The finals loss for the Cavaliers is inevitable even if both teams are fully healthy—yes, that means Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love both being health-serviceable—and it's simply by virtue of HCA for the Warriors.
Even if the Cavaliers extrapolate their current record (yeah, because all their opponents will be that much of a cakewalk.
), there is a good chance that the Warriors will re-clinch playoffs-wide HCA again at this rate—especially since they've started their 10-0 season with much more impressive competition than the Cavaliers, despite how Steve Kerr has only been able to play a backseat hand at coaching so far. The Cavaliers are poised to skid for the better portion of the season now that their schedule has already whittled out a chunk of their gimme wins—much of them being against non-playoff Eastern Conference teams.
With HCA, there is no way the Warriors will lose a 7-game series, as they will have a same amount of home games in the series as is required to win it, and they are the best home-court team in the NBA; one of the only two anomalies was against the Cavaliers in Game 2, but it took Stephen Curry the worst performance of his career for them to narrowly win, and there won't be any encore to that chokejob now that he's abated his first-time jitters and looks more confident than ever in his shot.
I don't even consider the Cavaliers the best team in the Eastern Conference; their record may suggest so, but they've looked beatable enough against the lowly 76ers and Knicks. The Bulls' won their season-opener against the Cavaliers, and their win against the Oklahoma City thunder was
far more impressive than anything the Cavaliers have done so far.
The Warriors have a more NBA-acquainted and collectively experienced coaching staff, the best player in the game in Stephen Curry, and more depth in general—unbeatable to virtually any team in the NBA, and the Cavaliers are far from the most well-equipped team to challenge them.