Jim Cleamons
James Mitchell Cleamons (born September 13, 1949) is an American former professional basketball player and coach known for his contributions to the NBA as both a guard and an assistant under legendary head coaches.[1] Born in Lincolnton, North Carolina, Cleamons moved to Columbus, Ohio, before high school, where he starred as a 6-foot-5 swingman at Linden-McKinley High School, graduating in 1967.[2][3] At Ohio State University from 1967 to 1971, he averaged 18.5 points per game over three varsity seasons (1968–71), transitioning from forward to point guard in his senior year, and led the Buckeyes to the 1970–71 Big Ten championship with a 20–6 record, including an NCAA Tournament victory.[3][4] For his college leadership, Cleamons was inducted into the Ohio State Athletics Hall of Fame in 1984.[5] Selected 13th overall by the Los Angeles Lakers in the 1971 NBA Draft, Cleamons debuted as a 6-foot-3 point guard and contributed to the team's 1971–72 championship, part of their record 33-game winning streak.[1] Over eight NBA seasons (1971–1980) with the Lakers, Cleveland Cavaliers, New York Knicks, and Washington Bullets, he appeared in 652 regular-season games, averaging 8.3 points, 3.0 rebounds, and 3.9 assists per game while shooting 46.0% from the field; his defensive prowess earned him All-Defensive Second Team honors in 1975–76 during a standout 12.2 points and team-leading assists season with the Cavaliers, who reached the Eastern Conference Finals in the "Miracle of Richfield" playoffs.[1][6] Transitioning to coaching in 1982, Cleamons began at the college level with Furman University (1982–83), followed by stints at Ohio State (1983–87) and Youngstown State (1987–89).[2][7] His NBA coaching career spanned over three decades as an assistant, including seven seasons with the Chicago Bulls (1989–1996) under Phil Jackson, where he helped secure four championships (1991, 1992, 1993, 1996), and time with the Los Angeles Lakers from 1999 to 2004 and 2006 to 2011, contributing to five titles (2000, 2001, 2002, 2009, 2010).[8][3] He also served as head coach of the Dallas Mavericks for the 1996–97 season (24–58 record) and part of 1997–98 (4–12 before dismissal), and later as an assistant with the New Orleans Hornets (2004–2006), Milwaukee Bucks (2013–2014), and New York Knicks (2014–2016).[8] Cleamons retired from coaching in 2017, having won a total of ten NBA championships (one as a player, nine as an assistant).[6] His legacy includes inductions into the Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame (2008) and Lincoln County Sports Hall of Fame (2017).[3][2]Early Life and Education
Early Years and High School
James Mitchell Cleamons was born on September 13, 1949, in Lincolnton, North Carolina.[1] His family relocated to Columbus, Ohio, prior to his high school years, immersing him in a vibrant basketball culture that fostered his early athletic development.[2] Cleamons attended Linden-McKinley High School in Columbus, where he graduated in 1967. As a standout guard, he served as team captain and provided key leadership during his junior and senior seasons, helping the Panthers compile an impressive record with only five losses across those two years.[9] Under coach Vince Chickerella, Cleamons played a pivotal role in guiding Linden-McKinley to its first Ohio High School Athletic Association state basketball championship in 1967, defeating Cleveland East Tech 88-56 in the final.[10] This high school success laid the groundwork for Cleamons' transition to college basketball at Ohio State University.[11]College Career
Jim Cleamons enrolled at Ohio State University in 1967 and played for the Buckeyes basketball team from 1967 to 1971 over four seasons, ultimately earning a degree in education.[12] As a 6-foot-3 guard, he transitioned from forward in his sophomore and junior seasons to point guard as a senior, serving as a three-year starter and averaging 18.5 points and 7.3 rebounds per game over his college career.[4][3] His high school success at Linden McKinley, including a state championship, provided a strong foundation for his collegiate achievements.[5] Cleamons' leadership was particularly evident during his senior year in 1970-71, when he captained a young, sophomore-heavy Ohio State squad to a 20-6 overall record and the Big Ten Conference championship—the program's first outright title since 1960.[5][3] As the team's unanimous MVP and a first-team All-Big Ten selection, he averaged 17.4 points and 6.3 rebounds while contributing to a balanced offense that emphasized his playmaking from the guard position.[4][5] His defensive rebounding and transition scoring helped stabilize the team dynamics, allowing younger players like Luke Witte to thrive in the frontcourt. In notable performances that season, Cleamons scored 30 points in a key 91-75 victory over Indiana on March 9, 1971, outdueling future Hall of Famer George McGinnis and securing the Big Ten title. As Big Ten champions, the Buckeyes received a bye to the Mideast Regional semifinals of the NCAA Tournament, where they defeated Marquette 60-59 before falling 81-78 in overtime to Western Kentucky in the regional final.[3] These efforts underscored his role as a versatile leader who elevated team performance through scoring efficiency and rebounding prowess beyond his size.[4]Professional Playing Career
