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jmard5
03-05-2011, 08:16 PM
Nice read. Please delete if posted already. Thanks.

http://www.foxsportsflorida.com/msn/03/05/11/Heat-must-face-hard-truths-after-embarra/landing_reiter.html?blockID=433766&feedID=7926

By BILL REITER
FOXSports.com
March 4, 2011

SAN ANTONIO — There's no longer anywhere to hide. The delusion must end.

Friday's 30-point humiliation by the Spurs has to be the final straw.

For much of the season, Heat players and fans have lived under the veil of a false reality that often mirrored America's political discourse: big on embracing what they wanted to hear, not so big on processing reality as it stood.

The Heat's November follies — and the clear fractures stretching through the hype, hope and false prophesies of absolute greatness — shook all of these folks to the core.

Because from the very beginning they preferred to believe the Heat were already championship-caliber when they should have been assessing what the team needed to do — and it's quite a lot — to get there.

Then came a December stretch that included a host of creampuffs, followed by the apologists and delusionists ignoring clear signs of trouble ahead. This could occur because the Heat padded their record thoroughly against so-so teams even while the mounting losses against quality opponents went underappreciated or ignored.

This can work in politics, where spin and a knack for lying to oneself or one's constituents — regardless of political affiliation — can keep politicians in office and their supporters happy with what they don't have to know or admit.

It doesn't work so well in sports, where, eventually, spin and a knack for lying to oneself end abruptly. Competition and scoreboards have a way of cutting through such things.

Which brings us to the Heat's 11-game stretch against worthy opponents. It's their own personal March Madness, and so far they are 0-3, including Friday night's 125-95 absolute beatdown at the hands of the NBA's best team, the Spurs.

It was Miami's worst loss of the year, an embarrassment that not even the most loyal of fans can ignore. This game was the Nixon tapes coming to light; it was Bill Clinton's deposition on television. There was no place left to hide.

It was also a telling reminder that the less glitzy story is sometimes the more successful one.

The Spurs are everything the Heat aren't. They're in Texas, not South Beach. They've been built over time and through the draft, not in one spectacular burst of free agency. They're a team sometimes described as boring to watch that specializes in precise ball movement, team chemistry and exquisite execution of a game plan.

Mantras aside, the Spurs are the league's poster child for putting winning over glory.

This is a team in which Tim Duncan, no slouch, has taken a less-than-leading role to accommodate the rise of players like Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker. He's done it with grace. And it's helped his team to the best record in the league.

The Spurs have confidence stemming from depth, another thing utterly different from the Heat, and they have spent a lot of time learning to play together, trust one another and believe in a process.

These are words and goals right now in Miami. They're deeds and history in San Antonio.

For the Heat, the past two days have shown just how hard it is to build a dynasty overnight.

Reality began to rear its ugly head Thursday when the Orlando Magic shook the house of false narratives the Heat have lived within all season. Until Orlando raced back from a 24-point deficit, it seems Miami might stay comfortably clustered between its ill-made walls — happy if vulnerable there with fans who call critics haters. Those who should have known better assumed talk about the Heat's shortcomings were nothing more than outsiders trying to "make a name" for themselves.

But that wasn't it at all. It was simply the fact it's hard to create what San Antonio or the Lakers have overnight. The Boston Celtics did it a few years ago and people believed wrongly it was easy.

It's not easy. It takes time. And the route San Antonio has taken is every bit as promising, if not as sexy, as the one Miami has embarked on. That was clear Friday night.

On a brutal back-to-back, the more complete team with the actual history together and a legitimate sense of brotherhood showed the Heat what Miami is still working toward.

San Antonio sent all that talk of the Heat simply walking to greatness in a single season tumbling down. All that remains underneath is the rubble of collective self-delusion and some hard, glaring truths.

Among them:

• The roster is wrong. Period. This is why you don't let players, even amazing players, dictate rosters. Let LeBron and Wade be stars. Let general managers be general managers.

To get right, either Pat Riley has to fix it or the Heat have to hope they can come together as a unit. If the goal is a championship, that almost always takes more than a season, the 2008 Celtics notwithstanding.

• The Heat don't have a killer instinct to match the hype surrounding them. They can't beat good teams, let alone great teams, nearly often enough to be champions.

• LeBron James has not found a way to channel his incredible skill into the glory he expected when he came here promising multiple — not one, multiple — championships. He did not know how hard this would be. Having found out, he doesn't yet know what to do. That, too, takes time.

