South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

In East, 6th not sensible for Heat

- Ira Winderman NBA Insider

MIAMI — “Built for the playoffs.”

It is the phrasing found in many forecasts for the Miami Heat’s

2021-22 season.

The concern is that the season, however, does not begin with the playoffs but rather on Thursday against the visiting Milwaukee Bucks at FTX Arena, with 81 additional regular-season games to follow for the Heat.

And that is the rub when it comes to an older roster that is not exactly deep with proven reserve talent.

In April, May, perhaps even June, an argument could be made that a roster with the two-way games of Jimmy Butler, Kyle Lowry and Bam Adebayo is capable of melding to the moment. And when it comes to playoff closers, there are Butler and Lowry as 1 and 1A, in either order.

But it’s also about more than getting to the postseason in the NBA’s play-in world. It’s about getting at least a No. 6 seed to avoid the potential one-and-done or two-and-done scenarios for a No. 7 or No. 8 seed.

Last season, it took until the final week for the Heat to be liberated from such a minefield. And even then, all No. 6 meant was being swept 4-0 by the eventual-champion Bucks in the first round.

And then this past week came a sobering reminder from the preseason forecast at fivethirty­eight, whose primary model has the Heat finishing No. 6 in the East at 44-38, but only by virtue of a tiebreaker against the No. 7 Indiana Pacers, and just one game ahead of the No. 8 New York Knicks. Fivethirty­eight’s alternate model also has the Heat at No. 6 in the East, at 42-40, three games ahead of No. 7 Indiana.

Granted, many unknowns remain in the conference, from Kyrie Irving to Ben Simmons and the correspond­ing realities of the Brooklyn Nets and Philadelph­ia

76ers.

But still it’s sobering.

Per each of fivethirye­ight’s two projection models, the East will shake out at the end of the regular season as: 1. Bucks, 2. 76ers, 3. Hawks, 4. Nets, 5. Celtics, 6. Heat,

7. Pacers, 8. Knicks, 9. Raptors, 10. Bulls, 11. Wizards,

12. Hornets, 13. Cavaliers, 14. Pistons, 15. Magic. Per fivethirye­ight’s RAPTOR projection, the Heat have a 69% chance of making the playoffs, 4% chance of making the NBA Finals and 2% chance of a title. Per the site’s Elo forecast, the Heat have a

61% chance of making the playoffs.

Of such forecastin­g, Adebayo said as the Heat closed out their preseason practice sessions, “We’re going to worry about Miami. We’re not worried about the outside stuff. We don’t worry about the other teams.”

Only they have to because No. 6 wasn’t good enough last season, and something lower would be even more perilous to navigate.

So some thoughts on how it might shake out from this perspectiv­e in East, where the playoff-quality depth is at least 11 deep, the conference offering few light nights:

1. Bucks: The core is back, and this time with championsh­ip confidence. The lack of offseason drama makes Milwaukee the logical choice as conference favorite.

2. Nets: Some foresee a dive depending on Kyrie Irving’s whims. But how can a team with Kevin Durant and James Harden not be considered elite and a conference favorite, regardless of the latest orbit of the mercurial third wheel?

3. Celtics: This is higher than many forecast, but Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown rank with any 1-2 in the conference, now with the stability provided by Al Horford and the hunger of Dennis Schroder.

4. Heat: Last season was eye-opening to the realities of opening the postseason on the road. Yes, there is an older roster, but it’s one aware of how last season’s seed created an insurmount­able obstacle.

5. 76ers: This all depends on what becomes of Ben Simmons. Even a deal for the likes of a CJ McCollum would call for an upward calibratio­n.

6. Hawks: Will the NBA crackdown on unnatural shooting motions create mind games for Trae Young? Was last season the type of overachiev­ement some pointed to with the 2020 Heat?

7. Pacers: The talent is there with Domantas Sabonis, Malcolm Brogdon, Caris LeVert, Myles Turner and T.J. Warren. And now there is the coaching of Rick Carlisle.

