Heat working through 'process'
Updated: 2014-10-17 07:20
By Associated Press in Miami(China Daily)
|
|||||||||||
Erik Spoelstra wanted Wednesday to be a full-contact practice day for the Miami Heat.
Instead, school was in session.
Everyone around the Heat knew that getting ready for this season would be different, since LeBron James has changed addresses and the roster looks much different than the ones Miami had on the way to making appearances in the NBA Finals in each of the past four years.
The Heat are 0-4 in the preseason. They are giving up 109 points per game, on 48 percent shooting. And while everything happening now gets erased when the regular season starts in two weeks, there are reasons for concern.
"I still want to win basketball games," Heat forward Chris Bosh said.
"There is a balance. You say process - I say that a lot just to be politically correct - but in all actuality we've got to win some games.
"We've got to play better defense. We have to start seeing something different."
Process is a word Spoelstra uses often, and the process right now is certainly far different than the one Miami went through starting in 2011.
There are new players in the locker room, some of them being tried in multiple roles already this preseason. The defensive numbers rank near the bottom of the NBA. Dwyane Wade, Luol Deng and Danny Granger are all struggling with their shot and Mario Chalmers, Josh McRoberts and Justin Hamilton are hurt.
"We're not making excuses," said Spoelstra, the Heat coach since 2008.
"Every team is going through something, missing guys. It's about the type of team you're developing, committing to that, showing improvement. We're showing flashes. We're not showing improvement, yet."
Tuesday's exhibition against Atlanta underscored Spoelstra's words.
One flash came early, when Miami ran out to a 19-point lead early in the second quarter.
And then came the collapse, with the Heat not just blowing that entire lead but actually trailing by 20 at one point in the fourth quarter.
Then came the next flash, with Miami getting within four with two minutes left, but no closer.
"We're process-oriented, so we're not necessarily talking about the win, we're talking about playing a consistent game - which we haven't gotten to," Spoelstra said on Wednesday.
"Last night was schizophrenic in terms of some of the very best of our basketball and some of our very worst. We're not playing to our identity."
There's no outward signs of panic. Wade is shooting 39 percent, Deng and Granger are both shooting 37 percent, but the Heat expected it would take time for everyone to get into game rhythm. Chalmers' hip pointer is improving, McRoberts (toe) and Hamilton (heart ailment) both worked out on Wednesday and soon the Heat will be healthy.
"We're still trying to build our system," Spoelstra said.
The Heat went through the film on Wednesday, worked out specific details in practice and then spent much of the session again honing defense.
With four preseason games left, there suddenly doesn't seem like a lot of time to get all the kinks ironed out.
Bosh said it is the little things, like whiffing on screens and not making an extra pass, that is hurting the Heat on game nights. And strangely, he doesn't see those things happening in practice, only in the exhibitions.
"The potential is there," Bosh said. "We've just got to do the hard stuff."
(China Daily 10/17/2014 page23)
Today's Top News
Chinese, Italian companies sign $10b
Tony Blair home address discovered in terror suspect's car
HK barricades taken down by police
Hesitant panda heads for forest
High-speed rail part of deals worth $10b
'Minimum force' to remove protest road barriers in Hong Kong
Spain's Catalonia to call off independence referendum
Alibaba set to expand 'double 11'
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Sea change |
'Old newcomers' |
General aviation hub reaches for the sky |
Endangered species threatens livelihoods |
Chinese mavericks set to amaze racing world |
Helping them breathing |