• Chris Bosh still doesn't fit in. He seemed to be crying after Thursday's game, though that's a matter of trying to interpret the moment. What isn't open to interpretation is he too often vanishes in big games. The guy who in November admitted he didn't fit in still doesn't, not on this stage, not with this kind of pressure. He is Exhibit A that the problems of November still plague this team. That should have been expected.

• The Heat remain fumbling and overmatched when playing against a good team that has at least a very good point guard. Against the league's best team, with Tony Parker returning from injury early and unwilling to miss a game against a team he could so easily exploit, it simply wasn't fair. He had seven assists to two turnovers in the first half, thus making Mario Chalmers and Mike Bibby look silly. The Heat were never really in the game, despite once cutting the deficit to 11 after the Spurs roared to a 24-point lead at the end of the first quarter.

• LeBron James and Dwyane Wade are not enough. LeBron was fantastic Friday, racking up 26 points, eight rebounds and seven assists and playing as if he had to do it all (because he does). Wade was OK, with 19 points. And they weren't even close to enough.

The closest Miami has come this year to facing these hard truths — and thus truly fixing their problems — was at the end of that awful November stretch in which all the pain and ridicule forced a players-only meeting. That meeting temporarily turned things around. It also came after a tough loss to a very good Dallas Mavericks team.

Maybe this game, finally, can trigger another collective awakening in which the Heat candidly assess their shortcomings.

It's time to start ignoring all the fans telling them how great they are.

The Heat are not a perfect team. They are now 14-17 against winning teams, including 0-5 over the past month. They are 1-8 against elite teams. They haven't been able to beat Boston yet this year. Or Dallas. Or Chicago.

This isn't American politics. Eventually, the spin gives way to the game; the sycophants and cheerleaders must be silent and watch from the sidelines; and a team must find out in the only way that matters — by the scoreboard — where they stand.

"We basically got blitzed right from the beginning," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said afterward. "We made a little bit of a run at the end of the second quarter. But they outplayed us, blitzed us, and there's nothing really else to say."

It's time for the delusion to end. What must follow is another team meeting: One with the same lessons, fire and fear of that November talk.

Only this time, after this crucial meeting, the Heat can't forget, or be fooled, or get complacent.

They're not what they thought they'd be when LeBron uttered those words about taking his talents to South Beach.

Which means they need every ounce of panic, fear, anger, togetherness and — most important — truth they can get.

Otherwise, May is going to look a lot like November and March.

MmP
03-05-2011, 08:18 PM
Why is this embarrasing, why losing to a good team is embarrasing? Why blowing a 24 point lead a national media scandal? Im getting tired of overrating the Heat. They have great players but it's just a team.

John Basedow
03-05-2011, 08:18 PM
tl;dr

TE
03-05-2011, 08:19 PM
Nice read.

jmard5
03-05-2011, 08:29 PM
Why is this embarrasing, why losing to a good team is embarrasing?

It depends on whose team we speak about. We are speaking about the Heat here, not the Nets(?).

We are speaking about a team who predicted multiple championships like they're just gonna steamroll the other teams.

xellos88330
03-05-2011, 08:40 PM
I think the last time a team considered "elite" has lost by 30 points was in 2008. That is why it was embarassing.

Supergirl
03-05-2011, 08:43 PM
"Chris Bosh still doesn't fit in. He seemed to be crying after Thursday's game, though that's a matter of trying to interpret the moment. What isn't open to interpretation is he too often vanishes in big games. The guy who in November admitted he didn't fit in still doesn't, not on this stage, not with this kind of pressure. He is Exhibit A that the problems of November still plague this team. That should have been expected."

Precisely. IMO, Bosh should be traded, because of Miami's big 3, he's the one who is taking up a lot of salary and not giving up much in return. Lebron and Wade are all the superstar scorers the Heat need, what they need are quality role players and a decent, defensive-minded big man instead of Bosh and a decent PG who can set up the plays.

Chillen
03-05-2011, 08:57 PM
They are a potential championship team on paper, that's it they haven't won squat yet and it won't be no cake walk in the Eastern Conference playoffs this year for them either. Out of the 3 Bosh is definitely the one player who they could probably trade, James and Wade I would say are untouchable until their contract's run out. I personally think LeBron would have been better off signing with the Bulls but that's old news now, Wade, Bosh convinced him to become a Heat. I wouldn't count them out but they have some holes to patch up in their roster after this season. They are still contenders but I don't think teams in the NBA feel like they can't be beat in a 7 game series, they certainly can.

TE
03-05-2011, 09:04 PM
For the Heat to be successful, two things have to happen.

1. Fire or demote Spoelstra to assistant again, bring in Pat Riley to fix these problems
2. Have solidified rotations for in game situations (i.e., play a working small lineup for small ball, play a big lineup for situations when the game is in control by the team who is rebounding the ball).

