Miami

Caleb Martin with a J. Cole-inspired path to the Miami Heat


MIAMI – Sometimes the second verse can carry more weight than the first.

For Caleb Martin, that essentially is the story of the resurrection of his NBA career with the Miami Heat.

To get to the story of how Martin landed with the Heat in the 2021 offseason first is to go back to 2011 and the J. Cole song “Autograph.”

Included in the lyrics from the Grammy-winning rapper:

“Caron Butler I’m a wizard if he doesn’t know

“It’s young Simba, I’m ballin’ ’til the buzzer blow.”

At the time Butler was a season removed from a five-year tenure with the Washington Wizards, having previously established a friendship during that tenure with the singer, songwriter and producer.

It was a connection that eventually would pay dividends . . . for Martin.

Fast forward to August 2021, when Martin was told of his release from the Hornets, his basketball future in doubt, with little more than a non-guaranteed training-camp invite from the Portland Trail Blazers.

That’s when Cole intervened.

Raised in Fayetteville, N.C., Cole had established a relationship with Martin when Martin, a North Caroline native,  played at North Carolina State, with that mentorship continuing through Martin’s tenure with the Hornets, including work with a mutual trainer.

“He’s got a million things going on,” Martin said this past week. “He could be doing a million things. But it also just shows you that it’s bigger than basketball. That’s my homie, that’s my guy.”

Seeing a friend in need, Cole reached out to Butler, the former Heat forward who is now a Heat assistant coach.

Butler took it from there.

“I’ve known J. Cole for probably 20 years now,” Butler told the Sun Sentinel. “Just listening to his music, his underground music, he mentioned me in one of his songs a long time ago. And he came to a game in D.C, when I was playing with the Wizards and we started talking, chatting. We were both with the same agency, Roc Nation, so that’s how we got connected and we just had a great relationship from there.”

So, no, it wasn’t a case of Cole imposing.

“Caleb  was on our shortlist already, from what he had already done in the league,” Butler said of Martin’s time with the Hornets. “And he just happened to become available and we had direct access to him without going through any agent. So I was like, ‘Man, let’s get him here and see what he looks like.’ ”

Tryout granted.

“I was nervous,” Martin said. “Just because I felt like that was my last opportunity. I was on the way out, I felt like. And they had some spots filled, so I just wanted to make sure I left the gym with them knowing who I was, and making them feel like they couldn’t leave me walking out the door without being on the roster. So I was definitely nervous, definitely a back-against-the-wall type of feeling. But I feel like that’s how I operate the best.”

The purpose of the session was not necessarily a tryout. It instead was the Heat’s weekly offseason Wednesday open run on their practice court. The sessions largely were staged by the Heat to give center Bam Adebayo real-time experience in expanding his post game.

Tryout aced.

“We were doing open runs just to develop Bam on his face-up game, stuff like that,” Butler said. “So Wednesdays we would do like a three-hour open run, and Caleb made it down just in time to get on the court.

“He was amazing. I think his activity, his big-muscle stuff, like his rebounding, deflections, he actually dove on the floor. He took a charge in a pick-up game. That’s not normal. That was something that jumped out to me. I recall him hitting a game winner and then he had like a crazy tip dunk that kind of got Riles [Heat President Pat Riley], like, ‘OK.’ ”



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