The Heat were hoping to make their series against the top-seeded Cavaliers competitive after a close call Wednesday at Cleveland. Instead, they suffered the worst playoff loss in franchise history on Saturday and are staring at a likely insurmountable 3-0 deficit, writes Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald.
Miami built an early 15-6 lead, but things fell apart quickly as the Cavs strung together a 33-5 run to put the game out of reach. The lead got up to 40 points in the second half as Miami fans expressed their displeasure with the effort.
“Once we jumped on them at the start of the game, then they just took control of it from there and it became an avalanche going the other direction,” coach Erik Spoelstra said. “And sometimes when you care, there’s a level of discouragement that kind of fed into that avalanche and that’s what we all feel disappointed about.”
The Cavaliers dominated the game near the basket, registering 11 dunks and outscoring Miami 60-30 in the paint. Cleveland also collected 13 offensive rebounds while building a 22-10 advantage in second-chance points and had a 21-11 edge in points off turnovers.
“I know how much everybody cares,” Spoelstra added. “We just laid an egg today. A big part of it was Cleveland.”
There’s more from Miami:
- Davion Mitchell replaced Alec Burks in the starting lineup for Game 2, and Spoelstra went with the same approach on Saturday, Chiang adds. The starting five kept the game even during their 13 minutes together, but Miami was outscored by 37 points otherwise. Chiang notes that Cleveland was relentless in its attack on rookie center Kel’el Ware, who is minus-24 in 57 minutes so far in the series. “I understand he’s being fed through a fire hose,” Spoelstra said. “… We’re coaching him hard and I feel for him because there’s an expectation that he has to be there like a vet. These are important learning experiences.”
- In an interview with Jared Weiss of The Athletic, Tyler Herro speculates that Miami’s season would have turned out much better if Jimmy Butler hadn’t forced a trade. Butler, who played just 25 games with the Heat this season before being dealt to Golden State in February, provided Herro with a complementary offensive weapon. “Obviously, I know I need Jimmy to win. If we had Jimmy right now, I feel like it’d be a completely different situation,” Herro said. “We probably wouldn’t even be the eighth seed. So finding that middle balance of like, damn, we need him, but also understanding, sh–, that’s his career and what he wants is ultimately his right to want what he wants. It was just tough to be in the middle of both sides.”
- Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson commented on this week’s war of words between Herro and Darius Garland, Weiss tweets. “I don’t control what they say at all,” Atkinson said. “… Tyler is a great player, he’s an All-Star. Great competitor on both ends, much like Darius. It’s like the playground, you got someone you’re going at at both ends and there’s some verbal stuff that’s overblown. But once the ball goes up, none of it matters.”
The Miami Heat are a bad team. Like, literally, they are not a good team and they should not be in the playoffs. They are literally a 37-45 team, of course they are going to get cooked in the playoffs. NBA should refuse all under .500 teams in the playoffs and just make the other rounds longer.
Miami isn’t even a real playoff team, as they traded away the player responsible for getting them here.
But Andrew Wiggins?
It’s the east…
They wouldn’t of been a playoff team in the west WITH Butler…
I’m not a Heat fan, so I’ll ask those who are: is Herro refusing to take accountability a normal thing, or has he just managed to do it a lot in the last few days?
He’s a good player, but the combination of picking a fight with Garland when you’d been somewhat of a defensive liability and pretty much blaming Butler for their current situation isn’t really a good look, and it makes him come off as a sore loser.
He might be slightly onto something because I don’t exactly think Butler handled the situation well, but they managed to get back contributors (like Mitchell) who have helped them in this series. The easy response would just be to forget about anyone not in your locker room and to focus on playing better.