Hibbert explains the Heat conundrum

May, 24, 2013
May 24
2:25
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Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
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Roy Hibbert
AP Photo, Getty Images
Roy Hibbert explains why the Miami Heat are more difficult to guard than the New York Knicks.

MIAMI -- It must be weird to be Roy Hibbert these days.

On Friday morning at the Indiana Pacers' Game 2 shootaround at AmericanAirlines Arena, he sat at a plush courtside seat with cameras, microphones and tape recorders jammed into his face. For several minutes, he fielded a barrage of questions about another player kneeing him in the groin area.

This is Hibbert's first Eastern Conference finals experience.

It must be weird to be Hibbert because he must wear two hats when talking with the media. In one breath, he would talk extensively about his "family jewels," as he put it. In the next breath, he'd put on his coaching hat and discuss the hard X's and O's of basketball.

For some people, the controversial layup from Shane Battier, the target of Hibbert's Thursday night tweet, is all they want to hear about. And that's understandable. Trash talk between athletes can be pretty compelling.

But for others, it's the X's and O's that makes the NBA experience fun. Why are the Heat so difficult to guard as a big man? Indiana coach Frank Vogel called the Heat offense "more intelligent" than the New York Knicks offense, but why is that the case?

Hibbert will explain.

During Game 1, Hibbert said he could hear LeBron James instructing his big men to do something that the Knicks didn't do enough.

What was James telling Chris Bosh, Chris Andersen and Udonis Haslem out on the court?

"'Be ready for that dump-off pass,'" Hibbert recalled.

In Game 1, when the Heat scored 60 points in the paint, Hibbert and the Pacers couldn't stop that dump-off pass.

Why?

Because James and Dwyane Wade are a threat to score and a threat to pass at the same time.

"When you play against a team this athletic with LeBron James, D-Wade and those guys, you have to pick your poison," Hibbert said. "Do you want LeBron James, who has a large launching pad, taking off and dunking on you? Or do you want Birdman making layups at the rim?"

The Pacers didn't have a dependable answer to that question in Game 1.

"It’s kind of putting me in an uneasy situation because you have LeBron coming at you at 100 miles an hour and he can take off from anywhere," Hibbert said. "What do you do? Do you try to stop him or do you worry about that pass?

"It’s a conundrum. I’m trying to figure that out."

James tallied 10 assists in Game 1, and Wade registered five. As a team, the Heat recorded 24 assists, four more than the Knicks did in any game of the Eastern Conference semifinals. In fact, James dropped more assists in Game 1 (10) than Carmelo Anthony did in the entire series against the Pacers (8).

To Hibbert, that's where you'll find the difference between the Knicks and the Heat.

"Last series, you didn’t have to worry about guys making plays like that," Hibbert said. "Carmelo is just coming straight at you, it’s easy to deal with. But with two or three guys around the basket ..."

Hibbert trailed off.

"We just have to do a better job," he said. "If I step up, somebody else has my back, and then we have a rotation after that. It’s pretty tough when you have guys like Ray Allen in the corner, LeBron and D-Wade on the court at the same time, and you have Chris Bosh, who’s a spot-up shooter. They’re going to push us to the limit."

The Pacers spent Thursday's practice and Friday morning's shootaround figuring out how to defend the Heat's multiple threats.

"We just have to be able to help the helper," Hibbert said. "That’s why Birdman and Chris Bosh have been living off the dump-off passes and stuff like that. We had our hands full. If we can stop the line drives, we can hopefully protect the paint a little bit better.

For the Pacers, the best way to deal with the Heat conundrum is to avoid it in the first place.

"We worked on some things," Hibbert said. "We’re trying to stop it at the point of the ball screen so I don’t have to be tested at the rim like four or five times in a row. We’re working on ball screen defense and the guard-guard pick-and-roll.

Easier said than done.

"But that’s hard to deal with when LeBron James and Dwyane Wade are coming at you," Hibbert said.

George vs. LeBron: NBA's next great rivalry

May, 24, 2013
May 24
8:14
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Windhorst By Brian Windhorst
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LeBron James
NBAE/Getty ImagesLeBron James and Paul George both made big plays in Game 1.
MIAMI -- Paul George will never forget that moment in 2009 when, as a skinny 19-year-old, he found himself guarding the reigning NBA Most Valuable Player in a pickup game.

Every year, LeBron James hosts the top high school players in the country at a Nike-sponsored camp. Many top college players are also there as “counselors.” In reality, it’s a recruitment fest for college coaches and a chance for Nike to develop ties with talent they one day may try to hire as endorsers.

One of the highlights every year, both for the few spectators allowed in and certainly the young men themselves, is when James suits up and takes on the teenagers in pickup games. It’s common that he’ll bring some NBA friends to those games including, at times, fellow superstar Chris Paul.

It was in one of these moments that George ended up not only fulfilling a dream by sharing the court with James but actually drawing the defensive assignment against him. After a good freshman season at Fresno State, George was invited to the camp and once there was given the wave over to the court where James was playing.

“I like challenges and it was a challenge,” George said. “It was my first time playing against someone of his nature. It was fun. I took a lot away from it.”

There was no way either of them realized back then that this was going to be the first of many showdowns.

And it will indeed be many because, even if it may not be getting the proper attention now, James versus George is almost assured to be the newest great rivalry in the NBA.

At age 28 and in his prime after winning his fourth MVP, James isn’t going anywhere. At age 23 off his first All-Star season and his first appearance on the All-NBA team, neither is George. They are already playing their second playoff series against each other and their teams both have aspirations of being back playing deep into the playoffs for the foreseeable future.

In Wednesday’s Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals, they traded off making huge plays for their teams in the fourth quarter and overtime. George had a brilliant three-point play driving right through James, then followed it up with a clutch 3-pointer over him at the end of regulation that forced overtime.

James got him back by securing a crucial rebound in overtime by outleaping George. Then, in one of the biggest plays yet in the postseason, James burned George on the game’s final play by driving past him to the rim for the game-winning layup at the buzzer. George had taken a bad angle and James crushed the error, leaving George up thinking about the mistake until after 4 a.m.

As satisfying as their Game 1 dueling performances were -- James had 30 points and George 27 -- it was just the preamble. Both in this series and in what figures to be years to come.

They are already two of the best perimeter defenders in the league and they play the same position. That means they’re going to end up spending lots of time guarding each other in pressure situations in important games.

