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Dwyane Wade's 36 points not enough to carry Heat to a win...again

This game started out looking very similar to the Heat's last game.  The Magic seemed to be doing whatever they wanted offensively, scoring 17 points in less then half a quarter.  The only difference was that Miami was able to somewhat keep pace, thanks mostly to Dwyane Wade getting going quickly.  I got the feeling that the refs were letting a lot go in the early stages; not calling Dwight Howard for a forearm to the chest of J-O or for what looked like an easy goaltending call on a Carlos Arroyo layup. 

Still though, I'm not one to complain to blame officials and I don't plan on starting now.  I just hope that as the game continued there would be no reason to.  The first big guy to come off the bench for Miami was Joel Anthony who quickly picked up a foul, but he always does that.  Shortly after that it was Uodnis coming in for Mike Beasley; Beasley started the game very active taking a few shots and scoring a 2nd chance layup, but after the first 2-3 minutes didn't do much to stand out. 

After Quentin Richardson' 2nd triple put the Heat up 24-21, Orlando went on an 8-1 run to close the 1st quarter thanks to back-to-back buckets by the sharpshooting J.J. RedickDorell Wright seemed to reclaim his role as the primary backup to Quentin Richardson, providing hustle defense and being a nice, big facilitator of the ball on offense.  His first shot came about 4 minutes into the 2nd quarter and it was pretty ugly, but it was so long that it went right off the backboard and in.  It was part of a 7-0 Heat run that gave them a brief 1-point lead.

Dorell then made one of the best plays, if not the best play, of his career.  He elevated to block a Vince Carter pass with one arm, then sped behind Carter and leaped out of bounds to save the ball blindly; luckily it went straight to Dwyane Wade. After bracing himself on the scorer's table, Dorell ran straight to the basket where D-Wade tossed him a perfect lob from just inside the halfcourt line and Wright finished it with a thunderous ally-oop jam.  It was so sick that I had to rewind and re-watch it several times.

Star-divide

After sitting on the bench for quite some time, Michael Beasley returned to the game with under 3 minutes left in the half.  He missed a jumper after and then right after that was called for a moving screen, but the sad thing is that I can't tell if he is just rusty from his injury or just generally struggling the way he has been the past few weeks.  When Beasley came back into the game the Heat had a THIS MANY point lead, but Orlando went on a quick 11-2 run to go up by 3.  Luckily the Heat has D-Wade, who brought the Heat back and tied the game at 54 going into the half.

A great start to the 2nd half for Miami happened before they ever touched the ball, as Dwight Howard was called for an offensive foul, his 4th, on the Magic's first possession and had to sit down just seconds into the 3rd quarter.  The Heat were having center issues of their own; Jermaine O'Neal had to go to the locker room during the 2nd quarter to get his ankles re-taped and also to receive IV treatment due to him catching the stomach virus that is effecting several members of the team.  J-O seemed to be fine when he started the 2nd half, but came up short on his first 3 attempts from the field, which usually means he isn't getting enough push off his legs.

Despite Dwight Howard sitting out almost the entire 3rd quarter, Miami spent the whole time trying to come from behind.  A troubling stat was that the Magic were +10 in rebounds during that 3rd quarter with their best rebounder sitting on the bench.  The 4th quarter didn't start out much better with lots of Heat jumpers coming up on the short end, and the Magic were able to stretch their lead all the way to 10 thanks to making a good percentage of their shots while the Heat hit on just 2-of-14.

When a pair of Dwight Howard free throws put the Magic up by 12 with under 6 minutes left, the Heat started to make their final push.  A Joel dunk and a Chalmers trey got the Heat within 7, then Wade got the deficit down to 5 with a pair of freebies.  Dwight Howard missed two free throws and Dorell came back with a jumper to get it down to 3. While Orlando was in the midst of a 5-minute stretch without a field goal, Mario Chalmers hit a triple from across the street at Bayside to tie the game at 88.  Jameer Nelson put Orlando back up by 2, and D-Wade responded with a nice quick layup that came with a foul, but he was unable to complete the 3-point play.

Wade kept responding to each time the Magic untied the game, this time with a 3-pointer that gave Miami a 1-point lead with 49.8 left.  Miami could've had the ball back after Matt Barnes airballed a triple that landed right in the arms of Mario Chalmers, but Jameer Nelson took it right away and got fouled.  I'll admit that I let out an audible ‘ugh' when the ball found its way into Michael Beasley's hands, but the kid dribbled into the paint and hit a nice teardrop to put Miami up by 2. 

