Miami Herald

HAS HEAT’S BIG 3 RUN ITS COURSE?

- BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com

As this Heat season spirals into a very dark place, one question hovers over everything:

Why hasn’t the trio that coach Erik Spoelstra has identified as the Heat’s Big 3 been more effective playing together since the start of the 2022-2023 season, when Tyler Herro became a starter?

Miami is 5-11 when Jimmy Butler, Bam Adebayo and Herro are all available this season after finishing 26-25 in those games last season, before playing without Herro for nearly all of a run to the NBA Finals.

So that’s 31-36 with Butler, Adebayo and Herro playing together during the past 15 months, heading into Wednesday’s home game against Sacramento (7:30 p.m., Bally Sports Sun), when Miami will try to snap a seven-game losing streak.

“That’s surprising,” an Eastern Conference scout said an hour before the Heat dropped its seventh consecutiv­e game, 118-105, to Phoenix on Monday in Miami. “They’re obviously a level below the top three of several other teams, but they should be better than this.

“There’s clearly some chemistry issues. You see lack of intensity at times and they’re not consistent­ly

Heat has blunt film session to examine seven-game losing streak, scoring. They shouldn’t be that bad” with those three starting.

Some suggest Herro’s move into the starting lineup has been a net negative, but when they’re on the floor together — which is necessary whether Herro starts or not — they’re still outscoring teams, just not nearly to the extent that they have at times in the past.

A study of data reveals several realities, and corrects some misconcept­ions, about lineups featur

ing Butler, Adebayo and Herro:

The lineup featuring those three historical­ly has been extremely good at times, including stretches last season when Miami outscored teams by 7.2 points per 100 possession­s with that group on the court. That number was 12.2 per 100 possession­s during Herro’s rookie season in 2019-2020, when Goran Dragic was playing point guard at a high level.

In fact, the Heat has never had a regular season or playoffs when those three have been outscored when they’re on the court together. In the two long playoff runs when Herro played the majority of games (the 2020 Finals run at the Disney complex and the 2021-22 run that ended with a Game 7 Eastern finals home loss to Boston), Miami outscored opponents by 10.7 points per 100 possession­s with a Butler/Adebayo/ Herro lineup.

In the 2021-22 playoffs, the Heat scored an impressive 125.1 points per 100 possession­s with those three on the floor together, by far the most that lineup has produced in their regular season or postseason time together. That was the season before Herro became a starter.

But when compared this season to the top three scorers on other teams holding playoff seeds, the Butler/Adebayo/Herro lineups don’t measure up in two key areas: points per 100 possession­s (which removes pace as a factor in analyzing offense) and plusminus when they’re on the floor together.

WEAK IN COMPARISON

Let’s take a look at scoring first.

Among the Heat’s Big 3 and the 15 other teams holding top eight seeds, Miami’s three top scorers (excluding newcomer Terry Rozier) compared to the top three scorers for other teams are third worst in points per 100 possession­s. And Miami’s group is nowhere close to the top 12.

Lineups featuring Butler, Adebayo and Herro are averaging 113.3 points per 100 possession­s in their 16 games together, which is only 33rd best among three-man Heat lineups this season that have played at least 15 games together.

This season, lineups with Butler/Adebayo/ Herro are outscoring teams by 3.4 points per 100 possession­s, which is underwhelm­ing for a pseudo Big 3.

“We need more out of everybody, including myself,” Herro said Monday night. “I feel like it starts with me, Bam and Jimmy. It’s on us to bring more, and the rest of the guys will follow.”

Among teams holding playoff seeds, Miami’s top three scorers have better points per 100 possession­s than only the top three scorers of Orlando (Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner, Cole Anthony) and lineups featuring New Orleans’ top three scorers (Zion Williamson, Brandon Ingram and C.J. McCollum).

In plus-minus per 100 possession­s, only the top three scorers of the Magic and Dallas and Indiana are worse than Butler/ Herro/Adebayo.

It’s notable that the

Heat went 8-3 in its 11 most recent games without Butler. But to suggest that Adebayo and Herro have been better without

Butler would be incorrect. The Heat has averaged just 108.1 points per 100 possession­s and has been outscored by 3.9 points per 100 when Adebayo and Herro play together — significan­tly worse than Miami’s numbers with Butler, Adebayo and Herro together.

CORRELATIO­N OR CAUSATION?

Less clear is whether the team’s struggles with its Big 3 healthy reasonably can, in some ways, be attributed to the fit of this trio.

In many ways, it should not be attributed to fit.

Here’s one example: Adebayo is shooting 7for-42 on mid-range jumpers in January. Herro and Butler cannot be blamed for that.

Butler is allowing the player he’s guarding to shoot 50.5 percent this season, compared with 47.6 percent last season and 44.4 percent the previous season. Even though Butler might be leaving his man at times to help when other wing players are victimized by penetratio­ns, that alone wouldn’t account for that drop.

In some areas, it’s more nuanced. For example:

Butler is averaging 12.7 field-goal attempts and 19.3 points in 16 games when Herro also plays, and 14.3 shot attempts and 22.5 points when Herro doesn’t. So the more aggressive Butler is a bit more likely to surface without Herro, though Butler scored 31 against the Los Angeles Lakers and 27 against New York with Herro in uniform.

At the request of Heat

Phoenix 33 29 38 18 — 118 Miami 25 24 25 31 — 105 Att.—19,600 (19,600). T—2:12. Officials—Gediminas Petraitis, JT Orr,

Pat Fraher. coaches, Herro says he’s shooting more catch-andshoot jumpers (mostly threes) than mid-range shots. The result has been five consecutiv­e games below 20 points, after failing to reach 20 just five times in his first 23. That’s a byproduct of the fit with Adebayo and Butler, who both take a lot of midrange shots.

Bottom line: The Butler/Adebayo/Herro lineups aren’t nearly as good this season as they were during 2020 and 2022 playoff runs, or even last season.

Why those results haven’t been as successful this season could be attributed to appalling defensive breakdowns and general defensive regression across the roster, problems with the supporting cast (particular­ly Jaime Jaquez Jr. missing the first five games of the losing streak), shooting slumps by Adebayo and Herro, an overall decline in threepoint shooting and a passive Butler at times.

The larger question is whether this Big 3 has simply run its course as an effective lead group.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Tyler Herro
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Tyler Herro
 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Jimmy Butler
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Jimmy Butler
 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Bam Adebayo
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Bam Adebayo
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? The Big 3 of Bam Adebayo, left, Tyler Herro and Jimmy Butler hasn’t scored a lot this season compared to the top trios on other teams in the top eight in each conference.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com The Big 3 of Bam Adebayo, left, Tyler Herro and Jimmy Butler hasn’t scored a lot this season compared to the top trios on other teams in the top eight in each conference.

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