Draft and Los Angeles Lakers
Jim Cleamons was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers with the 13th overall pick in the first round of the 1971 NBA Draft. Following a distinguished college career at Ohio State, where he served as team captain and averaged 18.5 points per game in his senior year, Cleamons transitioned to the NBA as a backup point guard, positioned as a developmental heir to the aging Jerry West.[1][6] In his rookie 1971–72 season, Cleamons appeared in 38 games for the Lakers, logging limited minutes as the team pursued dominance. He averaged 5.3 minutes per game, contributing 2.6 points, 1.0 rebound, and 0.9 assists while shooting 35.0% from the field. As the only rookie on the roster, Cleamons experienced the Lakers' unprecedented 33-game winning streak—the longest in NBA history—and their franchise-record 69–13 regular-season mark, which showcased the team's depth and chemistry under coach Bill Sharman.[1][13] Cleamons played a supporting role in the Lakers' 1972 NBA Championship victory, their first title in Los Angeles, achieved by defeating the New York Knicks 4–1 in the Finals. Over the postseason, he appeared in 6 games, averaging 2.8 minutes, 1.3 points, 0.7 rebounds, and 0.7 assists per game, including brief stints in the Finals where he scored 4 points across 2 appearances. His modest contributions provided valuable bench depth during the playoff run, helping secure the championship amid a star-studded lineup featuring Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West, and Gail Goodrich.[14][15]Cleveland Cavaliers
On August 31, 1972, Jim Cleamons was traded from the Los Angeles Lakers to the Cleveland Cavaliers in exchange for a future draft pick, marking the beginning of his five-season tenure with the team from 1972 to 1977.[16] During his early years in Cleveland, Cleamons transitioned from a reserve role to a more prominent contributor, averaging 5.7 points, 2.1 rebounds, and 2.6 assists per game in the 1972-73 season while playing 17.4 minutes per contest.[1] His defensive instincts, honed from his rookie championship experience with the Lakers, began to solidify as he developed into a reliable point guard, gradually increasing his playing time and leadership responsibilities on a young Cavaliers squad.[6] Cleamons' performance peaked during the 1975-76 season, when he started all 82 games and earned selection to the NBA All-Defensive Second Team for his perimeter defense, including a team-leading 1.5 steals per game.[17] That year, he averaged career highs of 12.2 points, 4.3 rebounds, and 5.2 assists per game, leading the Cavaliers in assists with 428 total while facilitating the offense for teammates like Campy Russell and Jim Chones.[1] His growth as a floor general was evident in his improved decision-making and rebounding from the guard position, contributing to Cleveland's 49-33 record and first-ever playoff berth, as he matured into a vocal leader who emphasized team defense and ball movement.[15] In the 1976 playoffs, Cleamons played a pivotal role in the Cavaliers' "Miracle of Richfield" run, appearing in all 13 games with averages of 13.8 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 4.7 assists in 38.7 minutes per game.[1] He delivered a clutch reverse layup off a missed shot by Bingo Smith with one second remaining in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals against the Washington Bullets, securing a 92-91 victory that helped Cleveland advance to the Conference Finals against the Boston Celtics.[18] Despite the eventual 4-2 loss to Boston, Cleamons' steady play and defensive tenacity underscored his emergence as a cornerstone of the team's identity during this period.[6]New York Knicks and Washington Bullets
