Heat Rumors

Markieff Morris Fined $25K For Violating League Rules

The NBA, which has doled out a number of fines during this postseason, added Markieff Morris to that list on Thursday.

The Heat forward has been docked $25K for interfering with live game play while on the bench, in violation of league rules, according to a press release. Morris’ infraction occurred during Game 5, when Miami closed out its series against Atlanta.

Morris, who was not in the game at the time, grabbed and held Hawks guard De’Andre Hunter out of bounds, which prevented Hunter from completely reestablishing himself inbounds as he caught a pass from a teammate. Morris received an unsportsmanlike technical foul for his actions, which occurred during the third quarter.

Earlier in the day, the league fined Jimmy Butler and the Heat organization $15K apiece. Butler made an obscene gesture, which the Heat posted on social media.

Morris was fined $50K for a dust-up with Denver’s Nikola Jokic in November.

Heat, Jimmy Butler Fined $15K Apiece By NBA

All-Star forward Jimmy Butler has been fined $15K for making an obscene gesture and the Heat organization was also fined $15K for posting Butler’s act on social media, the NBA announced (via Twitter).

The incident occurred on the bench in the second quarter of Miami’s Game 5 victory over Atlanta on Tuesday (video link). Butler was sidelined for the contest with right knee inflammation.

The Heat closed out their first-round series in five games despite missing Butler and point guard Kyle Lowry (left hamstring strain). The team is hopeful both players will be available for the second-round matchup against either Philadelphia or Toronto, which will start next Monday.

Butler had another strong regular season for Miami, averaging 21.4 points, 5.9 rebounds, 5.5 assists and 1.6 steals on .480/.233/.870 shooting in 57 games.

After leading the Heat to the Finals in 2019/20 with several brilliant performances, the 32-year-old struggled mightily in last year’s first-round sweep at the hands of the Bucks, posting averages of 14.5 points, 7.5 rebounds, 7.0 assists and 1.3 steals on .297/.267/.727 shooting.

However, Butler was outstanding in Miami’s series win over Atlanta, averaging 30.5 points, 7.8 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 2.8 steals on .543/.438/.794 shooting in four games. The Heat will need more strong play from the six-time All-Star in order to make another deep postseason run.

Heat Notes: Series Win, Butler, Lowry, Oladipo, Robinson

Despite missing Jimmy Butler and Kyle Lowry, the Heat closed out their first-round series on Tuesday, defeating the Hawks and securing a spot in the Eastern Conference Semifinals. They’ll face either Philadelphia or Toronto in the second round.

As Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald writes, the story of the first-round win was Miami’s defense simply performing better than Atlanta’s high-octane offense. After averaging 28.4 points per game on 46.0% shooting during the regular season, Trae Young put up just 15.4 PPG on 31.9% shooting in five playoff games vs. the Heat. Young, who made 22 field goals and had 30 assists in the series while turning the ball over 30 times, couldn’t seem to get going no matter who was defending him.

“They’re a good defensive team,” Young said, per Chiang. “Their team is more of a system than who they have on their team, and no matter who they have out there, they can play. It’s about their system. Their defensive system is all about helping.”

Here’s more on the Heat:

  • Miami’s second-round series won’t begin until next Monday, so Butler (right knee inflammation) and Lowry (left hamstring strain) will have a few days to try to get ready for Game 1. The hope is that both will be available, according to Chiang. “The next couple days while we just watch what’s going on, I just want everybody living in the training room,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said after Tuesday’s win. “Go back to our cave, bandage up, hopefully get healthy and then see what happens in that series. But definitely the guys have earned a couple days of just quality rest and treatment.”
  • Following the Heat’s Game 4 win, Butler and Victor Oladipo both laughed off a Skip Bayless claim that Butler hates playing with Oladipo (Twitter links via Brady Hawk of 5 Reasons Sports and Chiang). “I’m always the bad guy,” Butler said. “That’s okay. Bad guys are welcome here in the Miami Heat organization. … I love my guys.” Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald referred to the rumor as “baseless” (Twitter link).
  • Oladipo’s recent emergence has further diminished Duncan Robinson‘s role and raised more questions about Robinson’s future in Miami, writes John Hollinger of The Athletic. Hollinger published his article prior to Game 5, but Tuesday’s performances only strengthened his thesis — Oladipo had 23 points, while Robinson went scoreless on 0-of-5 shooting in 13 minutes.

Jimmy Butler Ruled Out For Game 5

5:39pm: Butler is considered day-to-day, according to Dave McMenamin of ESPN and Marc J. Spears of Andscape, who hear from a team source that the swingman felt soreness in his knee when he woke up on Tuesday.

Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald reports that there is no testing scheduled for Butler’s knee. Chiang adds that Oladipo is set to start in Butler’s stead tonight against Atlanta.


2:58pm: Already missing Kyle Lowry for Game 5 of their series vs. the Hawks on Tuesday, the Heat have announced (via Twitter) that they’ll also be without their other six-time All-Star, Jimmy Butler.

Butler, who hadn’t previously been listed on the injury report, has been ruled out due to right knee inflammation.

