MIAMI — In a perfect world for the Miami Heat, the NBA trading deadline would come a week later, allowing them to truly take stock.
Because the first three games for Erik Spoelstra’s team after Thursday’s deadline are against the Boston Celtics, Milwaukee Bucks and Philadelphia 76ers.
But Thursday at 3 p.m. it is, the final opportunity for a bigger swing than the trade for Terry Rozier.
A case could be made for desperation, with another postseason entry through the play-in round staring the Heat in the face, in light of what looms above with the Celtics, Bucks, Knicks, 76ers, Cavaliers and Pacers (the top six seeds advance directly to the best-of-seven opening round).
Yes, injuries still could change the calculus should Julius Randle’s shoulder or Joel Embiid’s knee sidetrack the Knicks and 76ers, respectively.
But then consider that the Cavaliers successfully withstood the absences of Darius Garland and Evan Mobley, as did the Pacers with the absence of Tyrese Haliburton. That’s what good teams do.
So for as much as already has been made about the Heat, and particularly Jimmy Butler, slow playing the regular season, the Heat may wind up slow playing the rest of the regular season, as well, preparing for that all-or-nothing week between the end of the regular season and start of the playoffs.
In the neighborhood that is play-in land, the Heat should be well positioned against the potential likes of the Atlanta Hawks, Chicago Bulls and Orlando Magic (although beware the Banchero).
But wind up with the final ticket to the playoffs as the No. 8 seed and you almost assuredly wind up with the Celtics in the first round. And as daunting as the Bucks might have been as a first-round opponent last season for the Heat, this season’s Celtics are at a whole other level with the additions of Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday.
So middle of the pack it likely will be, the seven-game losing streak seemingly quashing Heat visions of a top-four seed and homecourt in the first round, but possibilities strong enough to summarily dismiss any tank talk (if even possible with this season’s second tier in the Eastern Conference).
That could make this year’s trading deadline for the Heat the same as last year’s deadline considering the similar situations, essentially much ado about nothing.
But it also should make this month similar to last February, when the Heat nonetheless bolstered, albeit through the buyout market.
Yes, new limitations are in place in the collective-bargaining agreement that will preclude a star search on the buyout market. But that doesn’t prevent the type of subtle additions that could make a difference in a playoff (and play-in) run, similar to what the Heat did last February in adding Kevin Love and Cody Zeller.
In the power rotation, the Heat need a functional facsimile of what Dewayne Dedmon at one point provided for them. There has to be something bigger in reserve in the power rotation, if only to take fouls against opposing bigger big men.
And on the wing, a defensive pest to at least try to contain and perhaps even slow down opposing speed guards.
But what you can’t do is spend the first half of the season noting the 25 lineups, the 16 different starters, the extended absences of core pieces, the shifting landscape with Rozier, and then go ahead and blow it up without an extended read.
That is what these final two months of the season should be, an extended runway to the postseason for the players, an extended workshop in the laboratory for Spoelstra.
There are enough pieces in place to challenge anyone in the East this side of Boston (Super Bowl Sunday against the Celtics might not be a national showcase in the Heat’s best interest).
And, frankly, it also means enough time to see if it doesn’t work, as was the case with the 2021 playoff crash-and-burn in being swept out in the first round by the Bucks.
As Spoelstra noted after Wednesday night’s victory over the Kings, the Heat have shown they can be good enough to win seven in a row, shaky enough to lose seven in a row.
In the playoffs, that becomes moot, when the target number to advance is four wins. As the Heat did in the first three rounds last season against the Bucks, Knicks and Celtics.
At the start of last season’s playoff run, Spoelstra spoke of how it almost was his 2022-23 team’s destiny to do it the hard way out of the play-in round.
It is looking as if that could be the path again.
It also looks as if this group deserves the chance to see if it is capable of bigger and better, rather than some sort of Hail Mary at the trading deadline.
