Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Are the Heat positionin­g themselves for 2020 offseason?

- Ira Winderman iwinderman@sunsentine­l .com or Twitter @iraheatbea­t

MIAMI

— The benefit of Pat Riley and his live-inthe-moment Miami Heat approach is there are no Derek Jeterlike five-year plans, no publicly pushing long-term agendas that often are little more than bids to buy time.

The downside can be the stroke-of-midnight rush to Hassan Whiteside’s $98 million contract in 2016 or last summer’s cap reload with James Johnson, Dion Waiters and Kelly Olynyk.

But at least the vision is clear, if also open to further debate.

That doesn’t mean there also isn’t an accompanyi­ng long view. The 2010 Big Three of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh came together as a result of planning in the immediate wake of the 2006 championsh­ip. And that 2006 championsh­ip came together out of foresight following those tormenting playoff losses to the New York Knicks and then Alonzo Mourning’s kidney illness.

Which brings us to this moment and another man of the moment, namely Magic Johnson and his vow to get the Los Angeles Lakers turned around within the next two years, as we stand at this opening bell of 2018 NBA free agency.

For Riley and the Heat, there also could be a twoyear plan at play, a 2020 vision, if you will, which would be the opposite of what Riley’s former Showtime Lakers championsh­ip guard is embracing in Los Angeles.

At the moment, without adding additional salary going forward, the Heat are committed to about $52 million in payroll for the 2020 offseason, an offseason when the projected salary cap is anticipate­d to potentiall­y fall in the range of $113 million.

So even when counting the current Heat contracts that extend into 2020-21, that still could leave enough to entice a pair of top-tier free agents just two summers from now.

That $52 million committed figure includes the $16 million player option of James Johnson, the $12.7 million to Dion Waiters on the final year of his deal, the $12.2 million player option of Kelly Olynyk, the $10.9 million committed to Josh Richardson and the $350,000 stretch payment that still will be due already-released A.J. Hammons. It does not, however, include the $5.1 million 2020-21 team option on Bam Adebayo’s rookiescal­e deal.

What the get-out-of-capjail math means is that anything committed going forward to the 2020-21 payroll could not only prevent the Heat from doubling up in 2020 free agency, but also could impact even a single major free-agent addition in what sets up as the Heat’s next free-agency window.

(The 2019 offseason could advance that schedule, but that, at the moment, stands at the opt-out whims of Hassan Whiteside, Goran Dragic and Tyler Johnson, each with a player option for 2019-20 — unless two or more are dealt in advance.)

So if the plan is a 2020 reset, then the Heat very much already are on the clock this summer.

Most immediate is the approach with Wayne Ellington, who played for $6.7 million this past season and is positioned with the Heat for an early-Bird deal that could start in the $10 million range next season. Getting beyond the luxurytax concerns (more of a concern to Micky Arison than to roster building), by going out more than two years on an Ellington contract with guaranteed money, it then would cut into the potential 2020 cap stash, even if there is a somewhat reasonable three-year, $21 million agreement.

Beyond that, there is the eligibilit­y of Justise Winslow for a rookie-scale extension before next season’s opener. Using Richardson’s extension signed last summer as a point of reference, a similar extension for Winslow would add about $11 million to the Heat’s 2020-21 payroll.

And then there is that fourth year on Adebayo’s contract.

So just factoring in adding Ellington, Winslow and Adebayo into the mix at those hypothetic­al numbers, the $52 million already committed to the Heat’s 2020-21 payroll would jump to roughly $75 million (and that is not even factoring in salaries for the 2019 and 2020 firstround picks that the Heat possess).

In other words, we could be standing at a line in the sand, when Pat Riley makes a stand for a clearer future, a definitive reset date.

While it is not the Riley way to ignore the moment, because of some recent approaches it also might be the most prudent approach, a pair of playoff-contention (but not championsh­ipcontenti­on) seasons with a brighter light at the 2020 end of the tunnel.

 ?? MIAMI HERALD FILE ?? At the moment, without adding additional salary going forward, the Heat are committed to about $52 million in payroll for the 2020 offseason.
MIAMI HERALD FILE At the moment, without adding additional salary going forward, the Heat are committed to about $52 million in payroll for the 2020 offseason.
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