Heat Blast Lakers; Control Kobe

Two great wins in a row for the Miami Heat as they came home after a long road trip to face the Spurs and now the Los Angeles Lakers. The scoreboard blazed 98-87 but the game was not nearly as close as the score would indicate.

The Heat got 31 points, 8 rebounds, and 8 assists from Lebron James – who was scratched from the pregame shootaround due to flu symptoms. Didn’t seem to matter tonight as James relished the opportunity to take on Kobe Bryant, a player, he admits, he admired “back in high school”. Seems kind of odd to think that James is either that young or that Kobe is now that old.

Bryant was held to 6 points on 1-7 shooting in the first half by a melange of Shane Battier and Mike Miller. Bryant ended up with 24 points trying to stuff the basket when the game was pretty much determined, but for the most part was kept under control for the Heat defense.

Some other positive developments for the Heat – Eddy Curry makes his debut on the game after Mike Miller made his. Although not as immediately impactful as Mike Miller’s entrance, Curry flashed abilities on the offensive side of the ball depositing 6 points in 6 minutes. He did, however, leave Pau Gasol open to drain a three and it was Curry’s defensive rotation that still needs work. He obviously has come a long way just to get onto the floor, but the next goal for him will be to solidify himself into game shape and get after it on both ends of the floor. Curry has always been a gifted, offensive big man and his defense is mostly relegated to patrolling the paint and using his size. He was a factor, when he did play, on Andrew Bynum, matching him size for size.

Lebron James also showed more poise and comfort running the team and setting up his teammates. James, ultimately, will leave a legacy as a facilitator in his uncanny ability to make plays and set up teammates and this is where he will need to focus to become more successful for the Heat. One sequence tells all – after hitting a three and things were getting chippy with Kobe, who wanted to play through his frustration and chose to defend James tightly all of a sudden, James didn’t force up a jumper but instead threaded a pass on the wing to a waiting Battier who drained the three. If James can stay ultra competitive but focused on the task at hand, that shows tremendous growth.

Norris Cole Drawing Rave Reviews

There has been quite a buzz about this young rookie from Cleveland State since breaking for the much-delayed camp. It started at the black and red game, where his teammates couldn’t stop raving about his offensive game and skill at his position.

Last night, Norris Cole showed again why this kid may quietly – maybe not for long – contend for a rookie of the year spot. He dropped 20 points on the Celtics, 14 of which coming in the 4th quarter when the Heat were slowed by the Celtics’ zone defense. This is a bright spot as one of the problems for the Heat in last year’s run was how they were unable to deal with a zone defense and couldn’t find ways to split open set defenses. Not being able to score in the half court will surely slow you down in the playoffs.

Norris Cole has not only been drawing rave reviews from his teammates, but Heat fans as well. All night last night there were compliments on #30′s game all over Twitter. Ranging from his looks to his game, comments were all very supportive of the young rook’s efforts as he became the X-factor that helped the Heat win instead of blowing a 30 point lead.

There is also the media reaction. Today, on ESPN, Skip Bayless and Stephen A. Smith were both very complimentary towards his game. Both seemingly stating that this kid has a bright future and that the Heat may have found their point guard. Even going so far as stating that Mario Chalmers is going to be spending more time on the bench.

Miami Heat and MiamiHeatwave Are Back!

With the NBA finally getting things done with their much-anticipated CBA, the games will start on Christmas Day – with our Heat forced to watch the Dallas Mavericks raise their championship banner. And MiamiHeatwave.com will be right there with the rest of us loyal Heat fans, watching Run DLC shift into year two and finish what they started. Only 66 games until the playoffs, and we will be right there the entire way for our 8th year. Stay tuned!

Heat Defeat Celtics: Show Prelude to Playoffs

The Heat have “finally” broke through and beat the Boston Celtics. Everyone can sigh, and breathe a breath of relief. Well, that is if you’re a Heat fan. But did anyone seriously think this team was not going to win a game against the Celtics? What about if the two teams square off in the playoffs, did everyone really think that the Celtics were going to have the Heat’s number in the postseason, too?

The Heat are 1-4 against the team that went to the Finals last season. The other three games were all Celtic wins, but the point differential at the end of those games was never greater than 8 points – and that was the first game of the season. Not the first time these two teams matched up, but the very first game to kick off the 2010-2011 season. The Heat had all of a preseason to integrate Lebron James, Chris Bosh, Mike Miller and a slew of other new faces into the team’s playbook. Not to mention, Dwyane Wade’s preseason injury kept him from participating in practices as did Mario Chalmers.

Excuses aside, the Heat lost the first game to the Celtics 88-80. They shot terribly, 36.5%, while the Celtics shot a respectable 46.4%. The second game was played in Miami, and the Celtics got off to a quick start and built upĀ  a lead of 20 points in that game. The Heat answered back, rallying to within 5 points once the clock expired at the end of the game. Ray Allen hit his first 7 three point attempts and Rajon Rondo continued to feed the detractors of the Heat saying they couldn’t stop any elite point guard. (Yes, they were referring to Rondo with the term “elite”.) Game 3 the Heat lost 85-82, hardly a large point differential but the record was what everyone in the media was concerned about citing the fact that the Heat still couldn’t get past the Celtics.

Today, in the largest differential in this series this year, the Heat broke through with a 23 point lead at the end of regulation. The finger-pointing will already start and now it is the Celtics, and not the Heat, that are being targeted for scrutiny.Kevin Garnett and friends started filing out early before the game clock sounded the end of the game, further illustrating the frustration the Celtics are feeling these days.

