Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Heat without Ellington, Tyler Johnson vs. L.A.

- By Ira Winderman Staff writer

MIAMI — Roster prosperity again has been put on hold for the Miami Heat.

Two days after getting Kelly Olynyk and Rodney McGruder back into their rotation, the Heat now find themselves without guards Tyler Johnson and Wayne Ellington, with both ruled out following the morning shootaroun­d for Thursday night’s game against the Los Angeles Lakers at AmericanAi­rlines Arena.

Johnson and Ellington both were forced out of Tuesday’s victory over the Philadelph­ia 76ers with left thigh contusions.

Johnson had moved into the starting lineup in the wake of Dion Waiters’ season-ending ankle surgery in January, with Ellington emerging as one of the league’s top reserves with his 3-point accuracy.

It is the second absence of the season for Ellington, who missed the Feb. 7 home loss to the visiting Houston Rockets with a strained right shoulder.

It is the fourth time Johnson has been sidelined. He missed the Dec. 13 loss to the visiting Portland Trail Blazers with a migraine, the Jan. 9 road victory over the Toronto Raptors with a strained left shoulder, and then five games in late January with a sprained left ankle, with the Heat 2-3 over that span.

Coach Erik Spoelstra said he did not view moving Dwyane Wade into the starting lineup as an option.

“I want to him to get as comfortabl­e with that second unit as possible,” he said, with Wade having played in reserve since returning to the Heat in a Feb. 8 trade with the Cleveland Cavaliers. “That, to me, is a dynamic, game-changing lineup that I want them to continue to gain confidence in, get more comfortabl­e with.”

The Heat close out their five-game homestand with a Saturday game against the Detroit Pistons and then a Monday game against the Phoenix Suns.

Olynyk retuned in the victory over the 76ers after missing the previous six games with a strained left shoulder. McGruder made his season debut against the 76ers after four months of recovery from preseason leg surgery. shot against the 76ers, even though it almost came off as stock footage.

“They all seem about the same to me, because his celebratio­n, ‘This is my house,’ is all the same, every time — ‘This is my house,’ “Haslem quipped. “He looks over at Micky [Arison, the team owner]. They all seem the same to me because the celebratio­n is the same.”

Wade of course had been away from South Florida for a season and a half, with the Chicago Bulls and Cleveland Cavaliers, while Haslem has been with the team continuous­ly since the two entered the NBA as rookies in 2003. So whose house? “Listen,” Haslem said. “I’m the landlord. He rents from me. I’m the landlord. I’m his bank.”

The second-year swingman said he first checked with assistant coaches Juwan Howard, Dan Craig and Chris Quinn that Spoelstra actually was calling his name.

“I asked them, ‘He said my name?’ Just to clarify,’” McGruder said.

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