“He’s going to be a great one,” James said. “I thought he had some unbelievable talent back [in 2009] when I met him. He went to a school that no one really paid attention to. But I’m one of those guys who stays up late at night and watches those games. I knew him.”

James got the better of George in the playoffs last season. Though he split the defensive duties with Danny Granger, when James and Dwyane Wade went on a three-game scoring binge to win that second-round series, plenty of it came at the expense of the still-learning George.

But George's rapid improvement really caught James’ eye a few months later in Shanghai when he impressed James in some workouts and exhibitions on a Nike promotional tour last summer.

Now George has James and the Heat’s full attention.

“He’s improving every time I see him play,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “Every time I see him he looks taller. He has a unique skill set for his size.”

That’s what makes this budding rivalry so intriguing, because of how much George and James are alike. They are listed at 6-foot-8 but are actually probably 6-9 or perhaps even taller in George’s case. They both have terrific quickness and versatility defensively. They both are their team’s leading scorers and best passers. They’re both strong rebounders. It says it all that they’re the only two players in the East to have a triple-double in the postseason.

It just has the look and feel that it’s the start of something.

“His coach and his teammates trust him with a lot of responsibility,” James said. “They’ve given him a lot of opportunity.”

“The more I guard him, the more I’ll understand his game,” George said. “With LeBron, you’ve got to be on your toes.”

George is not as dynamic an offensive player as James at this point. While James has taken leaps in his shooting and overall efficiency in recent years, George struggles at times with shot selection and is known to battle turnover problems.

Then again, Wednesday was James’ 23rd career conference finals game. It was George’s first. They don’t compete totally on an equal footing from a skill development or experience standpoint.

At least not yet.

“I’ve got a lot of potential left,” George said. “I’m 23 with ambitions of being great in this league and I won’t stop until I get there.”


Bosh's versatility causes dilemma for Indy

May, 23, 2013
May 23
11:31
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Wallace By Michael Wallace
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MIAMI -- Before the Miami Heat try to take a 2-0 series lead Friday in the Eastern Conference finals against the Indiana Pacers, Chris Bosh had a confession to make about the closing seconds of his team's overtime win in the opener.

He was never an option.

Not even close. At least not on the final play.

When LeBron James caught the inbound pass with 2.2 seconds left and drove for the buzzer-beater layup that downed the Pacers 103-102 in Game 1 on Wednesday, Bosh wasn't the Heat's second, third or fourth go-to player.

In essence, he was the getaway guy.

“I had to flare to the weak side,” Bosh said of moving as far away from the ball as possible at the most pivotal point in the game. “If the lob was there, maybe [I'd get it]. But I knew it wasn't going to be there. I was never an option. When we drew up the play, we knew where it was going.”

Pacers coach Frank Vogel still didn't come right out and admit it Thursday. But it was Bosh -- more than James -- that he feared on that last play in Game 1. So psyched out by the threat of Bosh's versatility, Vogel kept shot-blocking center Roy Hibbert on the bench in a move that cleared the path for Miami's victory. It was a smart gamble that backfired.

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Chris Bosh
C.W. Griffin/Miami Herald/MCTChris Bosh's ability to score from inside and out could cause issues for the Pacers.
And as the Heat and Pacers make adjustments entering Game 2, Bosh will continue settling into his role as the most important chess piece in a clash of strategies that could ultimately determine the outcome of this series.

Don't classify Bosh as a glorified decoy. It doesn't do him justice. He's a dominating dilemma. If Game 1 proved nothing else, it confirmed that just the potential of Bosh's ability to stretch the floor with his shooting and quickness at center is every bit as vital as his actual execution.

In this series, that probably won't allow Bosh to be a late-game hero like James. And he also likely won't have the touches to provide all of those highlights like Paul George.

But Bosh will be the biggest headache to deal with in what promises to be a remarkably hard-fought series. No player will do more to impact these next few games without constantly having the basketball in his hands than Bosh.

“He's the most important player for us, has been for three years,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said Thursday of Bosh, who scored just two points in the first half and got his first rebound midway through the fourth quarter in Wednesday's game.

Added Spoelstra, “[Bosh] just makes it all work, and everything works better when he's on the court. We force easier triggers when he's involved. And that's either when he's involved or when he's on the other side with his spacing. That's what makes him so unique. One way or another, he helps our attack.”

The Pacers insist they'll avoid the ambush moving forward. Asked if his team spent too much time worrying about the mismatch Bosh creates on the court, George said the Pacers would be better off sticking with their identity.

“We just have to stay consistent in what we do,” George said after Indiana's practice Thursday at AmericanAirlines Arena. “We've got to honor and respect what Chris Bosh can do, but just stay true to what we do.”

Just one game into the series, the Bosh dilemma has the Pacers already dealing with a bit of an identity crisis. During his pregame media session about an hour before the start of Game 1, Vogel said his team hasn't -- and wouldn't -- adjust its style to counter an opponent's adjustments.

A few hours later, the message was different. Vogel justified his last-second lineup shuffle by pointing the pick-your-poison proposition presented by Bosh's presence.

“That's the dilemma they present when they have Chris Bosh at the [center] spot and his ability to space the floor,” Vogel said. “Obviously, with the way it worked out, it would have been better to have Roy in the game. But you don't know. If that happens, maybe Bosh is making the jump shot, and we're all talking about that [instead].”

Causing psychological conundrums isn't a new role for Bosh. But it's one that he's gradually embracing even as it constantly evolves from one playoff series to the next.

During the Heat's first-round series sweep against Milwaukee, Bosh was matched up with equally nimble and athletic center Larry Sanders. So the challenge then was for Bosh to be a defensive anchor and play closer to the rim. He had 16 points and 14 rebounds in Game 3 against the Bucks and then blocked four shots in the series clincher.

Against Chicago in the next round, Bosh was charged with matching the energy and relentless play of Joakim Noah. He then delivered 20 points and a career-high 19 rebounds in Game 3 and another four-block performance in Game 4 before the Heat closed out the Bulls in five games.

But in this round, as he faces the 7-foot-2 Hibbert and rugged power forward David West, Bosh knows his production might be determined more by his technique than his touches.

“I'm just doing my best to stretch these guys out,” Bosh said. “[Hibbert] is one of the best defenders as a big in the league. If you just give him one option, he's probably going to dominate. We want to give him a bunch of different looks, put him in a bunch of different positions where he has to make quick decisions. If you give him something else to think about, it changes the dynamic a little bit.”

