Miami Herald

Heat will play Wednesday with three starters out again, but Herro could be returning soon

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The Heat’s well-documented injury issues continue, but reinforcem­ents could soon be on the way.

The Heat again ruled out three members of its preferred starting lineup —

Bam Adebayo (left hip contusion), Tyler Herro (right ankle sprain) and

Haywood Highsmith (lower back contusion) — for Wednesday’s game against the Charlotte Hornets at Kaseya Center (7:30 p.m.. Bally Sports Sun). It will mark the fourth straight game that the Heat plays without each of these three starters.

The Heat also will remain without Nikola

Jovic (G League) and Dru Smith (season-ending knee surgery).

Adebayo will miss his fifth straight game, Herro his 16th straight game and Highsmith his fourth straight game.

While the Heat has not offered a definitive timetable for any of their returns, there’s optimism that Herro will be able to make his return within the next week, according to a source familiar with the situation.

After Wednesday’s game, the Heat hosts the Chicago Bulls on Thursday and Saturday before closing the four-game homestand against the Minnesota Timberwolv­es on Monday.

Herro and Highsmith remained in Miami when the Heat traveled to Charlotte for Monday night’s 116-114 win , but Adebayo made the trip to his home state of North Carolina.

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra cautioned against reading too much into that.

“He wanted to be around the guys,” Spoelstra said.

“He’s making progress. I don’t have a timetable for him . ... We knew he wanted to be here, and he can do his work. So, it’s good.”

Injuries have forced the Heat to use a league-leading 14 different starting lineups this season. In addition, Miami’s leading trio of Adebayo, Jimmy Butler and Herro have all been available for just six of the first 23 games.

But the Heat has managed to navigate those issues and a road-heavy start to the schedule to build a 13-10 record.

The Heat now plays six of its next seven games at home with the hope of soon getting healthier.

“It’s not about missed games,” Spoelstra said. “That’s been way less of a factor in our wins and losses than sustaining a high level of play.

“We’ve proven that even with moving parts we can get double-digit leads and can play extremely well on both ends of the court. It’s the consistenc­y that we have to continue to build on.”

TO FOUL OR NOT TO FOUL

When ahead by three points in the final seconds, Spoelstra has typically decided against committing the intentiona­l foul to prevent teams from setting up a potential game-tying three-pointer.

But late in Monday’s win over the Hornets during a timeout, Butler talked Spoelstra into taking the intentiona­l foul with the Heat ahead by three points and less than 10 seconds to play.

“Jimmy came into the huddle and he said he felt most comfortabl­e doing that,” Spoelstra said. “And he was the guy I definitely feel the most trust in that he can make that proper decision. As soon as he said it in the huddle, I was thinking probably what he was thinking was Jaylen Brown.”

That’s exactly what Butler was thinking, as his decision not to foul Brown in almost exactly the same situation nearly cost the Heat that Dec. 2, 2022, game in Boston. Brown banked in a long threepoint­er over Butler to force overtime before the Heat eventually escaped with the win.

“A lot, to tell you the truth,” Butler said when asked how past experience­s influenced his decision to intentiona­lly foul Hornets guard Terry Rozier on Monday, “Hell, I just remember Jaylen Brown hitting a crazy shot at Boston because I said I was going to foul and I said, ‘You know what, I’m not going to do it.’ And then he turns and banks a three in. I was like, ‘We’re not going to do that again.’ Plus, they’re out of timeouts and I think we had one left. So he was going to have to do something to get three points out of that play.”

After Butler’s intentiona­l foul Monday, Rozier made both free throws to cut the Heat’s lead to one point with 9.1 seconds to play.

The Hornets then took an intentiona­l foul on Butler to preserve clock, and Butler made one of the two free throws to push the Heat’s lead to two with 4.3 seconds remaining.

With no timeouts remaining to advance the ball up the court and so little time left on the clock, all the Hornets could get up on their final possession was a 44-foot heave from Rozier that missed the rim as the buzzer sounded.

“Fortunatel­y, it turned out good for us,” Spoelstra said. “We played the analytics with that. But even that last one with Terry, that thing was right on line. It was long off the backboard, but that seemed like 10 seconds for him to get that thing off.”

JOVIC MINUTES

Jovic becan his second G League stint of the season with 16 points on 6-of-16 shooting from the field and 0-of-6 shooting on threes, 11 rebounds, two assists, one steal and two blocks in the Sioux Falls Skyforce’s 110-106 win over the Motor City Cruise on Tuesday in Detroit.

The plan is for Jovic to play one more game with the Skyforce on Friday against the Windy City Bulls in Illinois before rejoining the Heat in Miami this weekend. The hope is that Jovic, 20, will return to the Skyforce later this month for the G League Winter Showcase in Orlando.

“The idea is to get him game time,” Spoelstra said, adding that Jovic had “two really good weeks” with his developmen­t since he came back from Sioux Falls after his first G League stint of the season.

Anthony Chiang: 305-376-4991, @Anthony_Chiang

 ?? SAM SHARPE USA TODAY Sports ?? Heat guard Jaime Jaquez Jr. tries to shoot Monday night while being defended by Hornets forward P.J. Washington. Jaquez had 18 points in Miami’s 116-114 win.
SAM SHARPE USA TODAY Sports Heat guard Jaime Jaquez Jr. tries to shoot Monday night while being defended by Hornets forward P.J. Washington. Jaquez had 18 points in Miami’s 116-114 win.

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