So, what went wrong? Kendrick Perkins wasn’t there, some will say. The Perkins trade has been cited for every problem save the government shutdown and the problems in Libya these days. In all seriousness, the Celtics did themselves no favors when they said that they lost the Finals because they didn’t have Perk. Now, they don’t have Perk and they can’t win games (14-11 since “the trade”). Really?

Looking at the three previous games against the Heat, Perkins only played in one of those games – game 3. And although he did have a factor in the game, playing 31 minutes, the result wasn’t all that spectacular (85-82). Celtic fans will try to make an excuse out of the Perkins trade, and vituperate Danny Ainge for it, but the fact of the matter is, the Celtics won without him and frankly, had very little need for him. There were questions whether or not the Celtics would be able to retain Perkins past these season anyway and so they chose to look to the future. The only team in the East with a legit big man in the paint is Orlando anyway. Try again, Celtic fans and media. It wasn’t Perkins absence that cost the Celtics this game.

Well, maybe it was rebounding. After all, the Celtics did have Jermaine O’neal and Shaq to help beef up their front court (not to mention they acquired Nenad Kristic for Perkins). They clearly had a rebounding advantage and that is what cost them today’s game. Nope, try again.

The Heat only were +4 in rebounding today against the Celtics. In the previous three games? Game 1 the Celtics were +6, in Game 2 both teams broke even, and in Game 3 the Heat had a +1 advantage – but still lost! So, the only game where the Celtics had a clear cut advantage was Game 1 and they only won that game by 8 points. Again, the Heat were +4 today and won by 23 points.

Still befuddled? You should be. The Heat have played excellent defense all year long. The games they lost to the Celtics were really anyone’s game (except Game 2 but the Heat whittled that 20 point lead down to 5, making a very scary threat to the Celtics as they escaped from Miami). The deciding factors for games like those comes down to very small details, very minor elements that may play out in a game. Really what it points to is that the Heat weren’t ready to beat the Celtics because they were still ironing out the kinks.

Today, the Celtics have some kinks to work out as they have new personnel on their squad, too. That said, the problem isn’t that the Celtics are trying to adjust to new guys, but rather they are just outmatched when they take the court against the Heat. And, the rest of the league will soon find this out, too.

This game is very simple, no matter what the pundits try to tell you. They want to sell airspace for advertising and the only way they can keep you interested is to keep you confused and try to sell controversy. With this Heat team, you won’t need to look for that. All you need to know is that this game is determined by 5 guys on the floor at one time for each team and the team that manipulates the best matchups wins. Can any team really say it has a better duo that Lebron James and Dwyane Wade?

Think about it. Last year, the Celtics were underdogs when going up against Lebron’s Celtics. That was Lebron basically by himself on the Cavs. Now, if they make it that far, the Celtics will be facing not just Lebron but Wade in the post season. Can they beat the Heat four times in a series? Also, consider the fact that the Heat are looking to secure the #2 spot in the East which gives them home court advantage (until they reach the conference finals).

Can anyone really matchup, let alone beat, this team 4 games out of 7? Today, we saw why it is going to be hard to beat the Heat.

Vindication: Whose Crying Now? Heat Blowout Spurs 110-80

Looks like the Heat are fixing things after all. In the wake of a 5 loss streak and heaps of heavy criticism from the media, the Heat have started to bounce back. No longer is anyone citing Erik Spoelstra as the problem and gone are the comments about the Heat, in tears, losing their confidence. How did the Heat make this seemingly miraculous turnaround?

By playing defense and getting back to basis.

We have said on this site several times that the Heat, when they lose, play lazy basketball. They get away from defending with tenacity and energy, chasing shooters off of three point lines and generating turnovers. This team is never going to have a size advantage over other teams – what it gets on the glass will come with a premium of sweat.

Against the Lakers, things changed. Dwyane Wade was seen defending Kobe Bryant and strangely, he seemed to be doing a tremendous job keeping all-world Kobe off his game. This is the thing about Dwyane Wade – he will drive you crazy with his inconsistency on the defensive side of the ball. Yet, there are few who can change a game as quickly from that side of the floor with Wade’s ability to generate fast breaks out of turnovers and sneak up and block shots on big men. Just ask Tim Duncan – whose shot Wade blocked while hanging in the air like he was made of helium.

And Wade continued to be the microcosm of change for the Heat. He was defending and finishing at the offensive end. He was making his shots, attacking the paint, getting others involved. The Heat, over these last three games, have made it a point to defend and get after it on the offensive end – not settling for three point shots, but attacking the paint.

One play stands out – Lebron James was dribbling the ball into the painted area when he was doubled by the Spurs. Instead of simply laying back for a spot up jumper, Chris Bosh slashed to the basket and got a threaded pass from a doubled Lebron for an easy layup. This is the difference this team is playing with right now – in the past, Bosh stays outside and calls for the pass and shoots a low percentage jumper. Now, Bosh is more aggressive, cuts to the basket and gets a higher percentage shot.

The Heat are learning. Having their faces mashed into the ground almost repeatedly by some other NBA contender helped them break down a bit. This is a necessary part of the Process for the Heat and Spoelstra. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him defend and attack the basket. He has to make that realization on his own. In the NBA, players win games, coaches lose them. That is how it is. So, Spoelstra will finally get the pass he deserves and everything goes nicely with winning. The Heat will continue to win so long as they defend and attack the basket and not get stagnant on offense. Change anyone of those components, and the Heat are right back in the doghouse again.

Switch to our mobile site