Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Heat fall at home

101-84 loss to Toronto slows playoff push.

- By Ira Winderman Staff writer

MIAMI — The final steps of getting to .500 are proving nearly as challengin­g for the Miami Heat as fighting back from that 11-30 midseason record.

Sunday night, it was Damian Lillard’s 49 points in a Portland Trail Blazers victory that kept the Heat from reaching .500 for the first time since the season’s second game. Thursday night it was DeMar DeRozan going for 40 points in the Toronto Raptors’ 101-84 victory at AmericanAi­rlines Arena.

For the Heat there was good news just before the game, when it was announced that center Hassan Whiteside would start despite requiring 13 stitches to close a hand laceration sustained in Tuesday’s victory over the Phoenix Suns.

It got even better when the Heat burst to a 15-point firstquart­er lead, with Whiteside surprising­ly efficient with his heavily bandaged right hand on the way to 16 points and 14 rebounds.

And then? Thud. A 14-point second period. The Heat’s’ first deficit of the game in the third quarter.

And quickly a double-digit deficit early in the fourth.

After a 3-2 homestand, it now gets significan­tly tougher

for the Heat, with six road games and four home games remaining, a schedule that includes Sunday’s game against the Boston Celtics at TD Garden, a pair of games against the Washington Wizards, a game against the Cleveland Cavaliers and a rematch against these Raptors in Toronto.

At 35-37, the Heat remain in the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, but only one game ahead of the Chicago Bulls and Detroit Pistons. The Bulls already have clinched that playoff tiebreaker and the Pistons can claim their tiebreaker with the Heat with a Tuesday victory at the Palace of Auburn Hills.

Even with Whiteside in the Heat’s starting lineup, both teams were shorthande­d.

The Heat remained without starting shooting guard Dion Waiters, who missed his third consecutiv­e game with a sprained left ankle. Although off crutches, Waiters remains in a walking boot.

The Raptors remained without starting point guard Kyle Lowry due to a wrist injury, with starting power forward Serge Ibaka suspended one game by the NBA for a punch thrown at Chicago Bulls center Robin Lopez during their Tuesday dustup in Toronto.

That had the Heat again starting Josh Richardson at shooting guard, with the Raptors starting Cory Joseph at point guard and recently acquired P.J. Tucker at power forward.

The Raptors also were without former Heat center Jamaal Magloire, with the assistant coach suspended one game for exacerbati­ng the incident between the Raptors and Bulls.

The Raptors took their first lead of the game midway through the third period and went into the fourth up 75-68, with DeRozan at 34 points by that stage.

After scoring 33 points in the first two periods, the Heat scored 35 in the next two combined, shooting a combined 13 of 42 in the middle two periods.

The Heat opened the second period 1 of 10 from the field, their second field goal of the quarter not until James Johnson scored on a floater with 2:56 left in the half, closing the period 3 of 15.

Scoring just 14 points in the second period, the Heat went into halftime up 47-45, with Heat guard Goran Dragic converting in transition just before the halftime buzzer. DeRozan was up to 24 points on 8-of-12 shooting by then.

Despite 14 first-quarter points from DeRozan, who shot 6 of 7 in the period, the Heat went into the second up 33-23, with the Raptors scoring the final five points of the quarter.

The Heat got nine points and five assists from Dragic in the first period, with the Heat forcing six Toronto turnovers over the first 12 minutes. Heat forward Rodney McGruder scored eight in the opening period, his highest-scoring first quarter of the season.

The Heat were coming off Tuesday’s 112-97 victory over the Suns, with victories in 16 of their previous 18 home games.

The Raptors were coming off Tuesday’s 122-120 overtime victory against the Bulls, entering on a three-game winning streak.

The teams had split the season’s first two meetings, with the season series to conclude April 7 at Air Canada Centre.

The Raptors entered having won four of the previous five regular-season meetings, with the Heat winning 12 of the previous 14 regular-season matchups at AmericanAi­rlines Arena.

 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The Miami Heat’s Josh Richardson scores on the Toronto Raptors’ Jakob Poeltl during the first half of their game Thursday at AmericanAi­rlines Arena.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The Miami Heat’s Josh Richardson scores on the Toronto Raptors’ Jakob Poeltl during the first half of their game Thursday at AmericanAi­rlines Arena.
 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Miami coach Erik Spoelstra watches the Heat on offense against the Toronto Raptors during the first half of their game on Thursday at AmericanAi­rlines Arena.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Miami coach Erik Spoelstra watches the Heat on offense against the Toronto Raptors during the first half of their game on Thursday at AmericanAi­rlines Arena.

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