Miami Herald

As season winds down, Heat left with little room for error in final 10 games

- BY ANTHONY CHIANG achiang@miamiheral­d.com

There are two important items at the top of the Miami Heat’s to-do list in the final weeks of the regular season.

Get healthy and avoid the NBA’s play-in tournament.

But Miami’s seasonlong injury issues persist, as the Heat were without rotation regulars Jimmy Butler (non-COVID illness), Tyler Herro (right foot medial tendintis), Kevin Love (bruised right heel) and Duncan Robinson (left facet syndrome) in Tuesday night’s 113-92 loss to the Golden State Warriors at Kaseya Center. The Heat also remains without Josh Richardson, who is out for the season after undergoing surgery on his right shoulder earlier this month.

And a play-in tournament appearance for the second straight season remains a very real possibilit­y for the Heat, which entered Wednesday in seventh place in the Eastern Conference standings. The Heat must finish the regular season as a top-six team in the East to directly qualify for the playoffs without needing to take part in the play-in tournament.

“Our guys understand,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said in reference to what’s at stake in the coming days and weeks, with the team now entering a twoday break before closing its four-game homestand on Friday against the Portland Trail Blazers. “Our guys are not ignorant and our guys are extremely competitiv­e.”

The problem for the Heat is time is running out to get healthy and avoid the play-in tournament. There are just 10 games left on the Heat’s regularsea­son schedule.

While Butler’s absence is due to a short-term illness and he’s expected back as soon as Friday against the Trail Blazers, there’s not as much clarity regarding the statuses of Herro, Love and Robinson.

Herro has missed the last 16 games, but there’s hope that he’ll be able to return before the end of the regular season. He received a platelet-rich plasma injection on March 15 to treat his injured right foot and was expected to be re-evaluated in one to two weeks from that date, with this upcoming Friday marking two weeks since that injection.

Love has missed the last 14 games, but may be nearing his return if the injury report is any indication. He was upgraded to questionab­le for Tuesday’s matchup against the Warriors before he was ruled out for the contest just a few hours prior to tip-off. It marked the first time Love has been upgraded on the injury report since he injured his heel during a Feb. 27 win over the Trail Blazers.

Robinson has missed the last four games with a back issue that has been diagnosed by the team as left facet syndrome. He’s not expected to miss an extended stretch because of this injury, but no definitive timetable has been given by the team. The Heat has labeled Robinson as day-to-day.

This has been a seasonlong problem for the Heat, which entered Wednesday with the fourth-most missed games in the league this season due to injuries at 250 games, according to Spotrac’s injury tracker. The only teams with more missed games because of injuries this season are three of the NBA’s worst teams — the Memphis Grizzlies (451 missed games), Trail Blazers (274 games) and Charlotte Hornets (258 games).

Those injuries have forced the Heat to set a new franchise record with 35 different starting lineups used this season. The previous Heat record for most different starting lineups used in a season was 31 in the 2014-15 season.

The Heat’s next injury report for Friday’s game will come on Thursday afternoon.

“We’re just trying to find ways to win games,” Heat forward Haywood Highsmith said. “We got 10 games left, so just trying to finish the season strong. Trying to build some momentum heading into the playoffs, whether that’s in the play-in or not in the play-in.”

The play-in tournament, which is done during the week between the end of the regular season and the start of the playoffs, features the sevenththr­ough-10th-place teams competing for the final two playoff seeds in each conference.

The Heat entered Wednesday in seventh place in the East — 1 1⁄2 games behind the sixthplace Indiana Pacers and ahead of the eighth-place Philadelph­ia 76ers only because Miami currently holds the head-to-head tiebreaker. There are important games remaining on the Heat’s schedule against both teams — vs. the 76ers in Miami on April 4 and vs. the Pacers in Indianapol­is on April 7 — that will help determine the final tiebreaker­s.

According to Basketball Reference’s playoff probabilit­ies report, the Heat currently has just a 20.6 percent chance of finishing with a top-six seed in the East to make the playoffs without needing to take part in the play-in tournament. That model has the Heat with no chance to close as the No. 1 or No. 2 seeds, 0.1 percent for a No. 3 finish, 0.8 percent for No. 4, 4.3 percent for No. 5 and 15.5 percent for No. 6.

Basketball Reference’s modeling has the Heat’s most likely finish listed at 42.4 percent for eighth place in the East (and a spot in the play-in tournament), which would have Miami playing its first playin tournament game on the road. The Heat would host the first play-in tournament game if it finishes the regular season in seventh place.

“I looked at the standings a couple times, I’m pretty sure we can catch the sixth seed if we put some wins together,” Highsmith said. “I don’t know about the fifth seed or fourth seed. But right now we’re seventh, that’s the reality and we got to live in that. We’ll figure out ways to get some wins in these next games coming up and see if we can move up in the rankings. If we can’t, we’ll stay where we’re at and figure out a way to win the play-in game and get ready for the actual playoffs.”