Bosh didn't have to bother baiting Hibbert with the game on the line Wednesday. Vogel made sure of it. But that might not be the case the rest of the series. After expressing his frustrations about sitting out the final seconds of Game 1, Hibbert said Thursday he met with Vogel and the two have a mutual understanding of his role in the matchup.

“Our size is our strength,” Hibbert said of coping with the Bosh strategy. “But at the same time, I'm not the quickest guy out there on the perimeter. We have a plan for it. And if I'm on Bosh, I have to do a good job of moving my feet.”

Meanwhile, Bosh will counter by forcing the Pacers' big men into what he describes as “unorthodox positions” in order to disrupt their comfort zone. Bosh knows it's not necessarily a glamorous job. It might not come with normal perks like points, rebounds or other statistical measures.

But there are fringe benefits that come with keeping the Pacers on the edge.

“I would like to think the threat of my impact is pretty strong,” Bosh said. “I've had to learn that since coming here, how to be a more well-rounded player, how you can affect the game without many play calls. It's not easy. But I just hang in there. If I get their guys a couple of steps out of their areas and comfort zone, and LeBron and [Dwyane] Wade get in there and finish, then I've done my job.”

Heat Reaction: Game 1 vs. Pacers

May, 23, 2013
May 23
12:14
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Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
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Banged-up D-Wade fights on for Miami

May, 22, 2013
May 22
11:14
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Wallace By Michael Wallace
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LeBron James
NBAE/Getty ImagesHow much can the Heat expect from Dwyane Wade against the Pacers?
MIAMI -- Making peace with the pain continues to be a precipitous work in progress for Dwyane Wade.

But even as the Miami Heat star drags his troublesome right knee into Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals Wednesday against the Indiana Pacers, Wade no longer bothers with optimistic hopes and expectations.

He acknowledges the multiple bruises that have been a nuisance the past two months will no doubt continue to slow him. Wade also knows he won't be anywhere near 100 percent healthy for the remainder of the playoffs. So the reality is that he's essentially in a race against time.

“No matter what else I have going on, we've got one month left in the season,” Wade said. “It hasn't gotten better. It hasn't gotten worse. I've just got to go out there and hope I've got it in me to help us get eight more wins. That's all I really care about. That's all I'm worried about right now.”

Eight more postseason victories are what separates the Heat from their second consecutive NBA title. And to complete that mission, the next four of those eight wins must come against a formidable nemesis in a Pacers team that had the Heat stumbling and frustrated in last season's playoffs series.

Even with the 10-year veteran guard at far less than his best, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra is confident Wade will still have a major impact on the series against the Pacers. Part of that confidence stems from watching Wade score 18 points and provide a dominant burst in the fourth quarter as the Heat closed out the Chicago Bulls in Game 5 last week.

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Dwyane Wade
Pedro Portal/El Nuevo Herald/MCTDwyane Wade is averaging 13 points and 45.3 percent shooting during the playoffs.


For the second time this postseason, the Heat's quick work of a playoff opponent landed them a full week off between rounds. Spoelstra was encouraged to see Wade go through all of the Heat's scrimmage work over the past three days without enduring any further issues with his right knee.

“Dwyane's a warrior [and] he's proven himself as a warrior,” Spoelstra said when asked Tuesday what he realistically expects from Wade this series. “He's giving this team everything he's got. He's practiced every day since the end of last series. So I take that as a good sign.”

Wade finds himself facing both a recognizable foe while also coping with a familiar ailment in the process. It was in the conference semifinals last season when Wade's left knee gave him so many problems he required fluid to be drained from it in the middle of the series against Indiana.

With center Chris Bosh knocked out of that series in Game 1 with an abdominal strain and Wade's knee flaring up between Games 2 and 3, the Heat trailed Indiana 2-1 before rallying with three straight wins. Miami came back from a 3-2 series deficit to knock off Boston and then defeated Oklahoma City in the Finals in five games.

The Heat have overcome so much adversity in the playoffs over the past three seasons, they've come to embrace it. And Wade, reluctantly, is the embodiment of that approach.

But the Pacers are the biggest test yet to Wade's resilience.

Despite Wade being in the midst of the least productive playoff run in his 10-year career, the Heat were able to withstand the struggles with his health and game to cruise past Milwaukee in a first-round sweep. Wade sat out the series-clinching win in Game 4 after shooting a playoff-career-worst 1-for-12 from the field in the previous game.

Wade was just as sporadic against Chicago. But the combination of a more aggressive LeBron James and a more engaged Bosh was enough for the Heat to overwhelm the short-handed Bulls in five games after losing the opener.

Through eight games this postseason, Wade's numbers resemble those of a solid role player rather than an elite star. He's averaging 13 points and shooting 45.3 percent from the field, compared with 21.2 points and a career-high 52.1 percent clip in 69 games during the regular season.

Yet even as Wade's knee injury has impacted his offensive rhythm and tamed his explosiveness around the basket, it hasn't tarnished his overall effect on the game in other areas. His 5.4 assists a game in the playoffs is slightly higher than his season average of 5.1, and his 4.8 rebounds in the postseason is on par with his season average.

It's one reason, in hindsight, Wade reflects with pride on his Game 3 stinker of sorts against the Bucks in the first round. Why? Because despite that horrible shooting night, he fought through the pain to stuff the rest of the stat sheet with 11 assists, nine rebounds, five steals and two blocks.

It's the same mentality Wade plans to carry into the series against Indiana, which boasts the league's top defense.

“I've had games before when I struggled and shot badly, and I let that affect the rest of my game,” Wade said. “But you need to do more. For me now, it's just find a moment to help my team get over the hump. That's my approach in this series coming out. From game to game, it's going to be different. I don't know what those different challenges will be. But my mentality going in is to do whatever it takes in that game, in that quarter, in that moment. Do all I can do.”

Wade hasn't revealed specific details about the status or treatment of his knee in recent days since he aggravated it in Game 4 against Chicago. At one time, Wade confirmed some squeamish details of how trainers have helped him slide his kneecap over to the side adjacent to the bruises before taping and wrapping it to prepare him for games.

Heat teammates get to see behind the scenes what Wade goes through daily to get through practices and games.