In October 1977, Jim Cleamons signed with the New York Knicks as a veteran free agent, with the Cleveland Cavaliers receiving Hall of Famer Walt Frazier as compensation in a sign-and-trade deal.[12][1] During his first season with the Knicks in 1977-78, Cleamons appeared in 79 games, averaging 25.4 minutes, 6.5 points, and 3.6 assists per game while providing steady backcourt depth.[1] His defensive skills, honed during his Cavaliers tenure, continued to contribute to New York's perimeter defense, helping the team secure a playoff spot.[1] The 1978 playoffs marked a highlight of Cleamons' Knicks tenure, as New York swept the Cavaliers 2-0 in the Eastern Conference First Round before falling 0-4 to the Philadelphia 76ers in the semifinals.[19][20] In six playoff games, Cleamons averaged 21.2 minutes, 5.7 points, and 3.8 assists, often serving as a reliable reserve guard in the Knicks' rotation.[1] The following year, 1978-79, saw Cleamons expand his role, playing all 79 games with averages of 30.3 minutes, 9.5 points, and a career-high 4.8 assists per game for New York, reflecting his growing importance as a playmaker despite the team's middling 38-44 record.[1] Early in the 1979-80 season, on December 4, 1979, Cleamons was traded to the Washington Bullets in exchange for a 1981 third-round draft pick, as the Knicks sought to reshape their backcourt.[1] With Washington, he appeared in 57 games, averaging 26.9 minutes, 7.8 points, and 4.4 assists, maintaining solid facilitation numbers amid a veteran-laden roster that reached the Eastern Conference Finals.[1] His scoring dipped slightly from the prior season, emblematic of a league-wide trend for aging guards, but his assist totals underscored his value as a floor general in limited starts.[1][21] Cleamons retired at age 31 following the 1979-80 season, influenced by diminishing playing time—down to 11.5 minutes per game in his final 22 contests with New York—and the physical toll of nearly a decade in the NBA, including the Bullets' demanding playoff push where he logged just 10 minutes across two games.[1] These final years with the Knicks and Bullets represented the wind-down of his nine-season career, transitioning from a rotational player on playoff contenders to a trade asset on contending squads, ultimately paving the way for his shift to coaching.[1]Coaching Career
College Coaching
After retiring from his professional playing career in 1980, Jim Cleamons transitioned to coaching, driven by his passion for teaching the fundamentals of basketball and sharing the lessons from his own collegiate experiences at Ohio State University, where he had developed a deep appreciation for the game's strategic and developmental aspects.[22] His return to college basketball allowed him to mentor young athletes, emphasizing discipline and teamwork—values he credited to his time as a Buckeye player.[23] Cleamons began this phase in 1982, viewing it as an opportunity to build programs from the ground up while staying connected to the sport that had provided him with an education and lifelong opportunities.[24] Cleamons' first coaching role was as an assistant at Furman University in 1982–83 under head coach Jene Davis.[12] The Paladins finished with a 9–20 overall record and 4–12 in the Southern Conference, placing seventh, amid a rebuilding effort that highlighted defensive challenges, as the team allowed 65.8 points per game.[25] In his one season, Cleamons contributed to player development and scouting, helping to lay groundwork for future improvements despite the program's modest resources and competitive conference standing.[26] From 1983 to 1987, Cleamons served as an assistant coach at his alma mater, Ohio State University, first under Eldon Miller (1983–86) and then Gary Williams (1986–87).[27] During this period, the Buckeyes achieved consistent success, posting records of 15–14 (1983–84), 20–10 (1984–85), 19–14 (1985–86), and 20–13 (1986–87), with Big Ten records of 8–10, 11–7, 8–10, and 9–9, and earning four postseason appearances: NIT berths in 1983–84 (first round) and 1985–86 (champions), and NCAA Tournament appearances in 1984–85 (second round) and 1986–87 (second round).[28] His responsibilities included working with guards, refining offensive strategies, and aiding in recruiting efforts that bolstered the team's depth, contributing to a stable program that emphasized balanced play and postseason contention in a competitive conference.[29] Cleamons' familiarity with Ohio State's culture, stemming from his playing days, helped foster continuity during the coaching transition.[30] In 1987, Cleamons advanced to his first head coaching position at Youngstown State University, succeeding the late Bill Dailey and inheriting a program in transition within the Ohio Valley Conference.[27] Over two seasons (1987–89), the Penguins compiled a 12–44 overall record, including 7–21 (2–12 OVC) in 1987–88 and 5–23 (independent) in 1988–89, reflecting challenges in a developing Division I program with limited facilities and recruiting reach.[7] Cleamons focused on instilling professional-level work ethic and fundamentals, recruiting local talent to build a foundation for competitiveness, though the teams struggled offensively (averaging 63.8 to 75.3 points per game) and faced tough non-conference schedules.[31] Despite the win total, his tenure emphasized long-term program stability, setting the stage for future growth before he departed for NBA opportunities.[32]NBA Head Coaching
