[SunSentinel] SKOLNICK: Playoff crash course for Heat
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http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/basketball/heat/
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Sports columnist
--------------------------------------------------------------
Ethan J. Skolnick
SKOLNICK: Playoff crash course for Heat
Published April 27, 2004
NEW ORLEANS -- Welcome to Playoffs 101. Take a folding seat.
Enrollment is limited to 16 for this popular crash course,
taught on backboards instead of blackboards, offering students
a chance to stretch their minds and muscles and games as they
never have before.
Through it, they learn about themselves. They learn who among
them is willing to lead the class, raise his hand, stand up,
stand out, and who shakes when his name is called. They learn
who has the passion, force, will and problem-solving skill
necessary just to make it near a Finals exam.
And we, as observers, get to audit the class.
So we learn much too.
Tonight, in Game 4 of a 2-1 series, we learn how quick a study
the young Heat can be and whether it has comprehended the Game
3 lessons well enough to fare better offensively.
Expect physical play. Go hard from the start. Run as much you
can, because an aggressive error beats a passive one. Play as
freely as you do at home, because playing your game is the best
way to take the Hornets out of theirs.
We learn if the Heat has what it takes to hang around long enough
to learn more about what it takes. It would be priceless for the
Heat players to graduate to play even four games against the
disciplined and deep Pacers, and for management trying to determine
how to retool the roster during summer break.
Think of all that's been learned or reinforced already, in just
three games against the damaged Hornets: Dwyane Wade isn't destined
to be a point guard, something his series nemesis Baron Davis has
said too, even while calling Wade "a special player" with a "world
of potential."
The Heat is short a shooter, especially when Eddie Jones shrinks and
Rasual Butler sits. Caron Butler can rise to a moment as well as a
rim.
Mostly we have learned that the Heat already has the most difficult
and important part of the playoffs just about nailed. It already
plays playoff defense. This is a discovery of Naismith proportions.
The Heat has generally been a solid defensive team since Pat Riley's
arrival. But it has never under such adverse circumstances, without
a shot-blocker like Alonzo Mourning, a proven shutdown forward like
Bruce Bowen or teammates together so long they knew all of each
other's tendencies.
After holding teams to a surprisingly low 42.5 percent during the
season, the Heat defense has been the story of this series, stifling
the Hornets at 33 percent, and testing their patience while keeping
itself in all three games.
"That's the base of who they are," said Hornets coach Tim Floyd,
frantically cramming to solve the Heat's basic equation. "The defense
is designed to take away the paint, the interior. It was when Pat was
there. Even with the old illegal defense rules, they capitalized on
those better than anybody in the league. And with the non-rules, they
are a great help-defensive team."
Hornets guard Darrell Armstrong spoke about the style and scrappiness
being the same as the Riley days: "The first trap and rotation, they
got all those things down. You got to make the extra pass."
P.J. Brown, once a strong Heat help defender, said the philosophy
hasn't changed, but he suggests in some ways this Heat defense is
superior, because "they are more athletic on the perimeter than we
were. Hey, you got those kind of guys four or five years ago, we
might have won a ring, no doubt."
Brown said the Heat's perimeter players are making it "hard inside,
man," by cluttering the paint and making him and Jamaal Magloire
shoot quickly.
"They can come down on the post just enough to mess with you and then
get back and contest Baron and David [Wesley's] shots," Brown said.
"There's not a lot of guys in the league who do that. ... That's Miami
D, though."
That's what has rendered Magloire moot on offense. Big Cat hasn't
purred in this series, making 12 field goals, leaving before talking
after Monday's practice. Sunday, Floyd defended his center as well as
Brian Grant has. The coach referred to Grant as "a guy who is paid to
defend people in this league," one "who has frustrated Shaquille
O'Neal." While Grant has kept Magloire from catching it in the post,
the Heat helpers have kept him from stepping out for 12-footers.
Magloire has looked agitated. Brown, knowing that "Sometimes he gets
a little anxious and tries to force it a little bit," has told the
25-year-old not to get frustrated, "because that's what they want him
to do, get frustrated, get technical fouls, get kicked out. But he's
a four-year veteran now, he's an All-Star, so I think he's going to
be OK."
The Heat should be better than OK. It simply must improve its offensive
grade -- a 90 would be an A -- while continuing to exhibit such
defensive mastery. If so, it will pass this challenging class while
closing the book on the Hornets.
Copyright c 2004, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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