“He's doing the best he can to get himself prepared and get himself ready physically,” said forward Udonis Haslem, who has been in Miami with Wade since 2003. “But I think, mentally, he understands his situation. He understands what we need from him and he understands what he can bring. Regardless of his situation physically, he's still an All-Star, still one of the top guards in this game, and still commands so much attention from other teams defensively.”

In essence, Wade might be a bit diminished as he deals with the knee. But he's hardly a decoy. That was clear the last time he was on the court with a game on the line.

James shook his head in amazement as he recalled watching Wade take over against the Bulls down the stretch in Game 5. Wade left the bench at the end of the third quarter to get his knee re-taped for what he anticipated would be a tight finish that required his late-game services.

During an eight-minute stretch, Wade scored six points, grabbed three rebounds, made a block and a key deflection as Miami rallied from an eight-point deficit for a 94-91 win. It was the sort of finish that reinforced confidence that Wade can still turn it on when needed and, despite the discomfort, do so in style with a few of his signature moves, as well.

“I know it's still frustrating because he's not nowhere near 100 percent,” James said of Wade. “I think Game 5 gave him a little bit of ease, knowing he could still be who he is. He hadn't had a Euro-step in about three weeks. So to see him do a Euro-step to [shoot] a floater, his two best moves of his career … let him know he could still be who he is.”

As he's progressed through the stages of frustration, disappointment and, finally, acceptance that this knee situation simply won't go away, Wade came across a spiritual message that provided a sense of peace. He posted a link to the passage on his Instagram account Tuesday.

It read, in part: “There may be things I don't understand right now but I'm not worried. ... One day it will all come together and everything will make sense.”

Wade hasn't forgotten who he is or what he adds to the Heat. He's just hoping his knee holds up long enough and allows him to provide a few more reminders with his play.

“It's easy right now to make peace with it,” Wade said of coping with the knee problems. “But as this series goes on, it's going to be highs and lows, ups and downs. There are going to be frustrations because you're not able to do exactly everything you want to do. But I'll figure it out.”

The imminent return of the LeBron floater

May, 21, 2013
May 21
6:56
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Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
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LeBron James
Nathaniel S. Butler/Getty Images
Don't be surprised if LeBron James breaks out his floater against Roy Hibbert and the Indiana Pacers.

MIAMI – For the past several weeks, LeBron James has finished up his daily routine at practice by shooting free throws with Ray Allen. Every practice, same thing.

But on Tuesday, things were different.

A day ahead of their Eastern Conference finals matchup against Roy Hibbert and the Indiana Pacers, James was at his normal basket at the Miami Heat’s practice court, but Allen was on another hoop, practicing his 3-point shot on his own. Instead of trading free throws with Allen, James was working with Heat assistant coach David Fizdale and point guard Mario Chalmers on a different shot:

The running floater in the lane.

Yes, the same one he unleashed out of nowhere against Hibbert last playoffs and used to help push the Heat over the top in six games.

James' goal on Tuesday was obvious: to polish his Hibbert arsenal.

“I just dust it off when I need it,” James said of his rarely-seen floater.

This was the first and only day that James has put in extra work on it this season. James started from the top of the key, barreled down the middle of the paint and launched in the air for a floater. He’d do that a few times and then switch angles. Starting from the baseline, James took a dribble on the move and then soared across the lane to drop a running hook. Over and over again.

The only thing that was missing was a 7-foot-2 cardboard cutout standing at the rim.

James knows he’ll need his full repertoire against the Pacers’ front line for this upcoming series. No, the thinking isn’t to only drop floaters in the lane. Rather, it’s to keep Hibbert honest. No more allowing Hibbert to camp out around the rim and wait for intruders. The Heat want Hibbert on the move and guessing.

“He won’t just have one look,” James said after Tuesday’s practice. “We have to be able to give him different looks to keep him off balance.”

James unveiled the crafty shot in the third quarter of Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals last season, just minutes after Chris Bosh left the game with an abdominal strain that sidelined him for weeks. James turned the corner after a high pick-and-roll with Udonis Haslem and made his way to the rim as Hibbert sidestepped off Ronny Turiaf to park himself underneath the basket.

That’s where Hibbert waited for James. But instead of trying to shoot through the 7-foot-2 giant, James hopped off two feet halfway into the lane, rose up and tossed the ball high into the air. Swish. From then on, James went to that shot without hesitation, and it proved to be a handy weapon against Hibbert's size.

Remember James' monster Game 4 against the Pacers when he registered 40 points, 18 rebounds and nine assists? James used his devastating floater on multiple occasions in that furious comeback alongside Dwyane Wade, but James also punished the Pacers with 16 free throws. James still attacked the rim and racked up fouls against Hibbert, but he needed the reliable floater to keep Hibbert from getting too comfortable in the paint.

Typically, James will use his otherworldly athleticism and strength to overwhelm his opponent like a wrecking ball. But there will be times when he'll need technique and grace to keep opposing big men on their toes. So for James in this series against Hibbert and the No. 1-ranked defense in the league this season, the key will be variety, not velocity.

James knows Hibbert doesn't want to be dragged away from the basket. He paid close attention to the Knicks-Pacers series and it resonated with him when Hibbert rose up for that iconic block on Carmelo Anthony at the rim in the decisive Game 6 (James called it "a very good block" on Tuesday). James watched every minute of the series during which the Knicks' percentage of shots in the restricted area plummeted from 39.5 percent with Hibbert on the bench to just 30.5 percent with him in the game, according to NBA.com/Stats.

This is the Hibbert effect, and James wants to neutralize it with as many weapons as he can. The floater, you can expect, will be one of them.

Heat's case for improvement strong, too

May, 21, 2013
May 21
10:48
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Wallace By Michael Wallace
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Mike McGinnis/Getty ImagesThe addition of Chris Andersen in February improved the Heat's ability to combat Indiana's size.

MIAMI -- Erik Spoelstra is already in adjustment mode.

The Miami Heat and the Indiana Pacers don't play Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals until Wednesday, but the Heat's coach is tweaking at least the narrative entering the best-of-seven series to advance to the NBA Finals.

At one point while facing a series of questions about the improvements the Pacers have made since they lost 4-2 to the Heat in last year's conference semifinals, the Miami coach countered with a progress report on his own team.

