South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Robinson must now produce payoff with complete game

- Ira Winderman

With all the massive money tossed around by the Miami Heat over the past 10 months, it is somewhat remarkable that a $90 million contract seemingly flew under the radar.

Jimmy Butler’s four-year, $184 million extension? Well, you are talking five-time All-Star.

Bam Adebayo’s five-year, $163 million extension? At 24, already an All-Star and Olympic gold medalist.

Kyle Lowry’s three-year,

$85 million contract? Six-time All-Star, former NBA champion. Asked and answered.

And then there is Duncan

Robinson’s fiveyear, $90 million contract, one that well could run the course of the deal without an All-Star appearance.

It is a contract that tops out at over $19 million in 2025-26. Only twice did Dwyane Wade earn more over his 17 seasons, never in his first 12 years, a Heat run that included three championsh­ips.

And yet it’s not as if the Heat are setting the bar at greatness. Instead, as one member of the organizati­on put it, it is the going rate for solid starter, one with a unique skill set.

Still, for all the consternat­ion in some quarters about the Heat’s apparent preference to remain below the luxury tax this season, because of Robinson’s salaries the Heat almost assuredly will be forced to pay well into the tax during his contract.

In 2023-24, for example, Butler will be earning $43.7 million, Adebayo $32.6 million, Lowry $29.7 million, Robinson $18.2 million. That also would be the first season on a rookie-scale extension for Tyler Herro, with the Heat having until next offseason for such a decision. And that’s not even getting into the possibilit­y of Victor Oladipo reverting to the salary stratosphe­re next summer with this Heat Bird Rights.

If there is not ultimate value on the contracts of Butler, Adebayo and Lowry, then it all goes south anyway. But the swing vote with the Heat’s salary structure, at least at the moment, comes down to Robinson.

He will be a starter. But can he be a closer?

Among the interested bystanders is Dennis Scott, the former NBA 3-point ace who now serves as a commentato­r for Turner Sports and NBA TV.

While Scott has plenty of insight on the long ball, as well as a “3-D” nickname that is more a play on his first name than on defensive acumen, the salary structure for shooting specialist­s is a whole new ballgame. Over a 12-year career that ended in 2001 and included some of the best of times for the Orlando Magic, Scott never earned more than $3.2 million in a season. His $25 million in career earnings equate to less than two seasons on Robinson’s new contract.

And yet there is respect for Robinson’s contract as one that has been earned.

Like many, Scott initially was skeptical of Robinson as a one-trick wonder.

“He certainly was a revelation of a guy that can really shoot the basketball,” Scott said during a recent interview. “And that’s not for everybody. Duncan can flat out shoot the basketball.”

But Scott said the timing of Robinson’s free agency this offseason allowed for requisite inspection by the Heat for something more, that this wasn’t merely

Jason Kapono 2.0.

“I think Pat Riley and Erik Spoelstra tested his toughness,” Scott said. “And you know the Miami culture — if you’re not tough, you’re not going to stay on the court long. And I think that’s what he’s shown us now in the NBA.

“He will fight over screens. He will get that long rebound that guards are supposed to get. Those other names, they kind of shied away from that.”

Scott said an NBA given is there are no free passes for teammates from Butler, but he said the same is true of Lowry. Scott said that will require ongoing toughness from Robinson.

“He’s gained the respect from Jimmy, and now Kyle will see how tough he is,” Scott said. “And as long as he continues to show that toughness on the defensive end, they’ll give him the freedom on the offensive end to shoot the basketball. That’s what they need.”

On the minimum scale, Robinson was a Heat luxury. On a $90 million contract, he shifts to critical component.

IN THE LANE

LINE IN SAND: Just as the Heat have drawn their offseason line at the luxury-tax threshold, likely to go with a 14-player standard roster at the start of the season — one below the maximum — the Milwaukee Bucks have been candid about their desire to limit tax liability, even coming off a championsh­ip. That meant losing

P.J. Tucker to the Heat in free agency.

“I think we’re very focused on that,” Bucks co-owner Marc

Lasry told The Athletic. “Look, we’re a small-market team. It’s expensive. I mean, for us, this year we’re going to lose quite a bit of money. It’s us and Brooklyn in the East. I mean, I’m trying to be unbiased, but I think we’re probably the two best teams.”

But,of the Heat he added:“They’re tough. I mean, I love Kyle Lowry. I think he is —

he’s a great player. Jimmy Butler, all the guys they’ve got, they’re really good. It’s going to be tough. And PJ’s the best. I mean, he just plays super hard all the time.”

REASON WHY: Lowry made an appearance on the podcast of Portland Trail Blazers guard CJ

McCollum this past week, telling the newly elected president of the players union that the opportunit­y to jump to the Heat was too tempting to bypass in free agency.

“For me, it’s championsh­ips or bust,” Lowry said. “Going to Miami, that was a situation where I feel like this is what they want to do. I have a close friend,

Jimmy

Butler, there and I feel like Miami, that’s what they want to do. It’s about winning championsh­ips.

“If you aren’t playing for championsh­ips, what are you playing for? And that’s the only thought process that went into my free agency: Where do I go to become a champion?”

LATEST CHANCE: Even with this his first season with the Boston Celtics, this will be somewhat of a reunion tour for former Heat guard Josh Richardson, with new Celtics coach Ime

Udoka having served as a Philadelph­ia 76ers assistant when Richardson was there in 2019-20.

“[ He’s] a guy I worked with in Philadelph­ia and a guy I saw a ton of in Miami,” Udoka said. “Versatile defender, a guy that can play on and off the ball. He’s done that some in Miami and he’s played some point guard, so he is a guy who can do a lot of things.”

Richardson is coming off an uneven lone season with the Dallas Mavericks.

“Didn’t shoot it that well last year, but we’ll get him back to that,” Udoka said of Richardson, who was twice caught up in COVID protocols last season.

“He’s a better shooter than he showed in Dallas, but Josh is another guy you can plug into a lot of different areas, small or big or point guard. Defensivel­y, he can guard all of those positions.”

STILL GOING: Arguably the least-known player from the Heat’s 2006 championsh­ip team, former forward Wayne Simien is maintainin­g his ties to the game by returning to the University of Kansas to serve as associate athletics director for engagement and outreach. In that role, according to the school, Simien will focus on “leadership and profession­al developmen­t opportunit­ies for student-athletes, coaches, and staff.” Simien last played profession­ally in 2008-09 in Spain, working since in Christian ministry.

NUMBER

2. Open tryouts to be held by the Heat for their G League affiliate, the Sioux Falls Skyforce. The first will be held Sept 18 in South Dakota, the second Sept. 25 in Miami. Details are available at siouxfalls.gleague.nba.com.

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