IN THE LANE
NO UMBRAGE TAKEN: In attempting to praise what he has joined, based on the Heat’s lineage of success, Terry Rozier noted this past week of his trade from the Charlotte Hornets, “It’s the total opposite. When you’re in Charlotte, you’re kind of used to losing. It’s kind of your DNA. Over here, it’s the total opposite. No one wants to lose. No one is fine with it.” Social media, of course, jumped all over it. But here’s the thing – the Hornets didn’t. “I interpreted that as I think he was more talking about the pressure to win in Miami than there was here,” Hornets coach Steve Clifford told the Charlotte Observer. “I think he just made a statement. I love Terry, everybody loves Terry. Terry loves our guys. I just think sometimes things get taken. He made a statement. I don’t think it’s any big deal.” Hornets forward Miles Bridges did not see Rozier’s comment as out of line or insulting. “I mean, he’s not wrong,” Bridges said. “I’m not saying we’ve got losing DNA, but the way that we’ve been taking losses and . . . I wouldn’t say we are getting used to it, but it’s like we are just moving on. We are not really taking it that serious. We’ve got to take it serious, man.”
BATTLE OF ATTRITION?: With absences in 18 or more games making players ineligible for postseason awards under a rule adopted this season, some have pointed to Heat center Bam Adebayo being on the precipice of being ineligible, having already missed 10 games. (That number actually is 11 according to the rule, because Adebayo played only 12 minutes in another game, which, under the rule counts as not having played.) But with Adebayo eligible for a supermax extension this offseason if he is named to one of the three All-NBA teams, he actually could benefit from the limitation if he stays healthy and others also on the precipice become ineligible. That particularly could become a factor with All-NBA teams starting this season no longer position-specific, merely a vote for the league’s top 15 players. In danger of becoming ineligible (with missed games as of Feb. 1) are Jamal Murray (14), Kristaps Porzingis (14), Tyrese Haliburton (13), Jimmy Butler (13), Joel Embiid (13) and Lauri Markkanen (10). Already ineligible are Darius Garland (24), Bradley Beal (24) and Kyrie Irving (20).
ON THE MOVE: Victor Oladipo has not played a game since tearing the patellar tendon in his left knee on April 23 in a Heat playoff victory over the Milwaukee Bucks. Nonetheless, since then, he has been traded three times, the latest move from the Houston Rockets to the Memphis Grizzlies, reduced at this point to an accounting entry with his $9.5 million 2023-24 salary. To recap: The Heat sent Oladipo and two second-round picks to the Oklahoma City Thunder on July 6, in a move to save against the luxury tax. Oladipo then was dealt from the Thunder to the Rockets as part of the machinations to allow Houston to offload the contract of troubled guard Kevin Porter Jr. Now comes the trade to the Grizzlies, with sidelined center Steven Adams going to Houston. The next step for Oladipo, 31, will be the Grizzlies either offering a buyout or simply allowing Oladipo’s contract to expire without putting him in uniform. The Heat initially acquired Oladipo from the Rockets in March 2021 at the cost of Kelly Olynyk and Avery Bradley.
RECENCY AND RIO: With Heat championship point guard Mario Chalmers a guest on The OGs podcast that retired Heat icon Udonis Haslem hosts with former University of Florida and Heat teammate Mike Miller, Chalmers staked his claim as the top 3-point shooter in Heat history. Haslem clapped back with his top five, in order, of Duncan Robinson, Miller, Ray Allen, Tyler Herro and James Jones. Asked by Haslem which of those he could possibly outshoot, Chalmers, who had fancied himself as one of the league’s top point guards during his Heat tenure, replied, “I’ll outshoot all of them.” As it is, Chalmers is not in the Heat all-time Top 10 in 3-point percentage, but does rank sixth in 3-pointers made, behind Robinson, Tim Hardaway, Eddie Jones, Glen Rice and Herro. Still, when it comes to Heat all-time 3-point shooters, with all due respect to Haslem, Rice has to be on that list, with consideration, as well, for Jason Kapono, Wayne Ellington, Hardaway, perhaps even Voshon Lenard.
NUMBER
5th. Bam Adebayo‘s standing on both the Heat’s all-time scoring and all-time rebounding lists. Already fifth in rebounds, Adebayo passed Chris Bosh for fifth on the Heat scoring list with his fourth point in Wednesday night’s victory over the Sacramento Kings. Ahead of Adebayo on the Heat scoring list in order are Dwyane Wade, Alonzo Mourning, Glen Rice and LeBron James. Ahead of Adebayo on the Heat rebounding list are Udonis Haslem, Mourning, Rony Seikaly and Wade.