“If we're talking about people assuming they're improving from their experience, hopefully, we've improved as well,” Spoelstra said. “They're a very good basketball team. They've grown together. They've been together, their core, for several years. They've been through playoff experiences together. They've added some good pieces that fit their culture. They've developed a philosophy they believe in.”

If Spoelstra's analysis sounds familiar, well, it is.

“We believe we've done the same thing,” he continued, smoothly transitioning the focus to the Heat. “Hopefully, we're much better than the last time we played them. If we're the same team that we were last year, that won't be enough. Period. Fact. And that's why we've spent so much time this year trying to develop habits to improve. We don't feel we're the same team that played the Pacers last year.”

If the Pacers believe they've gained ground on Miami over the past year, the Heat don't feel they've exactly stood still.

For every declaration made about the rapid growth this season of Pacers players Paul George, Lance Stephenson and Roy Hibbert, the Heat respond with the productive additions of Ray Allen and Chris Andersen along with the development of second-year point guard Norris Cole.

And that doesn't even include the steady expansion of LeBron James' overall game this season or the availability of center Chris Bosh, who was injured in the first half of Game 1 last year against Indiana and missed the remainder of the series with a strained lower abdominal muscle.

“Last year was last year [and] both teams are better than they were last year, so we'll see what happens,” James said of anticipating an even more competitive series with the Pacers this time around. “We know it's going to be a challenge for us. We look forward to it. It's the Eastern Conference finals. No matter who you play, you should be locked in. It's one round to go to get to the Finals. So there should be no reason why you're not locked in.”

The matchup between the Heat and Pacers represents the ultimate clash of playing styles, although both teams have adjusted this season to better adapt to the other team's game.

The Heat are bigger and deeper than they were during last season's run to a championship. After shifting virtually on the fly to go with a smaller lineup amid Bosh's absence, Miami signed Andersen in February just for these playoff occasions to provide length and energy off the bench.

Andersen once told Joakim Noah earlier this season the Heat brought him in strictly to match up with the Bulls center. He'll also give the Heat a bigger option, if needed, to complement Bosh and Udonis Haslem in the paint against the 7-2 Hibbert and rugged power forward David West. When the Pacers pummeled the Heat in the first of two double-digit victories in Indiana, West told ESPN.com that his team was much better prepared to face the Heat's frontcourt -- big or small -- this time around.

Meanwhile, Indiana can shift to a smaller and quicker lineup with speedy point guard D.J. Augustin and Stephenson in the backcourt. The Pacers have also added athletic swingmen in Gerald Green and Sam Young to help match up with James and Dwyane Wade on the perimeter. Committed to pushing in transition, the Pacers outscored the Knicks 12-0 in Saturday's series-clinching victory.

The Heat insist they won't be caught off guard by the Pacers, either. It's even grown to the point where Miami's players vehemently resent the notion they seem to struggle against teams with more size and perceived toughness.

“They have their style and we have our style,” Wade said. “At the end of the day, you have to find a way to win playing whatever style the game calls for. We're not the most physical team. We don't have guys that look very physical. But we have guys that understand what it takes to win. Sometimes, we know you have to get into the fight.”

Neither team plans to back down from the physical play that bordered, at times, on roughhousing last season. The Heat and Pacers combined for 276 fouls, seven conduct-related technical fouls, four flagrant fouls and two player suspensions during their six-game series a year ago.

In essence the Heat's series against the Bulls may have served as a warm-up of sorts for what could be coming next. In the 4-1 series win against Chicago, the Heat and Bulls combined for 232 fouls, 14 conduct-related technical fouls, three player ejections and one flagrant foul. The Heat can also draw from their series against the Bulls in the way they handled the opposing team's interior post play.

Bosh said there are similarities between what Chicago presented in Noah and Carlos Boozer at center and power forward and what Indiana has in Hibbert and West.

“They're different players, but I think playing against the Bulls, we've gone against that kind of style, that kind of tandem of a [power forward] and [center], and we've built a good rhythm against that,” Bosh said. “That's nothing we haven't seen. In order to win a championship, these are the teams we're going to have to beat in order to get there.”

Plenty has changed since last season, although both the Heat and Pacers bring back familiar faces and goals.

Indiana has gained confidence and experience.

Miami has added depth and versatility.

Neither plans to give an inch.

“When you have the two best teams in the East, that's exactly the way it should be,” Wade said. “They got better and we got better, too. So let's play.”

The Pacers have the league's most improved player in George.

But the defending champion Heat are staking their own claim as the most improved team.

What's the key to the Pacers-Heat series? 

May, 20, 2013
May 20
11:23
AM ET
Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
Archive
In the 2011-12 playoffs, the Indiana Pacers were the team that forced the Heat to implement Erik Spoelstra’s title-winning vision. If Chris Bosh’s injury was the fuse, the size of the Pacers provided the gunpowder to make it all happen. Spoelstra’s big plan? Go small, space the floor and slay the opponent with speed.

It was unconventional, but it worked. The Heat countered the Pacers’ enormous stature up front (David West and Roy Hibbert) by going in other direction -- align Shane Battier or LeBron James at the nominal 4 while playing only one traditional big man. The rest is history.

This time around, the big plan to go small likely won’t change.

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Heat play waiting game yet again

May, 17, 2013
May 17
11:12
PM ET
Wallace By Michael Wallace
ESPN.com
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MIAMI -- As a four-time league MVP and the catalyst for the NBA's defending champions, LeBron James isn't accustomed to having his rhythm disrupted these days.

Good defenders rarely bother him.

Great schemes do little to knock him off his game.

But the only thing to stop James in his tracks recently has been a self-inflicted wound of sorts: His team's dominance so far this postseason. The Miami Heat are 8-1 through two rounds of their best-of-seven playoff series.

And that kind of success requires patience. Plenty of it.

For the second time during these playoffs, the Heat find themselves uncomfortably idle as they await the start of their next series after making quick work of an opponent.

After sweeping Milwaukee in the first round, Miami dispatched short-handed Chicago in five games to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the third straight season. But after enduring a seven-day break between facing the Bucks and the Bulls, the Heat now have a six-day hiatus before they play Game 1 of the conference finals Wednesday night at AmericanAirlines Arena.

Miami could learn its next opponent as early as Saturday, when the Indiana Pacers look to close out the New York Knicks in Game 6 at home. With a win Saturday, the Knicks will force Game 7 at Madison Square Garden on Monday.

