Cavaliers Face One Painful LeBron Question After Knicks Collapse

The Cleveland Cavaliers are navigating a pivotal offseason as they weigh the potential impact of trading Evan Mobley for a chance at luring LeBron James back to the team.

The Cavaliers’ offseason took on a different shape once Jaylen Brown ended up with the Philadelphia 76ers, because that move removed one of the names Cleveland had been linked to as it tries to figure out its next step after being knocked out by the New York Knicks and, as the source put it, “embarrassed by them.”

That leaves the bigger question hanging over Cleveland: is there enough on the roster to make LeBron James seriously consider a return?

Brian Windhorst framed it this way: “If you can trade Evan Mobley for Jaylen Brown and LeBron James, now it is a different discussion,” Brian Windhorst said, H/T Heavy.

He also pointed to the idea that James is open to taking less than his market-value salary, saying, “The Cleveland Cavaliers learned today that LeBron James would be willing to play for less than his market-value salary. That changed everything.

So how does Cleveland get LeBron James’ attention? Do they show him their brand-new practice facility they’re building?

… That’s not going to impress him. What’s going to impress him is what they can do with this roster.

What can the Cleveland Cavs do?”

The discussion then turned to what Cleveland might have been willing to do if Brown had been available. The view there was clear: Evan Mobley is a strong defender and a useful player, but Brown is considered the better player overall.

“If the Celtics were to have traded Evan Mobley for Brown, I wouldn’t have hated it.

I think he's an elite defender and a valuable player, but I don't view him as being of the same caliber as Brown.

They're completely different players in terms of what they do on the court, but I think Brown is a better player, so if the Cavaliers could’ve landed him, I would’ve done so.”

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