Santa Cruz Sentinel

Heat’s Olynyk ready for anything

- Ky Tim Reynolds

LAKE KUENA VISTA, FLA. >> Kelly Olynyk might play no minutes for the Miami Heat on Tuesday, a scenario that popped up twice in the last three games of the Eastern Conference finals. Or he might play meaningles­s minutes, like what he got in Game 1 of the NBA Finals. Or he might play big minutes, as was the case in Games 2 and 3 of the title series.

He’s used to the uncertaint­y. This is Olynyk’s mandate as a Heat player: Be ready, sometimes for nothing, sometimes for everything. He has been a starter at times, a key reserve for the bulk of his three-year tenure in Miami but, on occasion, falls out of the

rotation entirely. He was more than ready in Game 3 of the NBA Finals, scoring 17 points, grabbing seven rebounds and making two very big plays that many might not have noticed to help the Heat beat the Los Angeles Lakers 115104 and get within 2-1 in the series.

“It’s never easy. It’s never easy,”

Olynyk said of his wildly fluctuatin­g role with the Heat. “It’s a weird feeling and I’m not going to lie, it doesn’t get easy. But you just know there is opportunit­y on the next side. The only thing is, you wonder if this is the last time there is that opportunit­y. So you stay ready because hard work always prevails.”

Olynyk has had a bigger role in these finals, especially the last two games, because Bam Adebayo was out with a neck strain. Adebayo is listed as questionab­le for Game 4, which means the Heat may not need to use Olynyk and

Meyers Leonard — who started at center in Games 2 and 3 — so much Thursday.

Leonard was a starter all season until hurting his ankle in February. He gave Miami 12 very important minutes in Game 3.

“KO and Meyers, they’re just great profession­als,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “We’ve said it all year long that our depth is one of our best strengths. That’s not just coachspeak. You have to have the right kind of pros that are really willing to be all about the team, and that requires sacrifice at times.

So the minutes weren’t always there for them this season, but they contribute­d in a big way at different points.”

Including playoffs, the Heat are 24-9 this season when Olynyk hits double figures in scoring. His 17 points in Game 3 came on 5-for- 9 shooting, 3-for- 5 from beyond the 3-point line.

But the two biggest moments of his night may have been when he stepped in front of Anthony Davis and took a charge on the Lakers’ big man in the second quarter for his third foul — part of a rough night for Davis — then when he chased down LeBron James for a steal with 2:45 left and the game still most undecided.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James and Miami Heat’s Kelly Olynyk fight for control of the ball during the first half in Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Sunday.
MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James and Miami Heat’s Kelly Olynyk fight for control of the ball during the first half in Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Sunday.

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