Miami Herald

Heat-Pacers series opens with 3 weekday afternoon games

- BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com

The Miami Heat will open the NBA postseason next week in a most unusual way: with weekday afternoon games.

That’s unpreceden­ted in modern NBA times but necessary in the NBA bubble, with the league playing four playoff games every day in the first round and using two courts on the Disney campus to do it.

And the Heat-Pacers series was relegated to afternoon starts initially because it’s not viewed by the national networks as an appealing television draw.

Game 1 of the HeatPacers series will be 4 p.m. Tuesday on TNT and Fox Sports Sun.

Game 2 will be at 1 p.m. Thursday on ESPN and

Fox Sports Sun, with

Game 3 scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Saturday on TNT and Fox Sports Sun.

Game 4 will be held at 6:30 p.m. Monday, with television informatio­n to be announced.

Games 5, 6 and 7 — if needed — would be the following Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. Times and TV informatio­n have not been set for those games.

Only three NBA series will not include a primetime game during the first three games of the series: Heat-Bucks, TorontoBro­oklyn and Utah-Denver.

The winner of that series will face the winner of the Milwaukee-Orlando series.

PACERS UNDAUNTED

With their playoff series against Miami starting in several days, the Indiana Pacers appear undaunted by their inability to beat the Heat so far this season.

Miami has won the first three games of the season series — including Monday by convincing fashion — entering their relatively meaningles­s seeding game finale on Friday (4 p.m., ESPN, Fox Sports Sun).

The winner will finish with the fourth seed and the loser will be the fifth seed, but that’s irrelevant in a season without home-court advantage.

“I think we have an opportunit­y to beat this team,” Pacers point guard Malcolm Brogdon said Thursday. “They’re a very good team, but we’re a very good team. We are going to rise to the occasion and take care of business. It’s very different from the regular season to the playoffs. It’s going to take the best players on both teams to step up and learn how to finish games.”

Brogdon, neverthele­ss, acknowledg­ed Indiana is the underdog.

Pacers backup point guard T.J. McConnell said Indiana needs to run against Miami and maximize its speed in transition. “They’re a well-coached team but we’re just as well-coached,” he said.

Later in the day, Indiana announced three of its top players — Victor Oladipo, Myles Turner and T.J. Warren — won’t play Friday.

Meanwhile, the Heat listed Jimmy Butler, Bam Adebayo and Goran Dragic as out (none has developed a major injury; all will be fine for postseason) and listed Jae Crowder (right knee bruise) and Derrick Jones Jr. (left knee bruise) as questionab­le for Friday’s game.

CROWDER UPDATE

Crowder, who bruised knees with Oklahoma City’s Luguentz Dort during the first half of Wednesday’s game, is expected to be fine for the start of the playoffs on Monday or Tuesday, according to a source. Crowder did not return to Wednesday’s game but was walking unencumber­ed afterward and X-rays were negative.

Meanwhile, Crowder is poised to break an obscure NBA record, and it speaks to why he has become such an important piece in Miami’s rotation.

No player who was ever traded during an NBA season has increased his three-point shooting percentage from one team to the next by as large a margin as Crowder has.

Crowder has gone from shooting 29.3 percent on three pointers in Memphis to 44.5 percent with Miami. That’s a jump of 15.2 percentage points.

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, the largest increase in three-point field goal percentage by a player who went from one team to another in a single season with a minimum of 30 threes made with each team is 13.3 by Mo Williams in 2010-11. Williams shot 26.5 percent on threes with Cleveland that season, and then shot 39.8 percent on threes with the Clippers.

Crowder, who replaced Meyers Leonard asa

Heat starter when the NBA season resumed, is shooting an absurd 22 for 39 on three-pointers in the bubble. He made 78 of 266 threes in 45 games for Memphis this season (all starts) and has made 57 of 128 threes in 20 games for the Heat.

DRAFT PICK

With several teams with similar records bunched together, the Heat entered Thursday in position to select anywhere from 19th to 24th in the Oct. 16 NBA Draft. Only six teams entered the final two days of seeding games assured of owning better final regularsea­son records than the Heat. Miami’s draft position could be resolved as soon as the end of seeding games on Friday night, unless the Heat (44-28) finishes with the same record as another team.

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