One season ago, the Miami Heat posted the top record in the Eastern Conference and advanced to the conference finals before succumbing to the Boston Celtics.
More success was expected this season, but the Heat have been underachievers. And worse, Miami will miss the NBA playoffs if it should lose to the visiting Chicago Bulls on Friday in the play-in round.
Chicago advanced by recording a 109-105 comeback victory over the host Toronto Raptors on Wednesday. The Bulls should be confident in the winner-take-all scenario as they are 3-0 against the Heat this season, including two wins in Miami.
The Heat are in this position after losing 116-105 to the visiting Atlanta Hawks on Tuesday, the first day of the play-in festivities. The Hawks advanced to the playoffs.
“We’ve had a lot of ups and downs this season. Nothing about this season has been easy,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “We’re going to do this the hard way.”
Spoelstra said he won’t trot out the same starting lineup against Chicago that he did against Atlanta.
“This is going to have a different feel than Atlanta, for sure,” Spoelstra said. “I wouldn’t even just say the starters, but who we bring in off the bench might be a little bit different than what we used against Atlanta.”
Miami trailed by as many as 24 points in the second quarter and was physically dominated on the boards as Atlanta had a 63-39 rebounding advantage and a 26-6 edge in second-chance points. Star Jimmy Butler scored 21 points but had a shaky 6-of-19 effort from the field.
Butler vows the result will be different on Friday.
“We have to stay confident,” Butler said. “We have to know we are capable of winning — if we start out the right way and if we rebound, obviously. I don’t know, shots don’t go in, we foul — that’s never the recipe for success with us. So come Friday, we’ve got to play, like, legit the exact opposite that we played (Wednesday night).”
The Bulls overcame a 19-point third-quarter deficit to beat the Raptors and stay alive.
Zach LaVine poured in 30 of his 39 points in the second half and DeMar DeRozan added 23 for Chicago.
“There’s not too many people in this league that have the talent that Zach has,” DeRozan said of his star teammate. “It feels good just to see him get appreciated from the moment that I got here. I wanted everything to come his way in a positive nature because I know how hard he works, how much he cares about the game and he’s a hell of a person.”
When reminded of Chicago’s regular-season success against the Heat, LaVine said it is a non-factor.
“They’re going to make adjustments. We are, too,” LaVine said. “It’s going to be whoever wants it more. I think it comes down to that.”
The Bulls have been playing their best basketball of the season in recent weeks after a shaky campaign in which they were last above .500 at 5-4 on Nov. 2.
But Chicago won 11 of its final 17 regular-season games and continued its rise with the rally against Toronto.
“I think that’s why our team is set up for success, we got two killers in Zach and DeMar,” guard Alex Caruso said. “That’s all we got to do is play our roles and then we know we got two killers that down the stretch of the game can go get a bucket on just about anybody in the league.”
While Butler was struggling, Miami got surprise help from Kyle Lowry, who poured in 33 points against the Hawks for his highest scoring output in two seasons with the Heat.
Lowry was 11-of-16 shooting — he made six 3-pointers — but experienced left knee soreness after his strong effort. He is listed as questionable against the Bulls but doesn’t figure to miss the game with the season on the line.
Miami guard Gabe Vincent (hip) also is questionable. He scored six points in 24-plus minutes against Atlanta.
The winner of this contest meets the top-seed Milwaukee Bucks in the first round of the playoffs.
–Field Level Media