After saying he needed at least 24 hours to decompress after a mentally and physically taxing series against Chicago, James declared Friday his body was recharged and ready to play again. But he can only be a spectator.

“I'm not where I need to be as far as getting ready because I don't know who we play,” an already-restless James said Friday. “As far as physically, I could play a game tonight if we had one. I'm ready to go. But mentally, I'm not there yet because I can't hone in on who we're playing just yet.”

The only preference the Heat had in this ordeal was to have been playing on Monday instead of waiting another two days. But the Wednesday start was locked in by the league once the Knicks beat the Pacers in Game 5 on Thursday.

For now, the Heat's priority is to avoid a repeat of the rusty play they carried into their opening game against the Bulls following the previous layoff. Miami's players and coaches on Friday still credited Chicago for playing tough defense and riding momentum to a 93-86 upset in Game 1 of the series.

But there was also an acknowledgment in hindsight that rust and a lack of offensive rhythm also played a much larger role in the loss than the Heat initially let on before rolling off four consecutive wins to put away the Bulls.

Miami scored just 35 points in the first half and shot just 39 percent in that loss to Chicago, but responded two days later with a 37-point win in Game 2 that accounted for both the largest postseason victory in Heat history and the most lopsided loss the Bulls were ever handed in the postseason.

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said his staff has examined every step the team took during the previous layoff between playoff games, from how frequently and long practices were held over the break, to what sets were run and how the team executed early in Game 1 against the Bulls. Spoelstra didn't say what exact changes might be made, but the Heat spent Friday's practice on shooting and timing drills.

“It's conditioning, shooting, rhythm, timing, sweating,” said Spoelstra, who gave the team the day off Saturday. “We're day-to-day right now in terms of our planning. You can't cheat the game, so you have to work at it. You're almost a week out from competing again, coming off a very intense series, your natural reaction is to not to want to come in here and get after it and sweat. But you can't shortcut it.”

There aren't any shortcuts to better health, either. Conventional wisdom would suggest that another extended dose of rest would be a good thing for Heat guard Dwyane Wade, who has struggled at times to play through a bruised right knee that's given him problems for two months.

But Wade, who bounced back with his second-best game of the playoffs to help close out the Bulls Wednesday, said he was resigned to the fact that his knee won't get much better regardless of the time off until after the season.

“I'm (still) dealing with this,” Wade said Friday. “I had 10 days off last time, so it really doesn't matter. At this point, we have a month (left) in the season. That's all I'm focusing on. I deal with stuff. I'm mentally strong enough to come out and still be effective, still be able to do what I do.”

Although Miami has shown a propensity to recover from early deficits to win playoff series the past two seasons, Wade doesn't want to keep playing from the same script. The Heat have trailed at some point in six playoff series since 2010 and have rallied to win five of them. The lone exception was the 2011 NBA Finals against Dallas.

In three of those six series, Miami dropped Game 1 and came back to win four straight, which was also the case in the Finals last season on the way to beating Oklahoma City.

“We'll continue to rise to the occasion, no matter who we're playing,” James said. “The stakes are higher now, being in the Eastern Conference finals. Our game will continue to rise, and we have a lot of room for improvement. We had a lot of mental breakdowns the last round we can improve. That's the best thing about our team. We don't really dwell on things we did well. We hate the things we did bad.”

The Heat have a bit more time to nitpick as they wait, and center Chris Bosh can think of a few adjustments.

“You just feel a little off,” Bosh said of initial challenges after a long layoff. “I wouldn't say rusty. You're rusty when you're coming back from the offseason. It's just a mental aspect of dealing with some shots that won't fall that usually go in. We were a step slow on defense, our awareness just wasn't where it was supposed to be. We want to hit the ground running and have a good rhythm this time. We're just going to have to continue to tinker with some things (the next few days) and just figure it out.”

No team has figured out how to get through playoff series faster than the Heat these days. But there's only one problem: They hate to wait.

This rapid postseason progress is really testing their patience.

Why the Miami Heat recycle

May, 17, 2013
May 17
4:06
PM ET
Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
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Dwyane Wade Rick Havner/Getty Images


MIAMI -- Erik Spoelstra laughed at the question.

The coach was asked at Heat practice on Friday if he feels pity for the video coordinators these days. After all, they have to prepare not one, but two, full scouting reports, one for the New York Knicks and one for the Indiana Pacers, because the Heat still don't know who they're playing in the Eastern Conference Finals. Actually, it's possible that the idle Heat won't know who they're playing until Monday night ahead of Game 1, which starts on Wednesday.

The Heat are playing the waiting game, the team's video coordinators and scouting staff are feverishly working double time. But what his "video guys" are dealing with now is nothing, Spoelstra insisted.

Spoelstra has been in their shoes. He started in the Heat organization as a 25-year-old video coordinator back in 1995, working long hours cutting film in the Heat's Dungeon, as the staff affectionately calls it. Since then, he's worn every hat in the coaching staff directory and seen it all when it comes to last-minute prepping.

But this current staff has been been studying up on the Pacers and Knicks since the beginning of May.

You think two teams is bad?

Try five.

"The worst one ever," Spoelstra recalled.

It was back in the 2003-04 season while Spoelstra was the assistant coach to then-head coach Stan Van Gundy. Shortly after graduating from the Dungeon, Spoelstra was in charge of writing the scouting reports for Van Gundy and the rest of the coaching staff, as well as a separate one for the players.

Spoelstra never saw it coming, really. That season, the Heat had started 0-7 and hadn't even reached .500 until the last week of the regular season. After a mad dash to finish the season (winning 17 of their final 22 games), Spoelstra instructed his video and scouting staff to prepare for the seventh seed or eighth seed.

"I prepared A-to-Z, four of the teams of highest probability, ranging from 60 percent to 90 percent probability that we'd play them. We had the books, video, everything," Spoelstra said as he pretended to lock up a safe.

"Turn the key, done."

On the final night of the regular season, four teams -- the Heat, Milwaukee Bucks, New Orleans Hornets, New York Knicks -- jockeyed for position in the playoff picture as the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh seeds were up for grabs.

The Heat beat the New Jersey Nets by 12 points in the final game of the season to finish with a lukewarm 42-40 record. After the win, the coaching staff hurried down to the Dungeon to watch the end of Toronto-Milwaukee game, which would decide their playoff fate. Of countless scenarios entering the day, it all hinged on this one game.

