The Union Democrat

Who wears short shorts? The Heat and a growing number in the NBA

- By IRA WINDERMAN

It has been the burning question throughout this Miami Heat season, one that has been both distractin­g and compelling: Can those shorts possibly get any smaller or any tighter?

Understand, this gripping matter is not necessaril­y sown solely from this season.

It was, in fact, after Tyler Herro was drafted out of Kentucky in 2019 that he asked Heat equipment manager Rob Pimental if he had anything shorter than the Heat’s shortest shorts.

A seamstress was called in to assist. “I’ve been wearing short shorts since middle school, actually,” Herro said of a fashion wave that has cut to the very fabric of today’s NBA. “I like ‘em short, I feel more comfortabl­e on the floor with ‘em.”

In recent years, players have taken to

rolling the waistbands on standard-issue NBA shorts to create the desired thigh reveal, a considerab­le change from the long, baggy look that former Heat player and assistant coach Juwan Howard helped cultivate with Michigan's Fab Five Freshmen back in the early '90s.

But now even inseams are being produced to align with the tightened demand.

Take, for example, Heat 2019 second-round pick KZ Okpala, who opts for Size 38 if available, with his 6-foot8 build.

“I actually asked if I could get shorter shorts, just `cause that's my style,” he said. “I played that way in college. So that's just something that I'm comfortabl­e with and that's just my style.

“I like the look. And for me it's more comfortabl­e.” Even old school with the Heat has moved new school, with Meyers Leonard asking for shorter than standard in order to highlight his quads.

Okpala doesn't quite go that far.

“For me,” he said, “it's more like it makes me feel ready to go.”

As long as they don't go to great lengths.

“I mean they came like that and I liked that,” Okpala said of the current cut of the smaller waist sizes. “But if they would have come longer, I would have told him I need smaller.”

The trend has been traced to Lebron James' move from the Heat back to the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2015, aligning to the more tapered look of menswear in general.

Since then, although not to the degree of some college players, the NBA has tapered its approach, with the Heat part of the movement.

“I like the functional­ity,” Okpala said, with the Heat in the midst of a six-day All-star break, with their schedule to resume Thursday night against the Orlando Magic at Americanai­rlines Arena.

Yet for all that is visible on game nights, the practice court is an even more stark story. Former Heat forward Derrick Jones Jr. went as far as taking matters into his own hands, cutting his workout shorts down to sizes otherwise not produced. So he put in a request to assistant equipment manager Ryan Powell for shears.

“Me and my guy Ryan, we came up with where we're going to cut them at,” Jones said. “That's how I'm comfortabl­e. I never was the type of person that liked baggy stuff. I never was into the style of baggy clothes.

“My stuff was always fitted. I got tats on my legs, so I like to show them off.”

Issued a Size L by the Heat, he opted for alteration­s. “We just get `em shortened,” said Jones, who left during the offseason in free agency to the Portland Trail Blazers.

The irony is that players find the tighter shorts liberating.

“I think having too baggy shorts is restrictin­g,” Herro said, “because they get caught between your legs; they're in the way. So I think the short shorts helped me.” But, Herro said, to each his own.

“I like just having comfortabl­e shorts that I like wearing,” he said. “So I think about whatever you're comfortabl­e with, wear it.”

The royal family has broken its silence on Meghan Markle and Prince Harry's explosive interview.

In a statement Tuesday, Buckingham Palace and Queen Elizabeth II said Harry, Markle and their son, Archie, will “always be much loved family members” — two days after the couple said they felt unsupporte­d by the palace before they left their senior roles last year.

“The whole family is saddened to learn the full extent of how challengin­g the last few years have been for Harry and Meghan,” the statement says.

“The issues raised, particular­ly that of race, are concerning. While some recollecti­ons may vary, they are taken very seriously and will be addressed by the family privately.”

During the highly publicized interview, which aired Sunday night on CBS, Markle told Oprah Winfrey she learned of concerns within the palace over “how dark” Archie's skin might be before his birth in 2019.

Winfrey later shared on “CBS This Morning” that Harry said the Queen and Prince Philip were not “part of those conversati­ons.”

Markle also asserted that palace officials didn't step up to defend her amid intense media scrutiny, and claimed the royal institutio­n denied her the chance to seek help as she battled suicidal thoughts.

“I went to the institutio­n and said I needed to go somewhere to get help, said that I've never felt this way before ... and I was told that I couldn't,” Markle said. “That it wouldn't be good for the institutio­n.”

Harry, meanwhile, said he felt “trapped” in the royal system.

The couple, who are expecting their second child, officially stepped away from their senior duties in March 2020 and have since moved to California.

Harry contends he didn't blindside the Queen with the move.

“I never blindsided my grandmothe­r,” he told Winfrey. “I have too much respect for her.”

Hours before the palace released its statement Tuesday, Harry's father, Prince Charles, didn't respond as he left a vaccinatio­n site in London and was asked about the interview.

Harry told Winfrey his father stopped taking his calls at one point, and contended their relationsh­ip needs work.

Markle, 39, and Harry, 36, have been married since 2018.

 ?? Michael Reaves / Getty Images /TNS ?? Tyler Herro #14 of the Miami Heat in action against the Newyork Knicks during the fourth quarter at American Airlines Arena on Feb. 9, 2021, in Miami, Florida.
Michael Reaves / Getty Images /TNS Tyler Herro #14 of the Miami Heat in action against the Newyork Knicks during the fourth quarter at American Airlines Arena on Feb. 9, 2021, in Miami, Florida.

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