Number 1 can be done fast.

Number 2, I'm not sold on it.

The Heat have a talented roster, but Spoelstra has done a shit job in having a solidified rotation for certain game situations.

ChuckD
03-05-2011, 11:17 PM
They are a potential championship team on paper, that's it they haven't won squat yet and it won't be no cake walk in the Eastern Conference playoffs this year for them either. Out of the 3 Bosh is definitely the one player who they could probably trade, James and Wade I would say are untouchable until their contract's run out. I personally think LeBron would have been better off signing with the Bulls but that's old news now, Wade, Bosh convinced him to become a Heat. I wouldn't count them out but they have some holes to patch up in their roster after this season. They are still contenders but I don't think teams in the NBA feel like they can't be beat in a 7 game series, they certainly can.

They're not contenders. Another thing that hides their flaws is the fact that they play in the EC, and feast frequently on their home conference dregs. If they were in the WC, I can assure you that they would be in the bottom 3 playoff spots fighting for their lives.

The major flaw in their roster was glaringly clear to those who understand the game: they're built inside out. Their best pure jump shooter is their PF who is a giant pussy inside the paint. OTOH, their best ball handlers are VERY shaky in shooting the ball, allowing teams to pack the paint on them.

Budkin
03-05-2011, 11:35 PM
If Phil Jackson was coaching that team they would be living up to their potential. Wonder how long it takes him to go over there after leaving the Lakers?

gospursgojas
03-05-2011, 11:52 PM
If Phil Jackson was coaching that team they would be living up to their potential. Wonder how long it takes him to go over there after leaving the Lakers?

Him taking his coaching "talents" to South Beach would usually be a lock, if he wasnt 70.

gospursgojas
03-05-2011, 11:53 PM
The Spurs are everything the Heat aren't. They're in Texas, not South Beach. They've been built over time and through the draft, not in one spectacular burst of free agency.

Line of the article.

NickiRasgo
03-06-2011, 12:12 AM
Line of the article.

Nice. That's why I love the Spurs, small-market team, yet we're still contender every season because of being healthy, chemistry and experienced. They just showing how badass they're not in forming with other "Superstar" to build a team but to show what a real team is.

Capt Bringdown
03-06-2011, 12:29 AM
Him taking his coaching "talents" to South Beach would usually be a lock, if he wasnt 70.

If the Lakers don't 3-peat this year (which would be surprising IMO, despite their regular season, their roster and half-court game should take them all the way again), PJ's ego all but demands a trip to South Beach.


They are now 14-17 against winning teams, including 0-5 over the past month. They are 1-8 against elite teams.
Wow...and wow.

ChuckD
03-06-2011, 12:53 AM
Him taking his coaching "talents" to South Beach would usually be a lock, if he wasnt 70.

Yeah, he's a parasite, jumping to the next healthy host after totally depleting the previous one. I think he's done, though. He's too old to fight with LeBron, and I think he and Pat Riley have a hate hate relationship anyway. Kobe did him in.

will_spurs
03-06-2011, 05:07 AM
Why is this embarrasing, why losing to a good team is embarrasing? Why blowing a 24 point lead a national media scandal? Im getting tired of overrating the Heat. They have great players but it's just a team.

They didn't lose against a good team: they got utterly crushed. A 5-point loss and it's possible to find excuses. A 30-point loss and it's getting hard to argue with a straight face that the Heat are contenders.

Miami has finally been exposed for what it really is: a so-so team that will be lucky to make it out of the first round, has no chance to reach the ECF let alone the Finals let alone get a ring, and that would fight to be in the payoffs if they were in the West. On top of it they gave a bad example and the West being scary more and more players are moving to the East, making it much harder than in previous years. To be honest if they were in the West I'm not even sure they'd have a winning record.

If they had the fighting spirit, they could recover from this and it would make them stronger. But as far as I can see they are done through and through. Maybe they fix their issues during the off-season and have better luck next year. I wouldn't be surprised to see them implode before that.

Obstructed_View
03-06-2011, 06:57 AM
The Heat were coming off a back to back and got utterly crushed in the first quarter by the best team in the league on an emotional high because they got Parker back. I don't really see how this is such a big deal. We all knew the Heat weren't as good as the Spurs, didn't we?

Brazil
03-06-2011, 09:32 AM
For the Heat to be successful, two things have to happen.

1. Fire or demote Spoelstra to assistant again, bring in Pat Riley to fix these problems
2. Have solidified rotations for in game situations (i.e., play a working small lineup for small ball, play a big lineup for situations when the game is in control by the team who is rebounding the ball).

