Miami Herald

Heat-Bulls battle again for East’s No. 8 seed

- BY ANTHONY CHIANG achiang@miamiheral­d.com

The Miami Heat was in this same position last year.

One year ago, the Heat hosted the Chicago Bulls in a win-or-go-home playin tournament game for the right to the Eastern Conference’s No. 8 playoff seed. The Heat won that game 102-91.

On Friday, the Heat and Bulls will face off again at Kaseya Center (7 p.m., ESPN) in an all-or-nothing play-in game. The winning team will get the East’s No. 8 playoff seed and the losing team’s season will be over before reaching the playoffs.

The Heat remembers last year’s play-in win over the Bulls as the start of a historic playoff run to the NBA Finals, going on to become the first No. 8 seed to reach the NBA Finals during a non-lockout-shortened season before falling to the Denver Nuggets in the championsh­ip series.

“I mean, we’re here,” Heat guard Tyler Herro said following Wednesday’s loss in Philadelph­ia. “We’re in the same position as last year and nobody expected us to do what we did last year.”

The Bulls remember last year’s season-ending playin loss to the Heat as a painful night.

“I remember that plane ride back home vividly, everybody was just frustrated,” Bulls guard DeMar DeRozan said following Wednesday’s playin win over the Atlanta Hawks to keep their season alive and clinch a spot in Friday’s eliminatio­n game. “That feeling sucked. I know for me that was one thing that was on my mind once I realized we were going back to Miami, not to have that same feeling.”

The Heat trailed by six points with 7:12 left in the fourth quarter of last season’s play-in game against the Bulls. But the Heat closed that game on a

26-9 run to rally and get into the playoffs behind 31-point performanc­es from Jimmy Butler and Max Strus.

Butler won’t play Friday and will be out for the next “several weeks”, according to a league source, because of a sprained right MCL that he sustained during Wednesday’s loss to the 76ers. And Strus is now with the Cleveland Cavaliers after leaving the Heat in free agency last summer.

“Completely two different years, two different teams, two different situations,” Herro said. “You can’t really compare last year to this year. But we’ll continue to fight and get ready for Friday. That’s the only thing that we can do right now.”

The Heat and Bulls split their four-game regularsea­son series this season 2-2. Friday’s matchup will serve as this season’s tiebreaker and determine which team clinches the East’s final playoff spot to face the top-seeded Boston Celtics in the first round of the playoffs.

“We’re going to rest up, treat up, rally around each other, get ready for Friday and again embrace these competitiv­e games,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra

said. “It will be competitiv­e in front of our home fans and then we’re going to bring a hell of a game on Friday night and do this the hard way. That’s just the way the deal is right now.”

NO DUNCAN?

Heat forward Duncan Robinson was in uniform and available for Wednesday’s play-in loss to the 76ers after missing the final four games of the regular season with a lingering back injury labeled as left facet syndrome.

But Robinson still did not play Wednesday despite being a regular in the rotation this season prior to the back issue. Why? Because Robinson is still ramping up after missing time.

Robinson is listed as probable for Friday’s game against the Bulls.

“Every day that he gets, he’s going to make progress and that’s really what it was,” Spoelstra said when asked about not playing Robinson on Wednesday. “We don’t have a whole lot of time for ramp up, so he hasn’t had those opportunit­ies. But we’ll see how he feels when we get to Miami. I think each step, he’ll feel better and we’ll take it from there.

Robinson, who has started in each of his last 17 appearance­s, initially missed five games last month with the back issue before returning to play in five games and then again being sidelined by the injury for the final four games of the regular season.

As a three-point threat, Robinson is a big part of the Heat’s offense when he’s healthy. He shot 39.5 percent on seven threepoint attempts per game this regular season.

“He’s definitely making progress,” Spoelstra said Wednesday regarding Robinson’s status. “That’s what’s encouragin­g.”

HERRO SPEAKS

Before getting hot and scoring 16 points in Wednesday’s fourth quarter, Herro totaled just nine points on 4-of-17 shooting from the field and 1-of-8 shooting from three-point range in the first three quarters of the Heat’s loss to the 76ers.

“There’s moments through games and throughout the season, you have bad shooting nights,” said Herro, who ended up scoring a teamhigh 25 points and logging a team-high 41 minutes on Wednesday. “I tried to just stay engaged as best as I could. Obviously, I would have loved to have made those shots. But I can’t make all of them. I tried to stay engaged, compete on the defensive end and make plays for my teammates when I could.”

PLAY-IN GAMES

EASTERN CONFERENCE FRIDAY

Chicago at Miami, 7 WEDNESDAY

Philadelph­ia 105, Miami 104 Chicago 131, Atlanta 116

WESTERN CONFERENCE

FRIDAY

Sacramento at New Orleans, 9:30 TUESDAY

L.A. Lakers 110, New Orleans 106 Sacramento 118, Golden State 94

FIRST ROUND

SATURDAY

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Orlando at Cleveland, 1 Philadelph­ia at New York, 6 WESTERN CONFERENCE

Phoenix at Minnesota, 3:30 L.A. Lakers at Denver, 8:30

FG .422, FT .737.

14-39, .359 (Herro 4-14, Wright 2-3, Jaquez Jr 2-4, Love 2-4, Ji.Butler 2-6, Jovic 1-1, Ca.Martin 1-1, Adebayo 0-2, Highsmith 0-4). Team Rebounds: 5. Team Turnovers: 13. Blocked Shots: 4 (Adebayo 2, Highsmith, Wright). Turnovers: 13 (Herro 5, Jaquez Jr 3, Adebayo, Ji.Butler, Jovic, Love, Ca.Martin). Steals: 12 (Ji.Butler 5, Highsmith 3, Wright 2, Jaquez Jr, Love).

Phila Min FG-A FT-A R A F Pt T.Harris 32:44 4-10 1-2 10 4 2 9 Oubre Jr 37:17 3-9 5-5 8 1 5 11 Embiid 38:14 6-17 9-10 15 5 3 23 Lowry 28:59 3-10 0-0 5 1 3 7 Maxey 43:58 6-16 6-6 3 6 1 19 Batum 27:36 7-12 0-0 5 0 2 20 Hield 17:57 3-8 0-0 1 6 0 7 Payne 3:29 1-1 0-0 0 0 0 3 Reed 9:46 3-3 0-0 2 0 1 6

Totals 240 36-86 21-23 49 23 17 105

Percentage­s: FG .419, FT .913. 3-Point Goals: 12-35, .343 (Batum 6-10, Embiid 2-4, Payne 1-1, Hield 1-5, Lowry 1-5, Maxey 1-6, Oubre Jr 0-1, T.Harris 0-3). Team Rebounds: 8. Team Turnovers: 16.

Blocked Shots: 3 (Batum, Oubre Jr, Reed).

Turnovers: 15 (Embiid 3, Maxey 3, Batum 2, T.Harris 2, Hield 2, Lowry 2, Oubre Jr).

Steals: 4 (Lowry 2, Embiid, Oubre Jr).

Miami 23 28 23 30 — 104 Philadelph­ia 22 17 30 36 — 105

Att.—19,788 (20,328). T—2:29.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Heat guard Jaime Jaquez Jr. drives past Chicago’s Drummond and DeMar DeRozan at the Kaseya Center in December. The Heat and Bulls split their season series 2-2 this year.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Heat guard Jaime Jaquez Jr. drives past Chicago’s Drummond and DeMar DeRozan at the Kaseya Center in December. The Heat and Bulls split their season series 2-2 this year.

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