Historically speaking, where are the Cavaliers headed?

CLEVELAND, OH - APRIL 15: Collin Sexton #2 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles the ball down the court during the first quarter against the Golden State Warriors at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on April 15, 2021 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Lauren Bacho/Getty Images)
CLEVELAND, OH - APRIL 15: Collin Sexton #2 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles the ball down the court during the first quarter against the Golden State Warriors at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on April 15, 2021 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Lauren Bacho/Getty Images) /
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Darius Garland, Cleveland Cavaliers
Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darius Garland brings the ball up the floor. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images) /

Are the Cleveland Cavaliers really getting better as a team or does history as a franchise suggest something different? The Cavaliers have been around now for over 51 years. They’ve had 27 losing seasons. Not exactly a franchise statistic to write home about.

When you start looking more closely at their franchise’s pattern of winning and losing seasons, I’m concerned about exactly where they’re going as a whole franchise?

The team currently has a small core of young players, like guards Collin Sexton, Darius Garland and wing Isaac Okoro that I believe are here to stay for the immediate short-term future. But the opportunity to build on that small core of players and begin a new pattern of winning seasons is contingent on better coaching, better future draft picks and management that is smarter in adding free agents and trades involving veteran players.

At this moment, the answer to those concerns is still not in focus and that has me constantly going back and studying why and how this franchise has won in the past. I do think this franchise is close to turning the corner again, but I have my reservations.

Historically speaking, the Cavs have had three time periods where they won.

When the Cavs started up as a franchise in 1970, Cavaliers head coach Bill Fitch took over a new team and eventually got them to win on a regular basis. It took him and his players, like Austin Carr, Jim Chones and Dick Snyder to get there, but by 1974-78 the Cavs were an above-.500 team and made it to the playoffs.

“The Miracle at Richfield,” where the Cavs beat the Washington Bullets in the Eastern Conference Semifinals on a last second shot by Snyder, will live in Wine and Gold lore.

It wasn’t until Cleveland head coach Lenny Wilkens came around in the mid-1980’s that the team won again with any regularity. Players like Mark Price, Brad Daugherty, Larry Nance, Ron Harper and Craig Ehlo played for Coach Wilkens and between 1987-1998 the team won and were an above average team for 10 of those 11 seasons.

The team made the playoffs nine times during that stretch and made it to the Eastern Conference Finals once. Unfortunately, during this time, the Chicago Bulls, led by the great Michael Jordan, were in the early stages of becoming a legendary dynasty as well. The Cavs lost to the Bulls four times in the playoffs during this time, including that Eastern Conference Final in the 1992 playoffs.

After that run, the Cavs hit rock bottom by the 2002-03 season, when they set a franchise-record worst 17-65 season record.

The Cavaliers returned to glory years, when savior LeBron James was drafted by the franchise in 2003. You know the rest of the story. The Cavs won and won and won.

The team made the playoffs five straight seasons between 2005-2010. They also made it to the NBA Finals in 2007, but were swept by a much more experienced and and talented/deep San Antonio Spurs team. The Wine and Gold would continue to get close during those early LeBron years but just couldn’t quite figure it out and get that elusive championship.

So when James left after the 2009-10 season, the franchise tanked again and were pathetic.

There wasn’t a lot of hope in Cavalier fan hearts, as those same hearts had been broken when James announced his publicly scrutinized announcement of taking his talents to South Beach and the Miami Heat, which ultimately played out formally via sign-and-trade. During this doldrum of a time, the Cavs did however draft current superstar guard Kyrie Irving.

And then it happened, in the heat of July of 2014, James made another monumental decision to return to Cleveland and promised a championship to the community.

And this time, in 2016, with James and Irving leading the charge, the Cavs were finally able to conquer their quest. They brought a long overdue championship to the city that hadn’t had a championship by any Cleveland professional organization since 1964 when the Cleveland Browns were crowned champions of the NFL.

With James departing Cleveland again in 2018, we are now in a new time for the franchise and so far, these last three seasons have had this team revert back to its losing ways. Despite some opportunistic moments where the Cavs have shown some fight to finally start winning consistently, they aren’t winning and that negative, and yet realistic outlook on the team, has me wondering about the following.

How much time will it take to get back to an above average squad that can make the playoffs and win championships like these past teams in Cavs history have done or gotten closer to?

We’ll get into the two key aspects in regards to how they turn things around from there.