Butler has been the Heat’s best player through the first four games of the playoffs, averaging 30.5 PPG, 7.8 RPG, 5.3 APG, and 2.8 SPG on .543/.438/.794 shooting in 37.3 minutes per contest.

Having opened the series with Victor Oladipo and Markieff Morris both out of the rotation, Miami will have to lean more on its depth with two starters unavailable, relying on a handful of players – including Tyler Herro, Bam Adebayo, Max Strus, Gabe Vincent, Duncan Robinson, and Oladipo – to attempt to replace Butler’s scoring and play-making.

The Heat hold a 3-1 lead over the Hawks, so they have a little margin for error, but things would start to get uncomfortable if they had to travel back to Atlanta for Game 6, especially if there are no guarantees that Butler and/or Lowry would be ready to play on Thursday.

Heat’s Kyle Lowry Out For Game 5

Heat point guard Kyle Lowry will miss a second consecutive game due to his left hamstring strain, according to Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press (Twitter link). The team has ruled out Lowry for Game 5 in Miami on Tuesday.

Lowry, who injured his hamstring in Game 3, also sat out Game 4 on Sunday, but the Heat didn’t miss a beat without him. Gabe Vincent stepped into the starting five in Lowry’s place, while Victor Oladipo entered the rotation. Neither player had a huge game, but Vincent was a plus-19 and Oladipo was a plus-28 in Miami’s 110-86 victory over Atlanta. They’ll likely continue to play key roles as long as Lowry remains on the shelf.

As Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald notes (via Twitter), Lowry’s hamstring strain is the sort of injury that would sideline him for at least a week – if not more – during the regular season. While the 36-year-old would certainly love to be back as soon as possible, the Heat won’t rush him back now that they have a 3-1 series lead over the Hawks.

The Heat have also listed P.J. Tucker (calf) and Caleb Martin (ankle) as questionable for Tuesday’s game, tweets Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel.

Heat’s Kyle Lowry To Miss Game 4

Heat star Kyle Lowry will miss Game 4 of the team’s first-round series against the Hawks on Sunday due to his left hamstring strain, according to Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel (Twitter link). Lowry suffered the injury in Game 3 on Friday and was ruled out for the rest of the game entering the fourth quarter.

“The training staff determined he wasn’t going to be able to play tonight,” head coach Erik Spoelstra said, as relayed by Winderman.

Lowry received around-the-clock treatment and had hoped to play. His status for Game 5 on Tuesday is still unclear.

Without Lowry, the Heat lost the fourth quarter 34-25 in Game 3. His defense and passing have been important for the team, though his scoring production has been modest through three games. He’s averaged 8.3 points in 29.7 minutes, shooting 35% overall.

Miami is shallow at point guard, meaning Tyler Herro, Jimmy Butler and Bam Adebayo will likely take on more ball-handling and play-making responsibilities. The team also has backup point guard Gabe Vincent available and could turn to Victor Oladipo, who only appeared in eight games during the regular season and has yet to play in the postseason.

Southwest Notes: Pelicans, Nance, Wall, Spurs

The Pelicans are aware that evening their current first-round playoff matchup against the top-seeded Suns will require them to keep their cool, writes Christian Clark of NOLA.com.

In the middle of Game 3’s second quarter, Pelicans big man Jaxson Hayes was ejected from the contest, an eventual Suns win, after aggressively pushing Phoenix forward Jae Crowder. New Orleans would go on to lose at home by a narrow margin (114-111). The Suns now have a 2-1 series edge.

Pelicans head coach Willie Green acknowledged that Hayes let his emotions get the best of him in that instance, but that the team overall has been effective at managing its emotions in a playoff environment.

“I thought we’ve done a really good job of that this series,” Green said of the Pelicans’ approach to their emotions. “We had a moment — the Jaxson-Jae Crowder thing. But other than that, it was a close game coming down the stretch, the last five minutes. They pulled away a bit. But we’re doing a lot of good. We just have to be better down the stretch.”

New Orleans will face off against the Suns in a big Game 4 today.

There’s more out of the Southwest Division:

  • Pelicans forward Larry Nance Jr. is confident in the team’s core even without star forward Zion Williamson, writes Logan Murdock of The Ringer“We’re the real deal,” Nance tells Murdock. “This team is here and this team is for real… And we have a top-10 asset that hasn’t even touched the court yet.” Murdock notes that three promising New Orleans rookies have emerged as key additions to the club’s playoff rotation: Herbert Jones, Jose Alvarado, and Trey Murphy III. Star veterans CJ McCollum and Brandon Ingram have proven they belong in these playoffs thus far.
  • Rockets veteran point guard John Wall is expected to opt in to the final season on his max deal, worth $47.3MM in 2022/23. Jake Fischer of Bleacher Report suggests that Wall’s agents and Houston brass will discuss the possibility of a buyout arrangement if the Rockets are unable to find a trade partner for Wall before the 2022 draft in June. Should Wall be bought out, the Heat and Clippers may have interest in adding the former All-Star, says Fischer.
  • With the team’s youth movement fully underway, the Spurs are ready for an offseason typical of San Antonio head coach Gregg Popovich: one full of Popovich’s exacting standards, per Jeff McDonald of the San Antonio Express-News. Third-year forward Keldon Johnson knows what to expect from Popovich, who wants to see Johnson improve his defense. “He’s hard on me because he wants me to be great,” Johnson said. “If it was anything different, I wouldn’t want that.” McDonald writes that San Antonio All-Star guard Dejounte Murray will need Johnson, forward Devin Vassell, and rookie shooting guard Joshua Primo to develop for the Spurs to return to the playoffs.

