Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

BUTLER DID IT

At this point, who can doubt Heat star?

- Jeff Zillgitt USA TODAY

One year ago, Jimmy Butler spoke after losing to the Boston Celtics in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals. Solemn and measured, he told reporters, “We had enough. Next year, we will have enough and we’re going to be right back in the same situation, and we’re going to get it done.” With most players, it’s bloviating. Not with Butler. With him, it’s prophetic. You can’t dismiss what he says.

One year to the date, Miami was in the same situation − Game 7 against the Celtics in the conference finals − and Butler and the Heat got it done, defeating Boston 103-84 on Monday in almost an unimaginab­le way.

The Heat blew a 3-0 series lead, losing Game 6 at the buzzer at home and with all the momentum in the Celtics’ favor as they tried to become the first team in NBA history to come back from a 3-0 deficit and win a series. But Miami went to Boston and closed out the series with a rout.

Almost unimaginab­le. Except to the Heat. They believe anything is possible, including winning the Finals against Denver.

“You have to have a guy that you can hold on to, particular­ly in those moments of truth,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said of Butler. “I’ve said this before, there’s no way to quantify the confidence that he can instill in everybody.”

Even after that agonizing defeat on Saturday, Butler reiterated: “We can do it. I know that we will do it.”

Spoelstra was equally adamant following the Game 6 loss. “I don’t know how we are going to get this done, but we are going up there and get it done,” he said.

28.5 Jimmy Butler’s average points per game in the playoffs this season, against defenses designed to shut him down.

“I’ve said this before, there’s no way to quantify the confidence that he can instill in everybody.” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra

On Jimmy Butler

Any other team, coach or player, anyone would say, “No way.” But with the Heat, Spoelstra and Butler, you have to leave room for the possibilit­y.

Spoelstra embraces these challenges and finds meaning in competitio­n. Yes, it's a game, but life lessons are embedded in the wins and losses.

“Life is hard. Profession­al sports is just kind of a reflection sometimes of life, that things don't always go your way,” he said. “The inevitable setbacks happen, and it's how you deal with that collective­ly. There's a lot of different ways that it can go. It can sap your spirit. It can take a team down for whatever reason. With this group, it's steeled us and made us closer and made us tougher.”

Don't forget, the Heat were the No. 8 seed. They had a 44-38 record and lost to Atlanta in the first play-in game. Miami had to beat Chicago in the second play-in game just to reach the playoffs, then a first-round matchup against top-seeded Milwaukee. It beat the Bucks in five games, then the Knicks in six and now the Celtics in seven.

No. 8 seeds don't get to the Finals. They lose in the first round. Just one other eighth seed has made it to the Finals. But the Heat aren't your typical No. 8 seed.

I've grown to roll my eyes at the use of the word “culture” when it comes to sports. If a team wins, its culture is good. If a team is losing, the culture is bad. There's too much coming and going to establish meaningful culture.

Except in Miami, the culture is there, win or lose. The way Miami conducts its business is different. It's a stable franchise that doesn't have a revolving door of head coaches and top front-office executives.

Team president Pat Riley has been with the Heat since 1995; senior vice president of basketball operations Andy Elisburg joined the franchise in 1988; vice president of basketball operations and assistant GM Adam Simon started as an intern in 1995, and Spoelstra began his Heat career in the video room in 1995 before becoming the head coach in 2008.

In 15 seasons, Spoelstra has made the playoffs 12 times, winning titles in 2012 and 2013 with LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. He also reached the Finals in the 2020 Orlando bubble with Butler.

Riley, Butler and Spoelstra share the same mentality.

“I just know why Coach Pat and Coach Spo wanted me to be here, and that's to compete at a high level and to win championsh­ips,” Butler said.

He wasn't perfect in Game 7. He shot just 12-for-28 from the field, but his 28 points, seven rebounds, six assists and three steals mattered.

“I'm just confident,” he said. “I know the work that we all put into it, so I know what we're capable of. Nobody is satisfied. We haven't done anything. We don't play just to win the Eastern Conference. We play to win the whole thing.”

If you didn't before, believe Butler when he speaks.

 ?? WINSLOW TOWNSON/USA TODAY SPORTS, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MARC JENKINS/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Miami's Jimmy Butler dunks over Boston's
Jaylen Brown in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals
on Monday.
WINSLOW TOWNSON/USA TODAY SPORTS, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MARC JENKINS/ USA TODAY NETWORK Miami's Jimmy Butler dunks over Boston's Jaylen Brown in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals on Monday.
 ?? WINSLOW TOWNSON/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Jimmy Butler celebrates with the MVP trophy after the Heat beat the Celtics in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals.
WINSLOW TOWNSON/USA TODAY SPORTS Jimmy Butler celebrates with the MVP trophy after the Heat beat the Celtics in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals.

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