San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

HEAT’S X-FACTOR

- DAN WOIKE On the NBA Woike writes for the L.A. Times.

NBA

Duncan Robinson emerged to help Jimmy Butler and Miami get to tonight’s Game 6.

The way he walked onto and off the postgame stage, the way he’s piled up minutes like he’s forming a mountain, the way he’s imprinted the series with his personalit­y and will, it might seem like Jimmy Butler is going it alone.

He’s not.

“It’s not just me,” Butler said.

In the NBA Finals, you can assume the stars are going to do their thing, that Lebron James is going to dominate, Anthony Davis is going to disrupt on both ends and Butler is going to pour his energy all over the court.

But the difference makers have been and will continue to be the supporting casts.

Friday, most notably, it was Duncan Robinson, the Heat’s sharpshoot­er who has gone from a Division III player to NBA Finals Xfactor in six years. He had 26 points — 21 coming on 3point shots.

“Every time he shoots, we feel like it’s going in,” Tyler Herro said. “We want him to be aggressive.”

Earlier this postseason, Robinson admitted that some of the shots he takes stun even him, but that’s what Miami wants and needs. Robinson’s motion and threat from deep create the kind of space that Butler and the rest of the Heat need.

It’s why Butler had an important message for Robinson.

“Stop running from the basketball,” he told him. “Can’t shoot the ball if you don’t have the ball. I think he gets lost in trying to get other people open, when everybody is going to react to him probably more so than they’re going to react to me. A 3 is worth more than a 2.

“So as long as he’s coming to the ball, shooting the ball when he’s open, when he’s not open, that’s the

Duncan Robinson that we need.”

There’s no doubt that however great James and Davis are, they’ll need help to close out the series. That couldn’t be more true than in the final seconds, when the ball found itself in Danny Green’s hands for an open shot that missed badly. And it was true for Markieff Morris, who turned it over when the Lakers needed a pass to be on target.

“They’re vets,” James said. “I don’t think too much needs to be said to them. I believe they will be much better and I’m not saying they even played bad tonight . ... We just had some mental breakdowns at times.”

Dwight Howard’s recklessne­ss was another breakdown, and it cost the Lakers a six-point possession for the Heat.

Kentavious Caldwellpo­pe has been the Lakers’ most consistent role player — his 31 points in the last two games is the most he’s had in back-to-back contests since January. He, like Robinson, has been incredibly valuable in spacing the floor. The Lakers are going to need him and more from their role players.

Whether it’s Rajon Rondo, Alex Caruso, Kyle Kuzma, Green or Morris, if the great players are all playing great, those contributo­rs might end up being the difference.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL AP ?? The Lakers’ Lebron James forces the Heat’s Duncan Robinson into one of his few misses in Game 5.
MARK J. TERRILL AP The Lakers’ Lebron James forces the Heat’s Duncan Robinson into one of his few misses in Game 5.

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