Jameer Nelson hit a very tough J to tie the game back up, and Miami chose to play it out instead of calling a timeout with 15 seconds left.  Beasley would attempt another shot and Dwight Howard blocked it, but the ball went off the back of the backboard and it would be Miami ball with 3.4 seconds left.  Wade would get the ball but took a horrendous shot and it was off to OT.  This is where the descriptive part of the blog will end because despite setting an additional 30 minutes on my DVR, it ran out.  Thanks TNT. 

Oh well, after reading the play-by-play I wouldn't have enjoyed the overtime much anyway.   The Heat finished by missing 5 of their last 6 shots and letting the Magic end the game on an 8-2 run.  Outside of Wade, nobody on the team did much of anything to help.  41.1% from the field and 32.0% from 3-point land sound about right for the losing version of the Heat.

I can see why Wade was very upset with some of his teammates during 2nd half, as first it was Beasley who would've had a very easy 2 points if he had be paying attention when going to the rim.  Wade flung a pass right to him but Beas wasn't expecting the pass and it went right through his hands.  My question is, how can you be going towards the basket during a fast break and not be expecting a pass.  The second time it was Dorell Wright who missed what should have been an easy reverse layup off a great bounce pass from Wade, but completely missed the rim. 

Also, why does this team have so much trouble with in-bound plays?  Defensively there have been several times this year where they force the opponent to an inbound play late in the shot clock or the game clock, and all that happens is the Heat stand around watching a nice ally-oop play.  Offensively, I can't remember the last time they got an open look off an inbound. 

With 3.4 seconds left, Miami had a chance to win the game but couldn't get D-Wade any kind of good look.  Instead, he received the ball in the corner surrounded by defenders, which only allowed him to take a horrible shot without even the option to dish the ball to an open teammate. 

This is just me talking here, and any of you are more then welcome to disagree with me, but I'm getting really sick of Michael Beasley.  He shows up for little patches here and there but overall is proving to be nothing more then a disappointment.  It bothers me even more because we all know that the talent is there, but not so Super Cool has no clue how to get it out.  I think what bothers me the most are the confused looks on his face when things don't go his way. 

Dude...man up and figure out how to at least hit jumpshots again.  Forget driving the ball, just hit your shots.  He was able to do that very well as a rookie, but now he can't seem to do anything right.  At least when his offense struggled at the beginning of the year he still had the effort that brought the team rebounds and defense.  But 8 points and 6 rebounds in over 30 minutes isn't going to cut it.  Ever. 

GAME NOTES

  • Jermaine O'Neal did everything he could despite battling the stomach virus that is circulating through the team and dealing with uncomfortable feet that had to be re-taped at least once, but it was apparent that he wasn't feeling ‘normal' judging by the way his shots looked.  He still finished with 14 points, 6 boards and a season-high 5 blocked shots. 
  • Lost in the mix was Carlos Arroyo having a great shooting night. He hit 5-of-6 from the field, some of which were very tough looking jumpers. 
  • Udonis Haslem was about as invisible as was Michael Beasley, but one thing that stood out to me was a technical free throw missed by U-D in the 2nd quarter that he took despite having Dorell Wright, Carlos Arroyo and Mario Chalmers on the floor.  That make sense to any of you?  Me neither...
  • Quentin Richardson hit a pair of 1st quarter treys then became pretty irrelevant for the rest of the game.  1 rebound and 1 assist for Q; I guess his hot streak is over now. 
  • Dorell Wright got his minutes back, but still looks pretty off taking jumpers.  He hit 4-of-12 but none of his makes came from outside 15 feet, and he was 0-for-5 from beyond the arc.  He's missed 10-straight treys with the last make coming on March 4th against the Lakers

Alright...if I missed anything I'll do my best to cover it in the next blog.  Back-to-back games where a big comeback was needed tells me that the effort and execution to start games are quite lacking.  Coach Spo...what excuses do you have to strum up this time? 

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This was a hard game to be at

It was a great atmosphere in the arena and it was exciting, but the some of the decisions and the ending made you want to kick the person next to you.

Some things were driving me crazy. Again Beasley dissapearing in this game. Q seemed like he was on the bench the entire 2nd half until the end of the 4th, what was that all about? And then what drives me crazy the most was no one looks for passes. Wade is one of the best facilitators and you have to expect a pass is coming, but when a pass comes to anyone on the team they miss it and look confused. What the hell is wrong with these guys hands?

How many times on TV did they show Wade breaking Matt Barnes ankles in the corner on that one play? Man was that pretty and the whole crowd was laughing at him.

Go big or go home

by Keebler on Mar 19, 2010 8:37 AM EDT reply actions  

They showed it a couple times, until they realized that the reason Barnes went stumbling out of bounds was because Wade stepped on Barnes’ foot, causing him to fall.