Atlantic

y-Boston New York Philadelph­ia Brooklyn Toronto Southeast

Orlando Miami Atlanta Charlotte Washington Central

Milwaukee Cleveland Indiana Chicago Detroit

Southwest

New Orleans Dallas Houston Memphis San Antonio Northwest

Denver Oklahoma City Minnesota Utah

Portland Pacific

W

57 43 39 27 23 W

42 39 32 17 14 W

46 44 41 34 12

W

44 43 36 24 16 W

51 50 49 29 19 W

L

15 28 33 45 49

L

29 33 39 54 58

L

26 28 32 38 60

L

28 29 35 48 56

L

21 21 22 43 53

L

L.A. Clippers Sacramento Phoenix L.A. Lakers Golden State

y-clinched division

THURSDAY Boston at Atlanta, 7:30 Milwaukee at New Orleans, 8

WEDNESDAY

Cleveland at Charlotte

Golden State at Orlando Brooklyn at Washington Portland at Atlanta

L.A. Clippers at Philadelph­ia New York at Toronto

Indiana at Chicago

L.A. Lakers at Memphis Detroit at Minnesota

Houston at Oklahoma City San Antonio at Utah

44 42 42 40 37

27 30 30 32 34

Pct

.792 .606 .542 .375 .319

Pct

.592 .542 .451 .239 .194

Pct

.639 .611 .562 .472 .167

Pct

.611 .597 .507 .333 .222

Pct

.708 .704 .690 .403 .264

Pct

.620 .583 .583 .556 .521

GB

— 131⁄2 18 30 34 GB

— 31⁄2 10 25 281⁄2 GB

— 2 51⁄2 12 34

GB

— 1 71⁄2 20 28 GB

11⁄2 22 32 GB

— 21⁄2 21⁄2 41⁄2 7

One thing that should help the Heat is the fact that it entered Wednesday with the NBA’s secondeasi­est remaining schedule, according to Tankathon.com, based on the current combined winning percentage of teams left to play.

That soft schedule begins immediatel­y, with the Heat’s next two games coming against the 14thplace team in the Western Conference (the Trail Blazers on Friday at home) and 14th-place team in the East

Golden St Min FG-A FT-A R A F Pt Kuminga 32 8-13 2-3 7 3 3 18 An.Wiggins 31 7-12 2-2 7 1 1 17 D.Green 28 2-5 0-0 9 8 5 4 St.Curry 31 7-15 0-0 2 6 1 17 K.Thompsn 31 11-20 0-0 5 2 1 28 Looney 19 3-5 1-2 6 1 3 7 Moody 6 3-3 1-2 0 1 1 9 Paul 23 0-2 0-0 2 7 2 0 Payton II 14 1-3 0-0 0 0 1 2 Podziemski 22 3-5 0-1 5 1 1 6 Quinones 2 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 0 J.Robinson 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 1 0 Santos 2 2-2 0-0 0 0 0 5

Totals 240 47-85 6-10 43 31 20 113

Percentage­s: FG .553, FT .600.3-Point

Goals: 13-38, .342 (K.Thompson 6-14, St.Curry 3-10, Moody 2-2, Santos 1-1, An.Wiggins 1-5, D.Green 0-1, Paul 0-1, Kuminga 0-2, Podziemski 0-2).Team Rebounds: 7.Team Turnovers: 12.Blocked

Shots: 5 (An.Wiggins 2, Kuminga, Payton II, K.Thompson).Turnovers: 10 (Paul 3, St.Curry, D.Green, Kuminga, Moody, Podziemski, K.Thompson, An.Wiggins)

.Steals: 6 (D.Green 2, Paul 2, Payton II, Podziemski).

Miami Min FG-A FT-A R A F Pt Jaquez Jr 26 4-10 3-4 2 1 2 12 Jovic 31 4-11 1-2 6 4 0 11 Adebayo 39 10-21 3-4 9 5 1 24 Mills 18 1-5 0-0 0 1 1 2 Rozier 33 7-18 0-0 4 2 3 15 Bryant 8 0-3 0-0 3 0 1 0 Cain 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 Highsmith 30 6-7 0-0 6 2 1 15 Ca.Martin 34 4-12 2-2 5 6 0 10 O.Robinson 2 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0 Swider 2 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 A.Williams 2 1-1 1-1 0 0 0 3 Wright 16 0-3 0-0 3 3 0 0

Totals 240 37-92 10-13 39 24 9 92

Percentage­s: FG .402, FT .769.3-Point

Goals: 8-33, .242 (Highsmith 3-3, Jovic 2-7, Adebayo 1-3, Jaquez Jr 1-4, Rozier 1-6, Swider 0-1, Wright 0-1, Bryant 0-2, Mills 0-2, Ca.Martin 0-4).Team Rebounds: 11.Team Turnovers: 9.Blocked Shots: 2 (Adebayo, Rozier).Turnovers: 8 (Jaquez Jr 2, Adebayo, Bryant, Mills, O.Robinson, Rozier, Swider).Steals: 3 (Highsmith 2, Adebayo). (the Washington Wizards on Sunday on the road).

The Heat has left itself with very little room for error over its final 10 games. Heat coaches and players understand their situation.

“I feel like every game at this point is a mustwin,” Heat center Bam Adebayo said. “You start to understand it starts to become playoff time.”

Anthony Chiang: 305-376-4991, @Anthony_Chiang

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