Number 1 can be done fast.

Number 2, I'm not sold on it.

The Heat have a talented roster, but Spoelstra has done a shit job in having a solidified rotation for certain game situations.

IMO Pat Riley is not the answer, I don't think this squad full of PS3 / bling bling ego players would accept an old fashioned coach. Riley is too harsh for them, Wade or Lebron would never accept to be treated like bb players and not superstars.

It's all begin with focusing on bb, they have 5 months to party and parade in night clubs. During the season the have to play, train, eat and sleep thats all, no room for partying untill 4 am every days off. Nevertheless a coach yelling at them in a pop style would fail.

TampaDude
03-06-2011, 09:50 AM
Miami has no interior defense and no bench. Their coach is clueless. They have no shot...NO SHOT...at winning a title the way they are now.

SenorSpur
03-06-2011, 10:19 AM
This was a very good read. What is funny about all of this is most observers of the NBA, including fans of the Heat, and especially the Heat players, seem surprised at all of this. While Miami's version of the Big Three were busy celebrating their NBA free agent championship and declaring how they were instantly going to "take over the world", they forgot one thing - there is a process and a journey to be undertaken. You still have to play the games -

This Miami team is flawed and has been since day one - flawed mentally and conceptually. Miami ownership elected to try and short-circuit their way to success. They willingly sunk money into 3 upper-echelon players, whose skill-sets are too similar (James and Wade) and that don't necessarily blend together very well. This is a team that is vulnerable both in the backcourt and lack any type of interior presence whatsoever. How could this have been missed? Yet there are even better questions.

As a Hall of Fame coach and long-time veteran of the NBA, you have to wonder why and how Pat Riley could've been so foolishly enticed into believing that he could've assembled this cast of characters, and mental midgets, thinking it would automatically and instantly win even one championship? How could Riles have not seen that James, while a fantastic talent and great player statistically, isn't without his deficiencies and on-court demons?

There is no question that LeQuit is a great player, but he doesn't possess the mental makeup needed to lead a team to championship. He should not have been thrust into a role of team closer, when it's obvious to everyone that he's incapable of fulfilling it. Furthermore, he's fundamentally flawed and needs a dose of hard coaching - something he's probably never received in his life.

How could Wade, a great player in his own right, and a player who practically single-handedly led Miami to a title, could've receeded to the background in deference to James?

How could Bosh, whose obviously along for the ride, have deluded himself into thinking that he's anything more than what he is - a very good, perimeter-oriented, complimentary player?

This is obviously an experiment gone bad. It's not surprising that fans, media and observers of the NBA were deluded. However, it is odd that the people in charge of the Heat, the people who are paid to make these decisions for the organization, couldn't see this coming.

BuzzerBeater
03-06-2011, 10:19 AM
....."including Friday night's 125-95 absolute beatdown at the hands of the NBA's best team, the Spurs.

hmmm, when did this change, what happened to "the team with the best record?":hat

ChuckD
03-06-2011, 10:27 AM
The Heat were coming off a back to back and got utterly crushed in the first quarter by the best team in the league on an emotional high because they got Parker back. I don't really see how this is such a big deal. We all knew the Heat weren't as good as the Spurs, didn't we?

A B2B is no excuse for a 30 point beat down. That's what happens to bottom feeders, and only once in a while, at that.


hmmm, when did this change, what happened to "the team with the best record?":hat

It was just a slip. They still say that on the Nat TV broadcasts.

TampaDude
03-06-2011, 10:30 AM
A B2B is no excuse for a 30 point beat down. That's what happens to bottom feeders, and only once in a while, at that.


Yup...if Miami had lost by single digits, then they could excuse it with the B2B, but to lose by 30??? They can't beat the top teams. They have no shot at a title the way they are now.

wildbill2u
03-06-2011, 12:22 PM
If we could play that well every game, we'd never lose.

We can't and won't. Class it as an exceptional game and don't get big-headed because we beat the team with all the buzz while playing exceptionally.

Pop will keep the Spurs psychology in check. We fans will have to keep our own in check or we'll have a fan meltdown after an unexpected loss to a lesser team or to one of the elite teams like the Mavs and the Lakers.

We are the team to beat right now with every other team wanting to take us down a notch.

m33p0
03-06-2011, 02:15 PM
As a Hall of Fame coach and long-time veteran of the NBA, you have to wonder why and how Pat Riley could've been so foolishly enticed into believing that he could've assembled this cast of characters, and mental midgets, thinking it would automatically and instantly win even one championship? How could Riles have not seen that James, while a fantastic talent and great player statistically, isn't without his deficiencies and on-court demons?
money