I loved hearing the crowds reaction though…

Peninsula Is Mightier:Your SB Nation Miami Heat Blog Community Juggernaut

"My parents would always say, `It doesn't matter if it`s a guy picking up the garbage or the President of the United States, treat everybody as you would want to be treated.'"- Dan Marino

by David Dwork on Mar 19, 2010 2:06 PM EDT up reply actions  

Mixed feelings about this one

I got a chance to look at the NBAtv replay of the first half late last night. I see Wade doing his thing and Q make a couple of nice looking 3s and even a pull up jumper on a 2 (I thought that part of his game was LONG gone). Beasley was somewhat active but looked just a little gimpy from the injury. I noticed Wade interacting with Beasley more than ever—talking to him between plays and such. I also saw them on the bench together, and while Wade was talking to him, Beasley was nodding his head, but he just had this look on his face like no one was home. His eyes just looked really glossed over.

To start the 4th, we were missing several shots. We did a great job coming back from the deficit and even took the lead—even with Q (see my above comments about his 1st quarter) is sitting on the bench the WHOLE time! Fortunately, Chalmers hit a couple of big treys down the stretch of regulation.

We make it to OT not a single player attempted a shot in the Paint. We are not a jump-shooting team! We need Beasley getting over half his shots in the Paint-rather than taking all jump shots. We need Wade getting into the lane and creating for himself or others.

Were it not for key defensive breakdowns in the final two minutes on a layup by Nelson and wide open 3s by Lewis, we win this thing in regulation. Unfortunately, we have to play near flawless basketball against elite teams to have a chance in the end. As far as moral victories go, we did a hell of a job to get back in this one and even have a chance to win. But what was up with the look we got at the end of regulation? We would’ve been better off not calling a timeout and trying to go the length of the court—March Madness style. For Wade’s part, I would’ve rather seen him catch and shoot the fadeaway—a shot he had hit from the baseline several times last night—rather than take two dribbles and shot off the backboard over the double team.

Playing, coaching, and watching basketball.

by sherman r on Mar 19, 2010 10:32 AM EDT reply actions  

Love your comment on Beasley looking vacant while getting spoken to by Wade.. That is my biggest beef with Beas…I think he is ‘not smart’ (to put it mildly) and just doesn’t have the mental capacity to understand how to get better. It’s one thing to dominate lower levels of the sport when you have his size and skill, but against smart talented men who do this for a living those same moves (obviously) aren’t going to cut it.

As for the rest of your comments, it comes down to that we have players who show up in patches but nobody can put together a full game effort, save for Wade. Of course nobody will be at the top of their game for 48 minutes, but at least Wade can give us the feeling that he busted his ass the entire game while other guys pull disappearing acts. It sucks….

Peninsula Is Mightier:Your SB Nation Miami Heat Blog Community Juggernaut

"My parents would always say, `It doesn't matter if it`s a guy picking up the garbage or the President of the United States, treat everybody as you would want to be treated.'"- Dan Marino

by David Dwork on Mar 19, 2010 2:09 PM EDT up reply actions  

Well said...

…I just think some better game management on the coaching end could maximize what we do actually have.

Playing, coaching, and watching basketball.

by sherman r on Mar 20, 2010 12:36 AM EDT up reply actions  

The eat came in very close..but did not finish the job. Hopefully the heat can get a win in Charlotte .

by jlevitt92 on Mar 19, 2010 1:51 PM EDT reply actions  

After the past two loses…they NEED to win in Charlotte. God only knows how the psyche of the team will be effected should they drop that one.

Peninsula Is Mightier:Your SB Nation Miami Heat Blog Community Juggernaut

"My parents would always say, `It doesn't matter if it`s a guy picking up the garbage or the President of the United States, treat everybody as you would want to be treated.'"- Dan Marino

by David Dwork on Mar 19, 2010 2:10 PM EDT up reply actions  

Another great caption on a pic

Wade looks like a 55 year old man in the face in that picture.

Playing, coaching, and watching basketball.

by sherman r on Mar 20, 2010 12:31 AM EDT reply actions  

can you blame him?

2009 NY Phin PhansFantasy League Champion
2009 Best Regular Season Record in NYPPL.
2010 The Jim Mandich NewsFlash Award Winner.

by Patssuck456 on Mar 20, 2010 9:47 PM EDT up reply actions  

Not at all...

…unfortunately.

Playing, coaching, and watching basketball.

by sherman r on Mar 20, 2010 11:21 PM EDT up reply actions  

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