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Kyrie Irving celebrates 10-year anniversary of Cavaliers championship, silences rumors about tension

Photo by David Berding/Getty Images
Photo by David Berding/Getty Images
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Kyrie Irving chose the 10-year anniversary of Cleveland’s 2016 title to remind everyone how he views that Cavaliers group.

His absence from the reunion trip had become a talking point.

His message made the bigger picture clear.

Kyrie Irving cools Cavaliers reunion tension

Irving marked the anniversary through his post, sharing a message that sounded like a direct answer to any idea of personal acrimony around the 2016 champions.

“All for one. One for All. WE completed the mission together as brothers, and that’s all that matters to me.”

Fans had been questioning why Irving was not part of the Cavaliers’ current 10-year reunion trip, with LeBron James, Richard Jefferson, Channing Frye, Iman Shumpert, J.R. Smith, Matthew Dellavedova, Kevin Love, and others gathering around a golf retreat.

The noise grew after Smith appeared to suggest Irving had been invited and had ghosted the group. Later reporting claimed Irving never RSVPed because he was handling family matters, which softened the idea that his absence was rooted in a broken relationship.

Irving’s caption matters because it did not read like damage control. It read like a player separating the championship bond from every later rumor, trade request, or public misunderstanding.

The Cavaliers’ 2016 title remains the greatest shared achievement of that group. Irving made sure his anniversary message pointed back to that, not to who was photographed on the course.

Kyrie Irving’s stats explain his Cavaliers championship voice

Irving’s place in the story is impossible to reduce to a missed reunion.

Cleveland Cavaliers v Detroit Pistons Game Four
Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

During the 2015-16 regular season, he averaged 19.6 points, 4.7 assists, and 3.0 rebounds in 53 games while working his way back into rhythm after injury.

In the playoffs, he jumped to 25.2 points, 4.7 assists, and 3.0 rebounds, shooting 47.5 percent from the field and 44 percent from three across 21 games.

The Finals made him a permanent figure in Cleveland’s history. Irving averaged 27.1 points, 3.9 assists, and 3.9 rebounds against the 73-win Warriors, then hit the go-ahead three over Stephen Curry in Game 7.

That shot is why fans care so much about his place in the reunion. It is also why his words carry more power than his absence.

By calling the team brothers and saying the mission was completed together, Irving quieted the harshest reading of the situation. He was not at the retreat, but he still sounded firmly tied to the group that changed Cleveland forever.