as a dependable backup center. He was a second-round pick in the 2017 NBA Draft, started his career with the Los Angeles Lakers, and has now played for six teams in nine seasons. The path has been winding, but the role has stayed consistent: Bryant has become a player teams want around when they need depth and value.
He has started only one season as a primary option, doing that with the Washington Wizards in 2018-19, but he’s built a long career as a reserve big. That reputation has kept him in demand, and it helped him land this next deal ahead of plenty of other backup centers.
Last season in Cleveland, Bryant didn’t often need to step into the starting five. When Allen missed time, Evan Mobley usually shifted to center and Dean Wade started at the 4. Still, Bryant appeared in 60 games and settled into a steady backup role behind the team’s two All-Star bigs.
His fit is straightforward and useful. Kenny Atkinson can use him as a pick-and-roll big, a lurker in the dunker spot, or even as a floor-spacing option in the corner. Bryant hit 35.9 percent from three this season on 6.4 attempts per 36 minutes, and he adds strong rebounding plus above-average defense.
That combination made him an appealing piece for Cleveland, and it also made him a target for Indiana as the Pacers looked for a third center while building out the roster ahead of Tyrese Haliburton returning from injury next season. In the end, the Cavaliers moved first and kept Bryant in place.
In Other News...
Cavs May Have Their Cheapest Answer To A Familiar Wing Problem
With some new financial flexibility after James Harden declined his player option, the Cavaliers have a little more room to hunt for fixes around the edges of the roster, and the wing remains one of the obvious places to look. Brooklyns decision to let Ziaire Williams reach unrestricted free agency has put a young forward with size and athleticism on the market, and Cleveland is weighing whether he fits as a low-cost swing on a team that could use more versatility on the perimeter.
Williams brings defensive appeal and enough upside to make him an interesting development bet, especially in Kenny Atkinsons system, where the Cavs have shown a willingness to try to unlock more from young players. He also offers a possible cushion if Dean Wades free agency takes him elsewhere, which gives this pursuit a practical edge beyond simply adding another body on the wing. [Read more 🡒]
Cavs Just Lost A Defensive Piece Fans Thought Would Stick
Keon Ellis looked like the kind of depth piece the Cavaliers could keep around for a while after arriving in the DeAndre Hunter deal with Sacramento. He brought defensive energy, gave Cleveland useful minutes during the regular season, and showed enough versatility in 29 games to suggest he could carve out a longer stay in the back end of the roster.
Instead, Ellis is headed into a different situation after landing a two-year deal with Brooklyn, a move that gives him a clearer path to playing time on a rebuilding team. For Cleveland, it is another reminder that even useful defensive pieces can be tough to retain when the market offers a longer commitment and a more defined role. [Read more 🡒]
Cavs Could Make The All In Move LeBron Would Notice
LeBron James next move is already stirring up familiar speculation, and Cleveland is back in the conversation for all the reasons that still matter in July. Reports say he will not return to the Lakers and is expected to land somewhere that makes him happy, which naturally puts the Cavaliers on the list of teams worth watching whenever his name comes up.
For Cleveland, the idea is less about nostalgia than ambition, because any true swing would have to be big enough to change how the league views the roster right away. The Cavaliers have been linked in rumor chatter to a possible major deal with Boston, and even the existence of that kind of discussion tells you how aggressive this front office might be willing to get if it sees a path to moving the team into a different tier. [Read more 🡒]
