Patty Mills‘ debut with the Heat on Friday night looked familiar to coach Erik Spoelstra, writes Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. Mills provided the jolt of instant offense that Miami was looking for, coming off the bench to score 13 points in 16 minutes while shooting 5-of-7 from the field and 3-of-4 from beyond the arc. It was similar to the performances he used to deliver for the Spurs when they faced Miami in the 2013 and 2014 NBA Finals.
“That was great to see him finally do it in a Heat uniform instead of against us,” Spoelstra said. “We’ve seen that for too many years. You can see why he’s been able to do what he does. He’s ignitable, he’s smart, he’s been in a lot of very good systems so he knows how to fit even though he hasn’t had a practice.”
Mills matched his highest-scoring game of the season, as he was seeing limited playing time with Atlanta before being waived last week. There’s no guarantee that Mills will get regular minutes with the Heat once the roster is healthier, but his new teammates are aware of how he can help them.
“We all know what he can do,” Jimmy Butler said. “We all know what he’s going to bring to this team. I think that he’s a winner. He knows how to play the game of basketball. He has a very, very, very high IQ and he just wants to help in any way that he can.”
There’s more from Miami:
- Tyler Herro and Kevin Love have already been ruled out for Sunday’s game against Washington, Chiang adds. Herro will sit out his eighth straight game with medial tendinitis in his right foot, while Love will miss his sixth in a row due to a bruised right heel. Chiang notes that Spoelstra has typically alternated between Orlando Robinson and Thomas Bryant at backup center when Love is unavailable, but neither of them played Friday in Oklahoma City as those minutes went to Nikola Jovic.
- Heat players are cautioning against a letdown as they enter a soft spot in the schedule, Chiang states in a separate story. Locked in a tight race to avoid the play-in tournament, Miami will face 10-win teams in three of its next four games, hosting the Wizards tomorrow and traveling to Detroit for games on March 15 and 17. “Like every other game, with a sense of urgency,” Bam Adebayo responded when asked about the team’s approach. “So for us, it’s just having that same sense of urgency as if we were playing anybody else.”
- Caleb Martin will likely need surgery this summer for a sprained thumb on his non-shooting hand, but he tells Chiang that he’ll continue to play through the pain for the rest of the season.
5-star Karter Knox (Overtime Elite), younger brother of Kevin Knox, has narrowed his choices to South Florida, Kentucky, Louisville and G-League Ignite. He is gonna announce tomorrow. He is gonna follow the path of his big brother and head to Kentucky.
Karter’ s compensation will be north of $600k.
The difference between a 5-star and a mid-major?? For those of you following Indiana State and Robbie Avila, who is now known as “Cream Abdul Jabbar”, is getting $30k and a local dealership in Terre Haute is letting him drive around a Chevy Blazer. The entire amount of revenue generated in the NIL fund at Indiana State to pay ALL their athletes is $200k. Needless to say …. Indiana State has pretty much no shot at keeping him out of the Portal and transferring. Gonna get more money elsewhere.
UK gonna put 5 guards in the 1st rd & still have a 25W team full of NBA talent next season, that’s crazy
Nah that’s just an indictment of the NCAA…
What is crazy is how long it has taken the NBA to fix the pathways to the NBA…
He’ll transfer and then sit 2 years. At best he’ll come off the bench for a higher profile program. His best bet is to work on his game at Indiana State until he has a truly dominant senior season. His rebounding is less than convincing for a big man. His passing is better but could get better. Any career after college will probably be overseas. Unless he starts playing like the real Kareem.