If the Raptors beat the Bucks, the Heat would net the fourth seed and play the Hornets. If the Bucks beat the Raptors, the Heat would be the fifth seed and play the Bucks.

Sure enough, Toronto's Jalen Rose hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with five seconds to go, but the Bucks had one more opportunity to get the fourth seed. Michael Redd, playing at the time for the Bucks, missed a last-second 27-footer.

Buck lose, Heat nab the fourth seed to play the Hornets.

This would normally be a time for unbridled celebration for the coaching staff, right? Only one problem: the Hornets weren't one of the four teams that Spoelstra selected. They weren't even on Spoelstra's radar.

"There was a 1 percent probability of that happening," Spoelstra said. "I hadn’t watched one second of film of New Orleans."

They needed a fifth book. Instead of rejoicing, the whole room groaned. Except for one guy.

"As soon as it happened, Stan just started laughing," Spoelstra said with a grin. "He walked out and said, 'Have a good night!'"

And with that, Spoelstra and his staff crammed an entire week's worth of scouting in one night -- or early morning, you could say. Spoelstra had to watch the film, write up the scouting reports on each Hornets player and scout their entire playbook. Deadline was 1 o'clock the next afternoon in time for a coaches meeting, which was 13 hours away.

Of course, Spoelstra got it done. He had already written four 20-page books that week. What's one more?

"I think I was up 50 straight hours," Spoelstra said.

Dozens of copies of those four books, hundreds and hundreds of pages all gone to waste. How many trees did they kill?

"Put it this way: We recycle now," Spoelstra said. "I’m from Oregon. I ethically had a problem throwing away that much paper. Now we have a big green bin, and it's mostly digital anyway."

Video coordinators these days, they don't know how good they have it.

"Two teams over the course of two weeks?" Spoelstra said. "Nah, that's easy."

Heat Reaction: Game 5 vs. Bulls

May, 15, 2013
May 15
10:12
PM ET
Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
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Five things to know about Wade's injury 

May, 15, 2013
May 15
1:23
PM ET
Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
Archive
You wouldn’t know it by the chatter, but the Miami Heat are up 3-1 against the Chicago Bulls with a home game Wednesday night. The Heat could wrap up the series in a few hours, but that’s not the focus of the conversation these days.

The buzz is all about Dwyane Wade and his bothersome right knee.

A bone bruise limited Wade to six points on 3-of-10 shooting in Game 4 after he aggravated the injury in the second quarter. Wade has been hindered by the knee for two months and he’s scoring 12.3 points per game in the postseason on 43.9 percent shooting along with 5.3 assists, 4.7 rebounds and 3.1 turnovers. Perhaps of more concern, he’s averaging half as many free throw attempts as he did in the regular season.

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Heat Reaction: Game 4 vs. Bulls

May, 13, 2013
May 13
9:36
PM ET
Wallace By Michael Wallace
ESPN.com
Archive



Should the Heat worry about Wade?

May, 13, 2013
May 13
12:33
PM ET
Windhorst By Brian Windhorst
ESPN.com
Archive
CHICAGO -- There will never be a question about how much Dwyane Wade has given the Miami Heat in his career.

He carried them to one title, bit his lip when several years of his prime were sacrificed on rebuilding, sold the team to LeBron James and Chris Bosh so they’d join him then relinquished his beloved and earned alpha status so James could carry the team to another title.

This dossier has been properly recognized and he’s been afforded plenty of praise for it.

But it can also be used as a crutch and that’s what has been happening so far in the Heat’s postseason.

Wade will explain that he’s being unselfish and his coaches and teammates will back this up with vigor. Sometimes coach Erik Spoelstra will almost be accusatory to the questioner when someone probes how little Wade seems to be producing, explaining just how smart and unselfish Wade is playing.

The party line is that James, Bosh and even Norris Cole are thriving and the Heat are up 2-1 on the Chicago Bulls because Wade is willing to take just seven shots, as he did in Game 3, and not make an issue of it.

“He’s showing a great maturity in this series,” Spoelstra said. “He’s playing very, very intelligent.”

Let us, however, address the elephant in the room. Wade isn’t playing well and he’s hurt and won’t talk about how badly hurt he is. The Heat probably can get past the injury-riddled Bulls with Wade playing a shadow of himself. But if they’re going to win two more series to repeat as champs, it will probably require Wade to return to some semblance of his form.

When the Heat are at their absolute best, it’s because Wade’s relentless offensive attacking combined with James makes them nearly impossible to defend. When they're feeling good, Wade and James strike fear in opponents at the mere hint of a fast break.

When they won 27 games in a row in February and March, Wade was fantastic, averaging 23 points and shooting 54 percent. He even pulled off the feat of beating out James for a player of the week award in that span. It was not unlike last season at this time, where the one-two action Wade and James delivered knocked out the Indiana Pacers’ upset bid when Bosh went down with an injury.

That is the championship Wade and the championship Heat. And simply, in his first six games of the playoffs, Wade has not been himself and is making a minimal impact. He’s averaging just 13.3 points and shooting just 46 percent. And the Heat have not been themselves against the Bulls.

Wade will not talk about the severity of his right knee injury, just like he wouldn’t talk about how bad his left knee was bothering him during the playoffs last season. It seems like it’s costing him explosion because he’s not getting to the basket. He has taken just two free throws in the first three games against the Bulls.

“I’m a big boy, I know I can shoot a shot any time I want to,” Wade said. “When I have the ball I try to make the best play. It’s all about winning to me. When you’re on a team like this you don’t know what night your opportunities are going to come. It’s different from game to game, it’s different from lineup to lineup. As long as we’re in position to win, I will never complain.”

This is where Wade will then talk about how he might miss taking 20 shots a game, as he did when he won the scoring title on an average team in 2008, but he doesn’t want to play that way. He’ll talk about how in 2010, when he was the alpha dog and the Heat were bounced from the playoffs by the Boston Celtics, he vowed never to let that happen again even if it meant slicing off a huge piece of influence by inviting James aboard.

“I had some things to prove five years ago, now I just want to prove I can win,” Wade said.

“I ask myself 'What memories do I want to have?' I want to have memories of winning. Did I think five years ago I would play in a playoff game and take just seven shots? Hell no. At the end of the game was I pissed about it? Nope. We won the game, I moved on and I had a good dinner.”

