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When the Cleveland Cavaliers pulled the trigger on the February 4 blockbuster trade for James Harden, the league reacted on instinct. Too many ball-dominant stars. Too much overlap. Not enough defense. It was the same reflexive skepticism that has followed every ambitious roster gamble of the modern era.
Then Monday night happened in Denver.
Trailing by 11 points in the fourth quarter against the reigning champions, the Cavaliers didn’t just rally—they demonstrated something more unsettling. With Donovan Mitchell and James Harden sharing the floor, Cleveland revealed an offense that operates on inevitability. Not momentum. Not luck. Math.
For more music visit us online at www.kjdradio.com
By KJD Music LLCWhen the Cleveland Cavaliers pulled the trigger on the February 4 blockbuster trade for James Harden, the league reacted on instinct. Too many ball-dominant stars. Too much overlap. Not enough defense. It was the same reflexive skepticism that has followed every ambitious roster gamble of the modern era.
Then Monday night happened in Denver.
Trailing by 11 points in the fourth quarter against the reigning champions, the Cavaliers didn’t just rally—they demonstrated something more unsettling. With Donovan Mitchell and James Harden sharing the floor, Cleveland revealed an offense that operates on inevitability. Not momentum. Not luck. Math.
For more music visit us online at www.kjdradio.com