John “Hot Rod” Williams could not enter the NBA after he was drafted out of Tulane in 1985 as he was arrested for point-shaving but he was later found not guilty and was able to join the league for the 1986/87 campaign where he started all 80 of Games and averaged 14.6 Points, 7.9 Rebounds and 2.1 Blocks per Game. Williams would later see his starts diminish but not his time on the court as the Cavaliers generally used him as their sixth man. "Hot Rod" would have his best season in 1989/90 where he had career highs of 16.8 Points and 2.3 Blocks per Game while also producing 8.1 Rebounds.
The Cleveland Cavaliers struck gold when they landed the #1 Draft Pick in 2003 so that they could draft their home state hoops prodigy, LeBron James. After James left, the Cavs were blessed by the lottery Gods again in 2011 when they won the draft to pick first and choose Kyrie Irving, who was the consensus best player in the draft.
Larry Nance spent the first half of his career with the Phoenix Suns where he was an All-Star in 1985. The Power Forward would be traded in the 1987/88 Season in a mega-deal, and both teams would come out ahead. The Power Forward brought defensive stability to the Cavaliers, and they would become more significant threats in the East. The Power Forward would be named to two All-Star Games as a Cavalier, and he was a three-time All-Defensive Selection (one First Team and two Second Teams), and he would have five straight seasons averaging eight or more boards per game. In that same stretch, he never dipped below 2.0 Blocks per Game in a year, and he never fell below 11th in that metric.