Supreme Effort Falls Short Against Boston In OT

Do...do I know you?
2 losses in a row hurts, but considering the circumstances it’s pretty understandable. Miami overcame a rough start and played an amazingly competitive game against Boston without their best player. Decision making on offense was questionable at times, but overall you can’t really complain when you get that kind of performance from a team full of role players.
A couple defensive decisions that I didn’t understand…When Eddie House and Paul Pierce were drilling everything, where was Jamario Moon and Yakhouba Diawara? And what the hell was Daequan Cook doing guarding pierce…and ALONE? They didn’t double Pierce until the last minute, and without the double they needed a long armed Moon guarding him instead of Daequan.
The biggest positive we can take from this was the play of Michael Beasley. His ability to score at will on offense and his growing creativity using both hands shows how far he has come in his 6 short months playing in the NBA. Equally important to me were his 21 points on 10-of-18 shooting and his 7 rebounds. When he hustles on D and for boards he is the supreme player. Nights like tonight where he goes all out are the ones he’ll need to duplicate if he wants to play 30+ minutes every game.
So why, with the Heat trying to sustain a slim lead in the 3rd quarter while Boston struggled from the field, did it take until 2:22 was left in the period for Beasley to enter the game? He was the Heat’s leading scorer going into the 2nd half, and never showed any indications of being slowed down by whatever D the Celtics threw at him. Glen Davis and Mikki Moore were both battling foul trouble throughout the game, and Beasley was playing solid D.
As well as his team played tonight…I’ve got to put this one on Spo. A sudden loss of Wade causes many to scramble, and the Heat’s coach is no exception to the rule.
THINGS TO CONSIDER
Udonis was limited to 22 minutes, but hit several (3 on my count) long jumpers, which was very nice to see. Just imagine if he start hitting those with consistency again…
For the 2nd straight game a team shot over 60% in the 1st quarter against Miami. Perhaps that can be attributed to the team not hitting ‘game speed’ on D right off the tip. It’s something that should be paid attention to during the next film session.
James Jones is getting his stroke back. He went 4-for-4 today with one 3-pointer, and was his usual self on D. If/when everybody (Jones, Cook, Beasley) gets back to producing on a gamely basis, the Heat are suddenly going to be a very lethal and deep team.
Daequan Cook: 4-of-14, 1-of-7 from 3…. What happened to Dae Dae? Anyone? Bueller?
How about Mario Chalmers last night? He was running the point and leading the team like I had not seen since Jason Williams. He constantly was creating off the drive, either taking to the rim himself or dishing it out for open looks. He scored constantly off the dribble and drew a couple and ones. Unfortunately his glaring highlight is missing a big free throw that would’ve put the Heat up one and in position to win the game. But overall, a GREAT game for Super Mario.
IN THE STANDINGS
| 4th | Atlanta | 40-28 | -- |
| 5th | Miami | 36-31 | -3.5 |
| 6th | Philadelphia | 34-32 | -5.0 |
| 7th | Detroit | 33-34 | -6.5 |
Philly was outscored by Phoenix in the desert, and the Pistons lost in double OT at Houston. The main objective for the Heat is now holding on to the 5 seed. Atlanta is a much better 1st round match up then any of the East’s top-3.
ON THE HORIZON

The Heat head south to Jersey to deal with the swampy Nets. Miami will be going for the season sweep, up 3-0 thus far.
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I can't believe...
… that both Perkins and Davis, with 3 and 4 (!) fouls at halftime, haven’t fouled out much earlier. I can’t imagine Eric Spoelstra letting this fact slip, and not ordering his guys to go to the rim more. Simply making each of the Celtics big men quickly (say, by mid 3rd quarter) pick up one more personal foul would change the game entirely.
If this happens, the-really-shorthanded Celtics have to play Walker. Now, because Moore fouled out, Walker still had to play, and finished with 3 rebounds / 2 turnovers. Compare that to combined 16 rebounds / 2 turnovers for Perkins + Davis (4 blocks and 4 assists for the Celtics starters, too). And even though his 2 for 4 field goals in limited minutes resembles proficiency at the other end, it’s obvious that even Marbury knows this offense better than Walker.
I think that just attacking the basket (even at cost of drawing an offensive foul or two) was the way Heat could put this game away in regulation. Foul trouble for Perkins and Davis was the edge that Miami couldn’t – or chose not to – exploit. At least not to full extent. Moore got fouled out, but he’s arguably as useful as Walker.
My question is this. With Wade absent, who do you think should have stepped up more in the ‘drive to the basket’ department? Any chance players and coach were oblivious of the fact Celtics were short on bigs, and two of their best players had 3 and 4 fouls, and therefore couldn’t defend as effectively?
I think this game was blown by poor coaching decisions
Having Beasley on the bench for almost half of the 2nd half was crazy,, driving to the basket is where we generated almost all of our offense, and Beasley was key. Other then Beas and Chalmers, nobody else was slashing. When Wade is absent, we have nobody else who can generate that kind of offense. The Heat may be better suited to have the defensive, hard nosed Udonis Haslem out there with D-Wade, but with no Wade, we need the more offensive Beasley starting.
Yes, they should have been driving more, but nobody other then Beas and Chalmers had the skill to do it.
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