[外電] Hollinger's Team Forecast: Miami Heat
2007-08 Recap
There have been worse teams than the 2007-08 Miami Heat, but I don't think any
of them had three likely Hall of Famers in the lineup and were two years
removed from a championship. Miami's crash to a 15-67 disaster was notable
mostly for the sheer speed of it: Even a year earlier the Heat were a playoff
team, but faster than you can say "AIG" they were in total collapse, getting
hammered every night.
The Hall of Famers were a big reason. Dwyane Wade came back from offseason knee
and shoulder surgery, but it was clear from the get-go that he wasn't operating
at full strength. He spent most of his time on defense gambling for steals and
avoiding contact, while offensively he seemed notably less explosive than a
year earlier. Wade's final PER of 21.63 was a far cry from his league-leading
29.04 of a year earlier, and as he again checked out at midseason, there have
to be serious concerns about his durability going forward.
Alonzo Mourning, for his part, went out early in the season with a torn
patella tendon that could prove to be career-ending; if he comes back, it will
be at midseason at the earliest.
At least those two were trying. Shaquille O'Neal blatantly loafed through the
early part of the schedule, especially at the defensive end, while the Heat
looked on in horror at the three years and $60 million remaining on his
contract. So lame was his effort that Miami defended far better after he was
gone, improving from 25th to 20th in defensive efficiency after the All-Star
break even though Wade sat out and they were playing mostly D-Leaguers.
Those weren't the only two problems, though. Miami mortgaged its future to win
the title in 2006, and the bill came due last season. Older players like
Jason Williams and Mourning broke down, while veteran Band-Aids such as
Ricky Davis, Mark Blount and (gasp) Penny Hardaway couldn't stop the bleeding.
Without any young talent in the pipeline, the Heat had nowhere to turn and were
forced to dole out heavy minutes to replacement-level talents like Chris Quinn
and Earl Barron.
The result was about as un-Riley a Pat Riley team as you'll see. The Heat were
25th in defensive efficiency and continually botched the types of little things
you'd never see them screw up before, especially late in games. More generally,
they just seemed worn out -- the combination of age and two-plus years of
seemingly being ground down by Riley.
In the end, it added up to a 15-67 disaster. I could regale you with all the
stories of exactly how bad they were in each individual category, but it's too
depressing. Moreover, it's not pertinent -- this coming season's Heat are going
to look very different from last year's edition.
The reason that will be the case stems from two very fortunate events that
happened in the second half of the season.
First, Miami found a sucker to take on O'Neal's contract. The Heat traded
Shaq to Phoenix for Shawn Marion and Marcus Banks; amazingly, they didn't have
to include a draft pick, a young player or anything else in order to complete
the deal, and in Marion they got the best player in the trade.
From Miami's perspective Phoenix's sudden interest in Shaq was akin to having a
$40 million bag of money land on the sidewalk in front of your house. Suddenly,
the Heat were out from the obligation to pay Shaq and could look forward to
major cap space in 2009, and in the meantime they had a star in Marion and a
potential solution at point guard in Banks.
Second, the Heat were so bad so early that they quickly fell out of the playoff
race and began concentrating on tanking … er, on developing their younger
players for next season. Wade shut his season down after 51 games, while Marion
and Udonis Haslem sat out with injuries that, well … let's just say they would
have been more gung ho about playing if they were in a playoff race. Their
absence helped Miami lose enough to secure the second overall pick in the draft
and take Michael Beasley.
Nonetheless, this team is clearly in a rebuilding mode, and that was borne out
after the season when Riley stepped down -- perhaps for the last time -- and
handed the reins over to assistant Erik Spoelstra. A highly regarded assistant,
Spoelstra will have to contend with Riley's shadow looming over him from the
front office and the threat of Riley's returning if the team becomes a
contender, much as Stan Van Gundy did before him. But the 62-year-old Riley took
time off in each of the past three seasons, so one suspects he might be ready
to step down for good.
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Biggest Strength: Speed
The Heat may have the fastest perimeter trio I've ever seen. Banks may not be
anybody's idea of a true point guard, but he is one of the speediest players in
basketball and can push it upcourt with anyone. (He'll follow that burst with a
horrible decision, but we're setting that aside for now.) Wade, of course, is a
blur at both ends when he's healthy, constantly creating breakouts with his
running ability and penchant for steals. And then there's Marion, one of the
best transition finishers of his generation and an especially speedy threat
when he slides up to power forward and consistently beats his man down the
floor.
It gets interesting in that Miami's other players don't seem to have the jets
to keep up. With the exception of Wright and Beasley, pretty much everyone else
on Miami's roster is a pure half-court player who doesn't seek out transition
opportunities. So when Wade and Marion break out, players like Quinn, Jones,
Haslem and Blount will have to keep up or risk being left behind.
Biggest Weakness: Interior defense
A strength of the Heat throughout the ages, the team's ability to defend the
paint appears to suddenly be a major question mark. With Mourning and O'Neal
no longer around to anchor the defense, the only true centers on the roster are
Blount and Magloire -- and at this point in their respective careers, each is
little more than a third center. Project Joel Anthony seems nowhere close to
being ready, and while there are rumors of a midseason comeback by Mourning, it
remains to be seen both how much he has left and how long it would take him to
get up to speed.
That leaves Haslem as the team's likely starting center, and while he's a
hard-nosed defender, he's also 6-foot-8 and doesn't block shots. Joining him up
front is Beasley, a prodigious talent but one whose defense looms as a major
question mark. The only other bigs on the roster are "small-ball" power forwards
Jones and Wright, who are more posing as frontcourt players for matchup
purposes rather than players who are really capable of defending the position.
As a result, look for Miami to do a lotlot more doubling and scrambling against
he post than they've done in past years, especially when going up against the
likes of Yao Ming, Dwight Howard, or, dare we say it, Shaq.
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Outlook
The Heat are perhaps the league's hardest team to predict this year. Make one
set of fairly rosy assumptions -- a healthy Wade playing at an MVP level,
joined by an active Beasley scoring right out of the gate -- and this team
looks like a division champion. Make another, more pessimistic set -- Wade
continuing to struggle with injuries, and Beasley needing a year of adjustment
-- and they're a 50-loss team.
So I'll do the only thing I can and split the difference. I modeled the Heat as
getting about 30 minutes a game from Wade -- including time off for injuries --
with a PER of 26. That was way higher than his projection, but the projections
didn't know that Wade was limping through last season, nor did they watch Wade
dominating in the Olympics.
As for Beasley, I gave him a rookie PER of 16.5 -- about what Kevin Durant did
a year ago -- in 33 minutes a night. I can't really model him playing much more
than that given the propensity of young bigs to foul.
That makes for a nice nucleus with Wade and Marion, but then the question marks
come in earnest. Point guard and center are going to be major liabilities, the
bench only has one proven player in Jones, and the rookie coach Spoelstra will
be cutting his teeth as well. Additionally, there's a chance the team trades
Marion at midseason for future help, which would obviously diminish their
second-half results.
While the possibilities for this team are all over the map, I get to pick only
one outcome. And the median of those possibilities seems to be that they'll
hang in the playoff race all season, and might not know their postseason fate
until the final game.
Prediction: 39-43, 3rd in Southeast Division, T-9th in Eastern Conference
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