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Vintage Cavs Pays Homage to Cleveland's Pro Basketball Roots

The program for the Cavs first season was printed jointly with the Cleveland Barons.
TERRY PLUTO
The program for the Cavs first season was printed jointly with the Cleveland Barons.

Terry Pluto reflects on when the Cavs called the Richfield Coliseum home. He remembers those days fondly and writes about them in his new book ‘Vintage Cavs.’

The Cleveland Cavaliers have had their good days and their bad days. Winning the 2016 NBA championship is a highlight.

Pluto recalls the 2016 team. LeBron James had returned to Cleveland after a split from the team, coming back to help guide them to a win over the Golden State Warriors. Pluto says there was no love lost in that team, but James’ return was a business decision. A good one, it turned out.

“It was a marriage of convenience, there was not a lot of romance to it,” Pluto said. “It was pure business.”

50 years of Cavs history

Pluto’s book is a rich history of the first 50 years for the team, beginning with their start in the Cleveland Arena. He said the Arena and the Coliseum had different feels to them when the Cavs played there.

“They were almost like a neighborhood team,” Pluto said. “Let’s face it, next to the arena there was a farm – and they had sheep. And the other side of the arena was the park.”

People, Pluto included, still return to that spot, seeking out the space that once was the home of the Cleveland Cavaliers. Now, the land where the Coliseum stood is part of the Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

“The interesting thing to me, too, along those ways is that players who played there have gone there,” Pluto said. He mentions players like World B. Free and Mark Price who've shared stories of returning to the space and staring at the field. Pluto remembers Price saying, “It’s strange. It’s like I could hear it and feel it, but it’s not there. It’s like it almost didn’t happen.”

The site where the Richfield Coliseum once stood is now an empty field in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park.
Credit ANDREW MEYER / WKSU
/
WKSU
The site where the Richfield Coliseum once stood is now an empty field in the Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

Summit County's team

While these players, like Free and Price, seem like larger than life characters, Pluto said they made themselves accessible. After practice, they’d get into pick-up games. But, Pluto said, it carried even further.

“There’s a playground up in Cuyahoga Falls called Valley Vista,” Pluto said. “They would get in pick-up games with just guys off the street.”

In his research for the book, Pluto said he received emails from people recalling times they’d not only met the players, but had the opportunity to play with them.

“The fact is that you don’t see that now,” he said. “You know, because there just such bigger business.”

Terry talks past owners of the Cavs

Memory lane

Pluto said he’ll go into press boxes and often be the oldest one there nowadays. But he shares his stories with younger writers, who might not otherwise know these players.

‘Vintage Cavs: A Warm Look Back at the Cavaliers of the Cleveland Arena and Richfield Coliseum Years’ is a nostalgic, wistful memory of the team’s beginnings.

“Frankly, part of sports is memory, is nostalgia, is history,” Pluto said.

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit WKSU.

Vintage Cavs Pays Homage to Cleveland's Pro Basketball Roots

Andrew joined WKSU News in 2014. He oversees the daily operations of the WKSU news department and its reporters and hosts, coordinates daily coverage, and serves as editor. His commitment is to help foster reporting that marks the best of what public radio has to offer: a mix of first-rate journalism with great storytelling. His responsibilities also include long-term strategic planning for news coverage in Northeast Ohio that serves WKSU’s audience via on-air, online, by social media and through emerging technologies. You can also hear Andrew on-air daily as the local host for Here and Now, Fresh Air, and The World.
Ella Abbott is studying journalism and forensic anthropology at Kent State. Abbott has previously held the positions of senior reporter for the Kent Stater, the university’s student run newspaper, and editor-in-chief of Fusion magazine, Kent State’s LGBTQ magazine. Her interests are in public policy and crime.