Jim Cleamons served as head coach of the Dallas Mavericks from May 31, 1996, to December 4, 1997, compiling an overall record of 28 wins and 70 losses over 98 games.[8] In his first season during 1996–97, the Mavericks finished with a 24–58 record, placing fourth in the Midwest Division but missing the playoffs amid ongoing team struggles.[33] The following year, Cleamons led the team to a 4–12 start before his dismissal, contributing to the franchise's third consecutive season without playoff contention.[8] Cleamons' tenure was marked by significant challenges, including the implementation of the triangle offense—a system he had helped install during his prior assistant role with the Chicago Bulls—on a young, rebuilding roster featuring talents like Jason Kidd but hampered by injuries and inconsistency.[34] The Mavericks lost 12 of their final 13 games in 1997, exacerbating roster issues such as the mid-season ankle injury to forward Jim Jackson that sidelined him for the remainder of the campaign.[35] These factors, combined with the team's defensive inefficiencies and failure to gel offensively, led to his firing on December 4, 1997, after just 16 games into the 1997–98 season, making him the first NBA head coach dismissed that year.[36] Despite the poor win-loss outcomes, Cleamons sought to instill discipline and teamwork in the Mavericks' culture, drawing from his championship experience as a Bulls assistant to emphasize fundamentals and player development in a franchise transitioning from mediocrity.[37] His approach laid groundwork for future stability under subsequent leadership, though immediate results reflected the difficulties of coaching a roster in flux without substantial veteran support.[12] Cleamons did not hold any other NBA head coaching positions, including interim roles.[8]NBA Assistant Coaching
Cleamons began his NBA assistant coaching career with the Chicago Bulls, serving from the 1989-90 season through the 1995-96 season under head coach Phil Jackson.[38] During this period, he contributed to the implementation of the triangle offense and focused on player development, particularly helping Michael Jordan refine his balance between scoring and passing to enhance team leadership and overcome defensive challenges from opponents like the Detroit Pistons.[6] His efforts helped the Bulls secure NBA championships in 1991, 1992, 1993, and 1996, fostering a collaborative winning culture where players had ownership in strategies.[39] Cleamons' tenure was briefly interrupted by a head coaching stint with the Dallas Mavericks in 1996-97 before he returned to assistant roles.[38] Following his time with the Bulls, Cleamons joined the Los Angeles Lakers as an assistant coach under Jackson from 1999 to 2004 and again from 2006 to 2011.[40] In these roles, he emphasized defensive strategies, including man-to-man schemes with zone principles and formalized help defense to protect the paint and leverage team length, which addressed previous shortcomings exposed in playoff losses.[41] Cleamons also contributed to player development with Kobe Bryant, teaching him to maintain passion and intensity even without the ball, while promoting a team-oriented approach in the triangle offense.[42] These efforts supported five Lakers championships in 2000, 2001, 2002, 2009, and 2010, bringing Cleamons' total as an NBA assistant to nine titles and underscoring his influence on sustained winning cultures through Jackson's philosophies.[6] Beyond his championship tenures, Cleamons served as an assistant with the New Orleans Hornets from 2004 to 2006, where he continued applying offensive and defensive principles from his prior experience.[43] Later, he joined the Milwaukee Bucks as an assistant in 2013, focusing on veteran guidance before moving to the New York Knicks in 2014 under Derek Fisher, a Jackson protégé, through the 2015-16 season.[44][45] Across these roles, Cleamons' expertise in player development and defensive coordination remained central, drawing on his long collaboration with Jackson to build competitive team dynamics.[12]Personal Life
Family and Residences
Cleamons was born in Lincolnton, North Carolina, in 1949 to a family facing significant financial difficulties, where resources were carefully managed and he contributed by holding multiple jobs during his school years.[23] In 1957, when he was in the third grade, his family relocated to Columbus, Ohio, where he spent the remainder of his childhood and attended Linden-McKinley High School.[46][47] He grew up without a biological father but was supported by an aunt and uncle who acted as parental figures, a dynamic he later described positively as gaining additional family support rather than experiencing loss.[23] These early family circumstances profoundly shaped Cleamons' approach to basketball, as the sport became a pathway to securing a college scholarship and education, fulfilling expectations to maintain strong academic performance amid economic constraints.[23] Cleamons is married to Cheryl Cleamons, whom he has described as a decisive and capable partner.[48] The couple has two grown daughters, and their family life has been marked by frequent relocations tied to his professional basketball career, including stints in Los Angeles during his playing and coaching days with the Lakers, Cleveland with the Cavaliers, and New York with the Knicks.[47] Over the last 25 years alone, the family has moved more than a dozen times due to these career demands.[49] In 2020, Cleamons and his wife returned to his hometown of Columbus, Ohio, settling on the city's East Side after brief periods abroad.[11][47]Post-Coaching Activities
