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Cavs hope draft can get them to the playoffs

Just in case the Cleveland Cavaliers need it, here’s some advice for what to do with those two high picks.

NEW YORK — Just in case the Cleveland Cavaliers need it, here’s some advice for what to do with those two high picks.

Take Kyrie Irving first, grab Turkish big man Enes Kanter fourth, and start enjoying the post-season success you used to have when LeBron James was around.

“If I play with Kyrie, I believe we can make playoffs,” Kanter said Wednesday. “I know we can make playoffs.”

Or instead, pass on Irving and go with Arizona’s Derrick Williams, who can play inside or out, either forward spot, and would bring the mixture of power and athleticism back to your frontcourt that was lost when James left.

“I feel like I am the most overall ready in this spot by my size and ready to make an impact,” Williams said.

Even in what’s considered a less-than-stellar NBA draft, the Cavaliers have plenty of options tonight at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., when they become the first team since the 1983 Houston Rockets with two picks in the top four.

They’re expected to start with Irving, considered the favourite since the Cavaliers won the lottery last month. Though the Duke point guard played just 11 games during his freshman season because of a toe injury on his right foot, the numbers he put in his limited time seem too good to pass up.

The Toronto Raptors have the fifth pick.

“It definitely feels good, you know, knowing that I’m still projected to go No. 1,” Irving said. “We’ll see how it goes tomorrow, but it’s an honour to be at the No. 1 spot right now.”

The six-foot-two guard averaged 17.5 points while shooting 53 per cent from the floor, 46 per cent from three-point range and 90 per cent from the foul line. He returned from his injury in time to play in the NCAA tournament — where his Blue Devils were overwhelmed by Williams in Arizona’s round of 16 victory — and he said that proves there should be no question about his health.

“Playing in the NCAA tournament was the deciding factor for me,” Irving said. “If I didn’t play in the NCAA tournament, I would have been back at Duke for my sophomore season. I just wanted to kind of limit all the questions on my health and durability.”

The Cavaliers also pick fourth — the No. 1 pick was acquired from the Los Angeles Clippers last season in the Baron Davis trade — giving them the ability to add a big man, perhaps Kanter or another from the lengthy list of Europeans available, if they selected Irving first.

They were still weighing their options as of Wednesday afternoon with their first No. 1 pick since taking James in 2003.

“They’re keeping their cards closely, as they should, and we’ll see how it goes tomorrow night,” Irving said.

Minnesota holds the No. 2 pick and seems open to dealing it. Utah has Nos. 3 and 12, the latter potentially putting the Jazz in the difficult position of deciding whether they want to keep BYU star Jimmer Fredette in state.

Fredette led the nation with 28.9 points per game and was honoured by The Associated Press and nearly other organization that gives out a player of the year award. But he is perhaps the most scrutinized player in this draft full of question marks, with doubts over whether he has the quickness to get his shot off in the NBA or defend the much quicker guards he will face on a nightly basis.

Not to worry. Fredette says during his carefully devised workout schedule — he performed for only Utah, Sacramento, Indiana, New York and Phoenix — he gained confidence that his game will translate.

“I learned that I’m a very confident guy and that I can play against anyone,” Fredette said. “I feel like I can play all the guys out there, played against some of the toughest athletes and players that are guards in this draft. So it took away confidence and knowing that I can play in this league.”