Daily Southtown

Heat showing true ‘grit’

Even series with another comeback win

- By Tim Reynolds

MIAMI — The easiest way to explain what the Heat are doing in the comeback department during these playoffs is simply to put up their numbers against the rest of the league.

When facing a deficit of at least 12 points this postseason:

„ The Heat are 7-6.

„ The rest of the NBA is 6-59. Combined.

“Biggest thing for us, we had the will and we had the belief,” Heat center Bam Adebayo said. “And we keep finding ways to win.”

Doesn’t matter the opponent, either. The Bucks, Knicks, Celtics and now the Nuggets in the NBA Finals all have found themselves on the wrong end of a Heat rally.

The Heat rallied from 15 points down to beat the top-seeded Bucks in Game 4 and then from 16 down to win the clinching Game 5; from 12 down to win Game 1 over the Knicks and from 14 down in Game 6 to eliminate them; erased a 13-point deficit on the road in Game 1 against the Celtics and then a 12-point deficit to win Game 2 — and now, a 15-point comeback to win Game 2 of the NBA Finals over the Nuggets.

Sunday night’s rally matched the fifth-largest in a finals game in the last 25 years. The Heat trailed the Nuggets 50-35 with 5 minutes left in the second quarter and outscored the hosts 76-58 the rest of the way to even the series. The series now shifts to Miami, with both teams practicing there Tuesday before Game 3 on Wednesday night.

This improbable story — a team that trailed in the final minutes of an eliminatio­n game of the play-in tournament somehow getting to the NBA Finals — now has an even wackier plot twist. The eighthseed­ed Heat have home-court advantage in the title series over the Nuggets, the No. 1 seed out of the Western Conference.

“We’ve won on the road before,” Nuggets veteran Jeff Green said after Game 2. “We understand what’s at stake. They did what they were supposed to. They came in, got a split. Now they’re going home, and I think we have to go in there worried about Game 3. We can’t worry about Game 4. We have to worry about Game 3.”

What the Heat are doing is simultaneo­usly historic and completely on brand. There have been four teams in the last 25 years to have seven postseason wins after trailing by double digits in a game; the Warriors did it last year on the way to the NBA title.

The other three teams on that list? The 2011 Heat, the 2012 Heat and now the 2023 Heat — all coached by Erik Spoelstra.

“We faced a lot of adversity during the season,” Spoelstra said. “We handled it the right way. … It steeled us and we developed some grit, which is what we all want. We want to be able to have that privilege of having adversity and being able to overcome it. You gain

strength from that.”

The effect of all that adversity — like 44 games decided by five points or fewer, the Heat going 28-16 so far in those — is this: They just never think they’re out of a game. Sure, there’s the axiom that

in the NBA every team eventually makes a run, and that’s largely true, but the Heat didn’t even raise the surrender flag in Game 1 when trailing by 21 points in the fourth quarter. They got the lead down to nine with 2:34 left.

And in Game 2, the comeback wasn’t in vain.

Down eight going into the fourth, Duncan Robinson and Gabe Vincent — two undrafted guards who were forged from the Heat developmen­t program — scored their team’s first 15 points of the final quarter. They gave the Heat the lead, and they didn’t give it away.

“We just needed to come out with a sense of urgency in that fourth,” Robinson said afterward. “It was kind of like a now or never sort of thing.”

What made the Game 2 comeback even more improbable — even for a team that is making rallies seem like an everyday thing in the playoffs — is that the Nuggets were 45-3 this season in games where they led by at least 15 points. And in games at home where they led by more than 10 points, they were 38-0.

The Comeback Heat weren’t deterred. Heat forward Jimmy Butler says it’s the “I don’t give a damn factor” that kicks in at those moments.

“I just think nobody cares on our team. We’re not worried about what anybody thinks,” Butler said. “We’re so focused in on what we do well and who we are as a group that at the end of the day, that’s what we fall back on. Make or miss shots, we’re going to be who we are because we’re not worried about anybody else. That’s how it’s been all year long, and that’s not going to change.”

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/AP ?? Heat forward Kevin Love, left, and Nuggets center Nikola Jokic compete for possession of the ball during the second half of Game 2.
MARK J. TERRILL/AP Heat forward Kevin Love, left, and Nuggets center Nikola Jokic compete for possession of the ball during the second half of Game 2.
 ?? MATTHEW STOCKMAN/GETTY ?? Gabe Vincent drives on Jamal Murray during the Heat’s win in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday.
MATTHEW STOCKMAN/GETTY Gabe Vincent drives on Jamal Murray during the Heat’s win in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday.

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