8. Bulls: Lots of talent for Billy Donovan to orchestrat­e, with Zach LaVine, Nikola Vucevic, Lonzo Ball, DeMar DeRozan, Alex Caruso, etc. But will it mesh?

9. Knicks: Do Kemba Walker and Evan Fournier make things better or just more complex for Tom Thibodeau and Julius Randle?

10. Raptors: It sure seems as if some are sleeping on a roster that features Pascal Siakam, Fred VanVleet, OG Anunoby, Gary Trent Jr., Goran Dragic, Scottie Barnes and the coaching of Nick Nurse. That actually sounds more like a No. 6 seed.

11. Hornets: Again, a team that seemingly is stronger than such placement, considerin­g the presence of Gordon Hayward, LaMelo Ball, Terry Rozier, Miles Bridges and P.J. Washington.

12. Wizards: There is a better quality of depth this time around Bradley Beal, but no one else is capable of the heavy lifting achieved by Russell Westbrook at the end of last season.

13. Cavaliers, 14. Pistons, 15. Magic: The only three teams without legitimate playoff prospects in the East this season. These are the games you cannot lose if you are set on a high seed.

IN THE LANE

UNIFORM PLANS: The NBA has released the listing of uniforms teams will wear this season, with the Heat yet to unveil their latest City Edition. The Heat will play Thursday’s season opener against the Milwaukee Bucks in their red Statement Edition uniform. They then will go on the road on Oct. 23 against the Indiana Pacers in their black Icon Edition. Their white Associatio­n Edition will be worn for the first time upon their return home, on Oct. 25 against the Orlando Magic. The Heat’s City Edition uniforms are scheduled to be worn for the first time on Nov. 4 against the visiting Boston Celtics.

A CANADIAN THING: Dating to his days as Toronto Raptors coach, Detroit Pistons coach Dwane Casey said he has been keeping tabs on Canadian export Kelly Olynyk. Then the former Heat center this offseason signed with the Pistons. “I’ve had a man crush on Kelly since Toronto,” Casey told Pistons.com. “He’s from Canada. We always tried to get him there when I was back in that other life.”The signing also reunited Olynyk with fellow Canadian and longtime friend Cory Joseph. “We played together from like 7, 8, 9 growing up,”Joseph, the veteran guard, said.“His dad and my dad coached. His mom was a referee. My mom played back in the day. I used to go in his backyard and he had this amazing trampoline. I used to go bounce around with him as kids.”

STILL SEARCHING: Two seasons ago, it was a case of coming up two victories shy of a championsh­ip in the NBA Finals while with the Heat. Last season, a 2-0 Finals lead with the Phoenix Suns evaporated into a series loss to the Bucks. So, yes, the motivation very much remains for Jae Crowder.“I don’t know how you can play a series like that, be up 2-0 and lose four in a row and it not hurt, not burn,” Crowder said, as he prepares for his second season with the Suns.“It’s supposed to burn, I think.” GAMESMANSH­IP: Perhaps this time Hassan Whiteside has found his NBA fit. With the Utah Jazz, the former Heat center has realized a partner both on and off the court.“It’s been really intense. It’s been really intense,” he told the Salt Lake Tribune of his practice-court battles with Jazz center

Rudy Gobert.“You know, just me and Rudy beating each other up all practice. And then we play Call of Duty all night. That’s pretty much how our days go.”While Whiteside has spent much of his career trying to measure up to Gobert, the video challenges are a different story.“I’ve been winning ‘em!” he said. “But if you talk to Rudy . . . he’s so competitiv­e! ‘All right, let’s do it again!’“

18 NUMBER

Consecutiv­e regular-season games the Heat have scored at least 100 points, a franchise record they will take into Thursday night’s season opener against the visiting Milwaukee Bucks. The previous record was a 16-game stretch in 2017. Only three times in the franchise’s 34 seasons have the Heat had 15 or more consecutiv­e games of 100 points.

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 ?? ?? The Heat arrive to the starting line of the 2021-22 NBA season with considerab­le hope.
LYNNE SLADKY/ AP
The Heat arrive to the starting line of the 2021-22 NBA season with considerab­le hope. LYNNE SLADKY/ AP

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