After concluding his NBA coaching tenure, Cleamons returned to his hometown of Columbus, Ohio, in 2020 following a stint as an NBA basketball ambassador in Africa and Australia during late 2019 and early 2020.[11] The move back to the city's East Side, after more than two decades in California, was driven by a desire to reconnect with family, friends, and the familiarity of home amid the winding down of his professional basketball career.[11] At age 71, Cleamons expressed no interest in full retirement, citing ample energy to remain active, and focused on informal coaching and community engagement with local youth, viewing basketball as a tool for broader life lessons rather than an end in itself.[11] In 2021, he contributed to basketball instruction by recording training videos at a Grove City gym for distribution to youth programs in Australia, building on prior camps he had led there and emphasizing practical applications of the sport.[50] Post-pandemic, his efforts centered on impacting young men in Columbus through basketball, including support for community initiatives like the Columbus Urban League's "My Brother’s Closet" program.[51][52] Cleamons took on a coaching role for the Ohio All-Stars in the 2022 Classic for Columbus, an HBCU College Basketball All-Star Game held at Nationwide Arena, where he guided a team of top Ohio college seniors against HBCU players.[51] He returned to coach the Ohio squad the following year at the event's second annual iteration at Ohio State's Schottenstein Center in 2023.[53] These appearances highlighted his ongoing commitment to fostering basketball talent and cross-cultural exchanges in his community.[51] Reflecting on his transition from NBA circles, Cleamons conveyed optimism about giving back locally while acknowledging disappointment over limited head-coaching opportunities despite his extensive experience, including nine championship rings as an assistant under Phil Jackson.[11] His speaking engagements often draw on these championship insights to motivate youth, as seen in featured profiles revisiting his nomadic coaching life now rooted in Columbus.[52] In 2024, he gave an interview reflecting on his experiences with former teammate Wilt Chamberlain.[54] As of 2024, Cleamons continues community-oriented basketball instruction without formal NBA affiliations.[51]Awards and Honors
Playing Achievements
Jim Cleamons was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers with the 13th overall pick in the first round of the 1971 NBA Draft, marking his entry into professional basketball after a standout college career at Ohio State University.[12] During his senior year at Ohio State in 1970–71, Cleamons earned first-team All-Big Ten honors and was awarded the Chicago Tribune Silver Basketball as the conference's most valuable player, leading the Buckeyes to the Big Ten championship with averages of 17.4 points per game.[4] These accolades highlighted his leadership as team captain and his defensive prowess, which transitioned seamlessly into the NBA. As a rookie with the Lakers in the 1971–72 season, Cleamons contributed to the team's NBA Championship victory, their first title in Los Angeles, by appearing in 38 regular-season games and providing depth during the playoffs against the New York Knicks in a seven-game series.[55] In the 1975–76 season with the Cleveland Cavaliers, Cleamons' defensive tenacity earned him a selection to the NBA All-Defensive Second Team, recognizing his role in the team's first playoff appearance where he averaged strong perimeter defense alongside key contributions in steals and assists.[56]Coaching Accomplishments
