Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Butler took the long road

Star’s path to the Heat begins 20 years ago

- By Ira Winderman

Because NBA Finals moments such as these require themost polished of narratives, the cleanest way to explain the genesis of Jimmy Butler’s path to the Miami Heat is to turn toward franchise icon DwyaneWade.

It was Wade who was part of the lineage that Butler followed at Marquette. It was Wade’s time alongside in the Chicago Bulls locker room in 2016-17 that further planted the idea of Heat culture into Butler’s psyche. And it was the raw emotion of Wade’s final Heat game at American Airlines Arena in April 2019 that captivated Butler, as he watched while in Philadelph­ia 76ers colors.

And yet, the Butler-to-Miami trajectory arguably startedwel­l before. Before Butler made it to Marquette or even to high school in Tomball, Texas. But, rather, whenButler­was12 years old. Yes, 12.

To appreciate the connection of what is playing out in these NBA Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers, with the second of Butler’s triple-doubles in the matchup on Friday night drawing the Heat within 3-2 in the best-of-seven series that continues Sunday at 7:30 p.m., is to consider Butler’s relationsh­ip with agent Bernie Lee, and Lee’s relationsh­ip with theHeat.

In 2001, with Lee beginning to make his way in the business, his client Mike James, then a 26-year-old journeyman guard who already had toiled in Austria, France and a variety of minor leagues, received an invitation to a participat­e in the pro-amsummerle­ague inMiamirun by Ed Pinckney, the former Villanova and NBA forward who at the time was working as the Heat’s television analyst. Amongthose Jamescompe­ted against in those gameswas currentHea­t television analyst John Crotty.

The Heat were struck by James’ play, offered a camp invitation.

To Lee, the rest is Jimmy Butler history.

“This all started, Jimmy winding up with theHeat, because ofMike,” Leesaid to the Sun Sentinel amid this playoff run that nowhas theHeat and Butler within two victories of a championsh­ip. “It started with me and Pat Riley having a relationsh­ip.

“There is a direct timeline between Mike James and Jimmy Butler.”

James, who went undrafted out of Duquesne in 1998, did not make that cut in his initial Heat tryout. But that moment allowed Lee to build relationsh­ips with Chet Kammerer, theHeat scouting director, as well as with Riley, general manager Andy Elisburg, assistant general manager Adam Simon, even a guy buried at the time in the video room by the name of Erik Spoelstra.

Eventually James was invited back, signed by the Heat on Dec. 18, 2001. He would last two seasons with the team, before moving on to play with the Celtics, Pistons, Bucks, Rockets, Raptors, Timberwolv­es, Hornets, Wizards, Bulls andMaveric­ks.

All the while, Lee was pitching the

Heat for a reunion.

“Pat and Andy and Adam Simon and Chet are essentiall­y these foundation­al figures in Mike James’ life,” Lee said.

“Pat became like a father figure to Mike and has always been. So fromthen, I’ve been having these conversati­ons with Pat Riley, when I was an agent that not a lot of people knew. But because of Mike, Pat would always treat me different.”

The relationsh­ip would be further solidified in 2009, when Heat 2008 first round pick Michael Beasley was required by the league to enter rehab, due to a violation of the league’s substancea­buse policy. During that period, Beasley worked out at Mike James’ gym in Houston, again bringing Lee and the Heat together.

“Pat was flying there every weekend towatch Mikework out,” Lee said.

Later that summer, another Lee client, John Lucas III, would receive an invitation toHeat camp.

“It made it feel like Pat and I had a hundred different conversati­ons,” Lee said.

And then along came Butler and the emotional, prideful forward’s simmering discontent over the years in Chicago, Minnesota and Philadelph­ia.

It led Lee back to his safe space, and those 2019 offseason free-agency negotiatio­ns with the Heat that led to the All-Star’s four-year, $142 million contract, the one that is paying off so handsomely for all involved.

“By the timewe got to functional conversati­ons with Jimmy,” Lee said, “me and Pat had had this decades-long relationsh­ip. I knew who Iwas dealing with, with Pat, and they knew that with me. And then more important, just knowing Andy’s ability to creatively build out a team when nobody else really sees a path.”

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