Heat Notes: Oladipo, Lowry, Robinson, Draft Pick

Kyle Lowry‘s hamstring injury may create an opportunity for Heat guard Victor Oladipo, writes Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. Oladipo played just eight games during the regular season and hasn’t seen the court yet in the playoff series with the Hawks, but he gives coach Erik Spoelstra a veteran option if Lowry isn’t available for today’s Game 4.

“I’m just staying ready,” Oladipo said. “I can’t really control what happens out there, what goes on. I just got to stay ready. If my number is called, I’m going to go out there and play the game to the best of my ability.”

Oladipo is coming off an 11-month recovery from surgery on his quadriceps tendon. He wasn’t available until March 7, but he showed that he can still score, putting up 21 points on April 3 against the Raptors and 40 in the regular season finale against the Magic.

“Playoffs, regular season, it’s tough,” Oladipo said about not playing. “I want to be out there competing, helping the team win. But at the end of the day, I’m just focused on what I can control and whatever the coaching staff needs me to do to help us win, that’s what I’m going to do.”

There’s more on the Heat:

  • John Hollinger of The Athletic examines whether Miami is resilient enough to survive an extended absence by Lowry, who is listed as questionable for today’s game. Atlanta was able to exploit the Heat’s defense after Lowry was forced to leave Game 3, Hollinger notes, especially when Tyler Herro and Duncan Robinson were on the court together.
  • Robinson’s inconsistency continues to be an issue from game to game, notes Ira Winderman of The Sun-Sentinel. After making 8 of 9 shots in the series opener, Robinson went scoreless in Game 2 and managed just six points in Game 3. Winderman states that Caleb Martin might take some of Robinson’s minutes, especially if Lowry is unavailable and Miami needs better defense.
  • The Heat landed the No. 27 overall draft pick in a tiebreaker this week, but they may be more likely to trade it than use it, Winderman states in a separate story. Miami already has a wealth of young talent with Mychal Mulder and Javonte Smart holding two-way contracts that extend to next season and Haywood Highsmith and Omer Yurtseven on the roster as well. In addition, Marcus Garrett did rehab work at the team’s facility after January wrist surgery and Micah Potter was an All-Rookie selection with Miami’s G League affiliate. Winderman suggests that the first-round pick could be used as sweetener to get a team to take on Robinson’s $16.9MM contract.

Injury Notes: Doncic, Williams, Lowry, Capela

Playing Saturday for the first time in nearly two weeks, Mavericks guard Luka Doncic showed no ill effects from his strained left calf, writes Tim MacMahon of ESPN. Doncic logged 34 minutes, resting halfway through the first and third quarters. He posted 30 points, 10 rebounds and four assists and hit a late three-pointer to give Dallas a four-point lead before the Jazz rallied to win.

“I’m just excited to be back,” Doncic said. “I had fun out there, just having fun playing basketball. What could be better than in the playoffs? The playoffs are the most exciting, so I’m just glad to be back.”

Doncic admitted feeling winded during stretches of the game — MacMahon notes that Utah targeted him defensively, especially in the first half. However, Doncic said the calf didn’t slow him down.

“At the beginning, I was just thinking about it a little bit,” he said. “I think in the middle of the game I kind of forgot about it.”

There are more injury-related items to pass along:

  • There was also good news for the Celtics tonight as center Robert Williams returned for the first time since a meniscus tear on March 27. Williams played 16 minutes and said his knee didn’t hurt after the game (video link from Gary Washburn of The Boston Globe).
  • There’s “cautious optimism” from people close to Heat guard Kyle Lowry that the left hamstring injury he suffered Friday isn’t serious, according to Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. Lowry didn’t practice with the team today, tweets Dave McMenamin of ESPN, and was walking “gingerly.” A source close to Lowry tells McMenamin that the injury is day to day, but Lowry said he is monitoring it “hourly.” Miami’s injury report lists him as questionable for Game 4, which will take place Sunday night. Gabe Vincent or Tyler Herro would likely start at point guard if Lowry isn’t available, Chang states.
  • The Hawks have upgraded center Clint Capela to questionable for Sunday’s game, per Sarah K. Spencer of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, who adds that his status may be a game-time decision. Capela hasn’t played since suffering a hyperextended right knee in an April 15 play-in game.

Bam Adebayo Once Again Struggling In Playoffs

  • Heat center Bam Adebayo is once again struggling in the playoffs, Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel writes. After averaging 15.5 points on 46% shooting against the Bucks in last year’s first-round series, Adebayo has tallied just 28 total points through three games against the Hawks. He finished with 13 points on nine shots in Game 4, attempting only one shot in the fourth quarter. The Heat were outscored in that quarter by a score of 34-25.