On Tuesday, we learned that the Cavaliers planned to cut Larry Sanders in order to sign Edy Tavares from the D-League. Initially seen as a decision based on the fact that Sanders simply wasn't able to get back in rhythm after two years away from the game, it turns out there is more to the move.
According to a report from Jason Lloyd of The Athletic, the Cavaliers cut Sanders after he missed a team bus to the airport during their road trip in Miami.
Sources: Cavs moved on from Larry Sanders after he missed team bus to airport Tuesday in Miami https://t.co/NjUP41d4Ha
— Jason Lloyd (@JasonLloydNBA) April 13, 2017
Now Sanders is gone again after he struggled keeping up with responsibilities on and off the court. He missed the team bus from the hotel to the airport Tuesday in Miami, multiple sources with knowledge of the situation told The Athletic, the final blow to his time here after Sanders had previously struggled with punctuality.
"He didn't have any kind of a setback relative to any of the demons he had or any of those things," Cavs general manager David Griffin said. "He's an NBA player. He's kind of flaky. So sometimes you're late. You're this. You're that. None of those things were incidents. But I have to take you in totality as a player and if I know you're not going to play, then what I'm going to get is everything else. And if I didn't even feel confident that he'd be a benefit to the group in practice, then it was hard for me to tell coaches, 'This is a guy you've got to keep.' So they had the conversation on the plane, what else can we do? And we talked about it and we landed and we talked to all the rest of our staff and made a decision."
"I didn't think it was going to take him so long to be contributing at least at practice," Griffin said. "He was much further away than we thought. And by his own admission. He would tell you he was. He knew he was. I think that was a big part of it."
It's a tough end to the season for Sanders, but not a totally unsurprising one. Even for an elite athlete like Sanders, it's extremely difficult to jump right back into the NBA grind -- especially on an elite team facing all sorts of pressure entering the playoffs -- after two years away.
Hopefully, if he's so inclined, Sanders will continue to work over the summer and get another shot, either with the Cavs or someone else, during training camp. Cavs' GM David Griffin certainly indicated that was a possibility, saying:
"Next season, for sure we could [sign him]," Griffin said. "We haven't said, 'We're done with Larry Sanders.' It's just not the time to have Larry here."