Jim Cleamons achieved significant success as an NBA assistant coach, contributing to nine championship teams under Phil Jackson. With the Chicago Bulls, he was part of the coaching staff for three consecutive NBA titles from 1991 to 1993, followed by another victory in 1996, during which the team set a then-record 72 regular-season wins.[12] Later, Cleamons joined Jackson with the Los Angeles Lakers, helping secure five more championships in 2000, 2001, 2002, 2009, and 2010, including two three-peats that solidified the Lakers' dynasty.[57][58] As Jackson's top assistant, Cleamons played a key role in implementing the triangle offense, a fluid system emphasizing spacing, ball movement, and player reads, which was central to the Bulls' and Lakers' dominance. He focused on player development within this scheme, ensuring stars adapted to its principles for optimal team play.[42] Cleamons also served as a primary mentor to elite talents, guiding Michael Jordan through high-stakes playoff runs and instilling discipline in Kobe Bryant, including lessons on maintaining intensity off the ball.[50] During his active coaching tenures, Cleamons received recognition for his defensive expertise and leadership on championship staffs, though no formal NBA Coach of the Year awards were bestowed upon him individually. His work contrasted with a brief head coaching stint in Dallas (1997–1998), where attempts to install the triangle offense yielded mixed results before his dismissal.[8]Hall of Fame Inductions
Jim Cleamons was inducted into the Ohio State University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1984, recognizing his outstanding contributions as a player for the Buckeyes as a three-year starter from 1968 to 1971, where he served as team captain and earned unanimous Big Ten MVP honors.[5] In 2008, Cleamons received induction into the Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame, honoring his multifaceted basketball career that spanned high school at Columbus Linden McKinley, college at Ohio State, and nine professional seasons in the NBA with teams including the Los Angeles Lakers and Cleveland Cavaliers.[3] Cleamons' high school achievements were acknowledged with his 2019 induction into the Ohio High School Athletic Association's Circle of Champions, highlighting his role in leading Linden McKinley to the 1967 OHSAA big-school state basketball championship as a senior.[59] In 2017, Cleamons was inducted into the Lincoln County Sports Hall of Fame in his birthplace of Lincolnton, North Carolina.[2]Playing Statistics
Regular Season
Jim Cleamons played 652 games over nine NBA seasons from 1971 to 1980, accumulating 5,412 points for an average of 8.3 points per game, 1,981 rebounds at 3.0 per game, 2,531 assists at 3.9 per game, and shooting 46.0% from the field.[1] His statistics varied by team, with the bulk of his production occurring during his five seasons with the Cleveland Cavaliers, where he served as a key playmaker and defender. The following table summarizes his regular season performance by franchise:| Team | Years | Games | Points (PPG) | Rebounds (RPG) | Assists (APG) | FG% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles Lakers | 1971–72 | 38 | 98 (2.6) | 39 (1.0) | 35 (0.9) | .350 |
| Cleveland Cavaliers | 1972–77 | 377 | 3,532 (9.4) | 1,353 (3.6) | 1,549 (4.1) | .458 |
| New York Knicks | 1977–80 | 180 | 1,338 (7.4) | 457 (2.5) | 699 (3.9) | .475 |
| Washington Bullets | 1979–80 | 57 | 444 (7.8) | 132 (2.3) | 248 (4.4) | .483 |
| Career Totals | 652 | 5,412 (8.3) | 1,981 (3.0) | 2,531 (3.9) | .460 |
Playoffs
Cleamons made four playoff appearances during his NBA playing career, contributing to the Los Angeles Lakers' 1972 NBA championship as a rookie while also suiting up for the Cleveland Cavaliers in 1976, the New York Knicks in 1978, and the Washington Bullets in 1980.[1] Over 27 total playoff games, Cleamons accumulated 221 points, 89 rebounds, and 89 assists, averaging 8.2 points, 3.3 rebounds, and 3.3 assists per game—figures comparable to his regular-season career averages of 8.3 points and 3.9 assists.[1] In the 1972 NBA Finals, where the Lakers defeated the New York Knicks in five games to claim the title, the rookie Cleamons appeared in two games off the bench, scoring 2.0 points per game with 1.0 rebound and 1.0 assist, including a fast-break layup in garbage time during Game 5's 114-100 clincher.[1][62] Cleamons' most prominent postseason role came in 1976 with the Cavaliers, who reached the Eastern Conference Finals after upsetting the Washington Bullets in the "Miracle of Richfield" semifinals; he started all 13 games, averaging 13.8 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 4.7 assists while forcing a crucial turnover in Game 7 that set up the game-winning shot in a 94-91 victory.[1][18] His other appearances were more limited: in 1978, after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round, the Knicks lost to the Philadelphia 76ers in the Eastern Conference Semifinals, with Cleamons averaging 5.7 points and 3.8 assists over six games; in 1980, he played just two games for the Bullets in their Eastern Conference First Round loss to the Philadelphia 76ers.[1]| Season | Team | Games | MPG | PPG | RPG | APG | FG% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1971-72 | LAL | 6 | 2.8 | 1.3 | 0.7 | 0.7 | .571 |
| 1975-76 | CLE | 13 | 38.7 | 13.8 | 5.5 | 4.7 | .397 |
| 1977-78 | NYK | 6 | 21.2 | 5.7 | 2.2 | 3.8 | .389 |
| 1979-80 | WSB | 2 | 10.0 | 0.0 | 0.5 | 0.5 | .000 |
| Career | - | 27 | 24.7 | 8.2 | 3.3 | 3.3 | .285 |