Again, this is admirable. No one questions that if James was playing for the Bulls right now, which was possible, that Wade would be the man carrying the Heat. And the Heat would be the underdog.

The Bulls, of course, are playing a role in this. They are a strong defensive team and they’ve focused on trying to take away Wade’s post game, which is his go-to when his legs aren’t feeling the best, because they seem to know Wade can’t beat them off the dribble at the moment.

But it isn’t just about the defense, Wade averaged 20 points on 58 percent shooting against the Bulls in the regular season when they were much healthier. Much of this series Wade has been guarded by Marco Belinelli, who is not the team’s best defender.

Several Heat players and Spoelstra said they need to get Wade more involved. Obviously him taking just seven shots in Game 3, just one in the first half, was alarming. It figures getting him more active will be a part of the plan for Game 4.

At least it should be. Other than finishing off the hellacious Bulls, getting Wade into some sort of rhythm again has to be the team’s top priority as the Heat look ahead in the postseason.

“I wouldn’t bet I would shoot seven shots again, but I won’t say I won’t,” Wade said. “I’m not concerned about that. If I was worried about my numbers I wouldn’t be here in this position.”

But someone should start to worry about it.

What happened to Dwyane Wade?

May, 13, 2013
May 13
10:30
AM ET
Haberstroh By Tom Haberstroh
ESPN.com
Archive
Dwyane WadeJesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE/Getty ImagesBurdened with a bruised knee, Dwyane Wade has been a shell of his former self in these playoffs.

Is it time for the Heat to be concerned about Dwyane Wade yet?

It seems like a fair question in a vacuum, but of course, we don't operate in a vacuum. Actually, we’ve been here before. And Wade has made us look like morons for doubting him.

If you remember in last season's playoffs, Wade looked like a shell of his former self in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, scoring five points on 2-for-13 shooting from the floor against Indiana. Team doctors drained fluid from his troublesome left knee before the game to try to alleviate the discomfort, but the Heat fell behind 2-1 to the Pacers. It was commonly said that Wade was done and the Heat were done.

Wade then averaged 24.1 points, 6.1 rebounds and 4.7 assists for the rest of the playoffs, and the Heat won the 2012 championship.

As if we didn’t learn our lesson the first time: Doubts about Wade's effectiveness were raised again during this past regular season. And sure enough, Wade made those concerns look foolish and premature after a torrid shooting tear, registering a preposterous 55 percent conversion rate after the All-Star break.

Fooled us twice, shame on us.

And now Wade is at it again.

Playing through a balky knee (is there an echo in here?), Wade has averaged just 13.3 points per game in the playoffs, which is just below Reggie Jackson and a smidge above Omer Asik. He’s shooting 45.8 percent from the floor, down from 52.1 percent during the regular season. His player efficiency rating (PER) has plummeted from 24.0 in the regular season to 17.5 in the postseason. Once again, Wade's play is begging us to doubt him again.

So what do we do with this information? Do we just move right along and pretend that it isn’t happening?

Of course not. Wade very well could put up 40 points in Game 4, but that shouldn’t stop us from analyzing what has been plaguing Wade so far. What exactly is happening?

Unhealthy knee, unhealthy game
If Wade’s bruised right knee, which caused him to miss Game 4 against the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round, is limiting his game, it shows. Heat coach Erik Spoelstra has been praising Wade for his shot discipline after Wade took just seven shots in Game 3, but that discipline hasn’t carried over in other areas. Wade’s turnover rate has jumped from 13.2 percent of his possessions ending in a turnover in the regular season to 19.8 percent in the playoffs. In other words, Wade fumbles the ball every fifth time that he finishes a play. That's not good.

And those turnovers are telling. If you watch the film, you’ll notice that Wade hasn’t been able to slalom his way to the basket like he normally does. Instead, he has routinely stopped short in the midrange area for either an off-balance jump shot or a jump pass to the perimeter where he airmails it directly to a Chicago Bulls defender.

When healthy, Wade can hang in the air and use those jump passes as a weapon even though players everywhere are taught never to leave your feet to make a pass. But recently, Wade hasn’t shown the requisite lift to make it an effective counter. The result is gobs of turnovers off of jump passes that make youth coaches everywhere cringe.

Usually, Wade doesn't need those jump passes to be successful. He has made a living in the pick-and-roll where he can step around defenders and use his lightning-quick agility to maneuver his way to the rim. But that’s not the case anymore. Wade has scored a measly 14 points on 31 pick-and-roll plays this postseason, according to Synergy Sports video tracking. His efficiency on that action (0.452 points per play) ranks dead last in the playoffs among players with at least 25 pick-and-roll plays. Translation: Wade’s greatest strength has been reduced lately to a weakness.

No longer finding freebies
Without a dependable pick-and-roll game to catch his defender off-balance, Wade has watched his trips to the free throw line vanish. This postseason, he has tallied one more free throw than Chris Andersen, even though Andersen has played 102 fewer minutes. Moreover, Wade has failed to reach the free throw line in two of the three games this series.

Want to guess how many free-throw-less games he previously registered since LeBron James and Chris Bosh teamed up with him in 2010-11?

Two (not counting injury-shortened games). That’s it.

Wade remains one of the great foul-drawers in NBA history and it's one of the reasons he's a terror to guard even at age 31. Taking away Wade's free throw game is like removing James' ability to pass the ball.

Taking a detour
Wade has compensated for his lack of agility off the dribble by cutting to the rim and getting easy looks that way. In fact, 80 percent of his buckets in the restricted area this postseason have been assisted, whereas that number was just 57.1 percent in the regular season, according to NBA.com’s stats tool. This is when it helps to have that LeBron guy around.

Yes, we have to credit Wade for finding an effective detour off the ball, but the Heat can’t afford to watch Wade transform into Avery Bradley on the offensive end. Why? Because the road to a championship will get only harder. The Bulls' defense ranked fifth in defensive efficiency this season, but the four teams ahead of them? That would be the Pacers, Grizzlies, Spurs and Thunder. Two of those four could be next if the Heat get past the Bulls.

So you can blame the stingy Bulls defense for Wade’s struggles, but just know that it probably won’t get easier for the Heat here on out. The Heat have been able to absorb his ineffectiveness against a depleted Bulls squad thanks to Norris Cole and Ray Allen picking up the slack.

But going forward, the Heat need vintage Wade to show up. And if history repeats itself, it's only a matter of time before he does.
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