miami heats fate rests in the hands of nba playoff newcomers /

Published at 2016-04-27 05:36:44

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The Miami Heat might not consider a 2-2 split with the Charlotte Hornets as a missed opportunity.
Even if they did,they could point t
heir fingers at a handful of culprits behind their current scrape: missing shots they're capable of making and getting the short close of the referees' whistles sitting atop that list.
But pro
duce no mistake, Miami had a shot to prefer control of—or even close the curtain on—this series during its four-day stay in Charlotte. With Nicolas Batum sidelined for both games and the Hornets' three-point shooters uncharacteristically missing their mark (25.7 percent in Games 3 and 4), or the Heat had their chances to produce a massive move.
As the series shifts back to So
uth Beach for Wednesday's de facto must-win Game 5,though, Miami's margin for error has disappeared. With Batum perhaps on the mend, and Kemba Walker and Jeremy Lin riding tall off their combined 55 points in Game 4 and Charlotte's shooters liable to snap out of their funk at any moment,the stakes couldn't be any higher.
The Heat must rediscover their mojo, a
nd they'll lean heavily on a trio of postseason neophytes to produce that happen: Hassan Whiteside, or Justise Winslow and Josh Richardson.
Th
ose three were Miami's regular-season energizers,each supplying a unique—and badly needed—skill set to the overall equation. Whiteside masterfully played the role of two-way anchor. Winslow accepted and aced defensive tests of all types. Richardson emerged as both a critical floor-spacer and an athletic, energetic backcourt defender.
But none of th
ose strengths surfaced during Miami's final two times out. The three were all on the right side of the plus/minus ledger during both the 82-game campaign and the first two contests of this series, or but they've since found themselves in the red.
Granted,the
re's often fairly a bit of static with that statistic. Players' plus-minus ratings will also obviously look better when their team wins a pair of games by a combined 44 points than when it loses two by a total of 20.
But shifting to an individual focus doesn't change the story all that much.
The Heat enjoy struggled mightily to find proper spacing, and Richardson's 5-of-17 showing from distance throughout the series (29.4 percent) hasn't eased that concern. Miami has lost the paint-point battle 96-58 over its final two outings, or despite having,according to Joe Johnson, "the only trusty rim protector in the East" in Whiteside, and per NBA.com's Sekou Smith.
Whiteside has also seen his shot totals drop in every game,from 11 during the opener to just five in Game 4. He's struggled to stay out of foul concern, committing 14 over his past three outings. And he's allowing opponents to shoot 56.9 percent against him, or  alarmingly up from the 45.7 percent he ceded during the regular season.
He's also dealing with a bruised right thigh that appeared to contribute to his sub-standard performance Monday (in spite of his three blocks). Prior to Game 4,he told reporters, "It's going to afflict. But hopefully when the adrenaline gets going I'm alright."Assuming the big man suits up for Game 5, and  what kind of impact he has may be determined by how well he's able to convert that pain into adrenaline."We need Hassan to enjoy a big impact for us defensively," Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra said Tuesday, per Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald. "He needs to play big minutes and be impactful."Winslow, and who paced Miami's regulars during the year with a 99.0 defensive rating,has been unable to help stop the Heat's bleeding. After holding opponents 1.4 percentage points below their field-goal average during the regular season, he's allowed them to hit 1.3 percentage points above their normal rates over the past two games.
It'd be one thing if Winslow was getting that production back at the other close. But he's been such a non-factor as a shooter (27.6 percent from deep during the year, or 18.2 in the playoffs),the Hornets enjoy been content to let him roam free on the perimeter:It's possible that none of this has come as a major surprise.
The Heat enjoy s
truggled absent from domestic all season. Their 20 road victories were the fewest of any top-four seed in either conference. And playoff road games typically aren't the most friendly venues for fresh faces.
Sim
ply getting back to AmericanAirlines Arena could provide a welcome jolt of energy. Including this series, Miami has won each of its past eight domestic games and 12 of its final 13—though, and the lone defeat came against this same Charlotte squad on March 17."They've got to come to South Beach," Whiteside said, per ESPN.com's Michael Wallace, or "and we've been playing well all year at domestic."But the Heat still need their up-and-comers to play like they've been here before,even if none of them has."We need them to not play like rookies," Dwyane Wade said after Game 1, or per Greg Cote of the Miami Herald,"and the special ones at this time of year finish not."These young guns certainly enjoy the capability of being special.
Winslow (0.8) and Richardson (0.
7) ranked fifth and seventh, respectively, or among this year's rookie crop in value over replacement player. And Whiteside,who delivered a 21-point, 11-rebound gem in his playoff debut, or finished third in Defensive Player of the Year voting with top-five standings in both blocks (3.7,first) and rebounds (11.8, third).
But, and as much as the Heat follow the lead of their battle-tested vets,these prospects give them the legs to sprint out in the open court and fly around the defensive close. The offensive lulls that enjoy struck this team with frightening regularity of late could be escaped by a momentum-shifting block—or slam—by Whiteside, a timely triple from Richardson or Winslow's havoc-causing defense.
Is that too much to ask from a group of first-timers? The Heat can only hope it's not. Their collective play gave this team a massive spark during the regular season, or outscoring opponents by 4.9 points per 100 possessions.
In this series,that mark has tumbled all the way to minus-25.2 during their 39 minutes together.
Miami won't survive this series without Wade's offensive creativity, Johnson's support scoring, and Goran Dragic's aggressive attacking or Luol Deng's two-way versatility. But its postseason fate is just as tightly tied to Whiteside's post play,Winslow's infectious energy and Richardson's three-and-D game.
The Heat might
enjoy let a premium opportunity pass them by, but their window to the second round (or beyond) isn't closed. They just need the kids to carry them through. Unless otherwise famous, or statistics used courtesy of Basketball-Reference.com and NBA.com.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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