The Miami Heat have a ‘too many guys’ problem - Sport News

The Miami Heat have a ‘too many guys’ problem

The Miami Heat are deeper than they were last season. Nobody doubts that. But what is becoming a question is whether that’s a strength or an obstacle.

When healthy, the Heat have 11 players with a sensible claim to rotation minutes: Jimmy Butler, Bam Adebayo, Tyler Herro, Caleb Martin, Nikola Jovic, Kyle Lowry, Duncan Robinson, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Haywood Highsmith, Kevin Love and Josh Richardson.

And though the Heat haven’t been healthy all season (even now Jaquez is out with a groin strain, with no timetable for a return) this is the closest Miami’s roster has been to complete.

But the Heat are 1-4 since Butler returned from a right foot injury last week, including Sunday’s loss to the Orlando Magic that marked the Heat’s first three-game losing streak since November.

“This is literally one week after we felt that our season was starting to turn,” Spoelstra said. “Jimmy’s coming back, feeling like we’re getting healthy, we’re seven games above .500. This happens in the league and it’s all about how you respond to it.”

Because of the injuries, much has changed with Miami’s rotation over the course of the season. The Heat have used 23 different starting lineups in their first 43 games and don’t have a single five-man group that has cracked 80 minutes together.

The latest iteration of the starting lineup is Herro, Martin, Butler, Jovic and Adebayo as Spoelstra has notably moved Lowry to the bench for the last two games.

Lowry has made it clear through the media that he’s disappointed in the decision, but he also hasn’t been playing well. Lowry, 37, ranks last among starting point guards in points, shot attempts and assists.

The new starting lineup offers a higher ceiling on offense, where the Heat rank in the bottom 10 in efficiency this season.

But even with Miami’s top three scorers playing together for just the 12th game this season, the Heat could only muster 87 points against the Magic on Sunday. The Heat have failed to score 100 points in four of their last six games.

“I feel like we just get stagnant,” Adebayo said. “We got guys coming back, we’ve had guys in and out of the lineup, we’ve had I don’t know how many different lineups. But the biggest thing for us is we’re in a rough patch right now and we got to dig our way out of it.”

Spoelstra was quick to dismiss the changing roles of his players as a reason for his team’s struggles (“That’s not an excuse”), but players after Sunday’s loss acknowledged the team’s injuries – and now the overall health – as a factor.

“Coach gotta make difficult decisions,” Adebayo said. “Getting guys in and out, trying to figure out a rotation where everybody can be happy, and it’s difficult right now.”

That word – “happy” – stands out.

Added Lowry: “I think that’s part of it. We haven’t had a full slate of players for a while, we’ve had [a lot] of lineups and adjustments so it’s one of those things where guys are finally getting back and we gotta try to get a rhythm.”

Lowry is the latest Heat player to see his role change dramatically, but there have been concerns about role and minutes for several players this season.

When Herro missed a long stretch of the season with an ankle injury, some questioned if he should return to the starting lineup or come off the bench behind the surging Robinson.

And what about Jovic, who before starting the last 10 games wasn’t even in the rotation?

The Heat have cycled through different power forwards all season, including Love, Highsmith and Jovic. The same can be said about the backup center job, which has changed hands from Thomas Bryant and Orlando Robinson before the team seemingly settled with Love.

Lowry is just the latest player to sacrifice his role, but there’s another tough decision looming when Jaquez returns.

If the Heat suffer no other injuries between now and then, Spoelstra will have to cut someone out of the rotation altogether. Richardson and Highsmith appear to be most at risk of losing their minutes, but a case could be made for another change to the starting lineup that would move Jovic back to the bench.

The trade deadline may offer a reprieve. The Heat need a consolidation trade. Not only to clear up the rotational logjam, but also to upgrade the roster’s top-end talent.

Spoelstra can use 10-11 players on a regular-season night, but rotation shortens in the playoffs. Who are Spoelstra’s best eight players? Who can he trust in crunch time in April, May and June?

These questions, too, are looming.

Related Posts

Grizzlies analyst: Trading ex-Boston Celtics DPOY Marcus Smart for Knicks star ‘worth strongly considering’

Evidently, Mаrcus Smаrt doesn’t meаn neаrly аs mucһ to tһe Mempһis Grizzlies fаnbаse аs һe did to Boston Celtics fаnаtics wһose һeаrts were broken wһen tһe former…

Celtics star dishes on trash talk with former teammate in Hornets win

Tһe Celtics ɡot аn eаsy win over tһe Hornets on Mondаy niɡһt in Cһаrlotte wһile аlso seeinɡ а fаmiliаr fаce. Old friend Grаnt Williаms plаyed one of…

Former rival expects LeBron James to retire by 2025

If а first-time viewer were to tune into а Lаkers ɡаme, tһey’d probаbly tһink LeBron Jаmes is still аn аtһlete in һis prime. And nobody would blink…

LeBron James Sends Strong Message on Retirement Following 40-Point Game

Los Anɡeles Lаkers stаr LeBron Jаmes һаs sһown few siɡns of slowinɡ down, even in һis 21st NBA seаson, but һe cаn feel tһe end drаwinɡ neаr….

ESPN analyst gives bogus reason for why Knicks’ Jalen Brunson doesn’t get foul calls

New York Knicks point ɡuаrd Jаlen Brunson is six-foot-two. He аverаɡes 4.2 field ɡoаl аttempts per ɡаme less tһаn five feet from tһe ɡoаl аnd sһoots 56.9%…

4 takeaways as Celtics beat Hornets, almost clinch NBA-best record

Tһe Celtics will come һome аfter а seаson-lonɡ six-ɡаme roаd trip witһ а 4-2 record. Tһe C’s beаt tһe Hornets 118-104 on Mondаy in Cһаrlotte аfter pullinɡ…