Miami

Miami Heat in another NBA offseason waiting game


LAS VEGAS – Whenever their run at the NBA2K24 Summer League comes to an end, it almost would be fitting for the Miami Heat to fly standby.

In recent years, the designation has typified their offseasons when it has come to the pursuit of elite-level talent.

And, now, here they are again, in a holding pattern with the Portland Trail Blazers regarding the request of All-Star guard Damian Lillard to be relocated to South Florida.

A year ago, the Heat circled with bids for Kevin Durant and Donovan Mitchell.

Before that, there were gambits, some rather public, for LaMarcus Aldridge, Tracy McGrady, Pau Gasol, Gordon Hayward, and, in one of his previous lives, a prior run at Durant.

All eventually took their talents elsewhere.

And, yet, each time it also was a case of an elite-level talent circling the Heat on a wish list, as now is the case with Lillard and his simmering frustration of years of biding his time on a Blazers treadmill of mediocrity.

At times, the waiting game has meant losing out on others.

That element certainly is in play this offseason, with the Heat prioritizing a possible trade for Lillard over the opportunity last month to go all in for Bradley Beal, who went from the Washington Wizards to the Phoenix Suns.

Even last summer, secondary transactions were bypassed as hope was held out for Durant, who ultimately was not dealt by the Brooklyn Nets until this past February.

Often lost in the narrative is that the Heat arguably as much as any franchise over the past two decades also have gotten their man, from Shaquille O’Neal arriving amid his rift with Kobe Bryant, to LeBron James and Chris Bosh uniting with Dwyane Wade, and then Mike Miller Shane Battier and Ray Allen hopping aboard to join those three.

And it continued from there, from Goran Dragic forcing his way from the Phoenix Suns in 2015, to Jimmy Butler making the jump from the Philadelphia 76ers in 2019 and then Kyle Lowry from the Toronto Raptors in 2021. In each case, there was competition, another team left empty handed.

And, yet, fans being fans, it is the ones that got away by never arriving that have created the appearance of falling behind, which assuredly would be fallout if Lillard is not soon in Heat colors.

2022: The Summer of Mitchell and Durant. Amid the deconstruction of the Utah Jazz, Mitchell stood available from the start of the 2022 offseason. At the same time, Durant was sending Lillard-like signals that he needed to relocate.

The fact that Mitchell played in a Miami pro-am alongside Bam Adebayo, expressing his respect for the Heat center, only fueled that fire. At one point, it appeared Mitchell would be off to either the New York Knicks or Heat. Instead, he was dealt on Sept. 1 to the Cleveland Cavaliers, who had the type of draft capital the Heat lacked.

As for Durant, he reiterated his trade desires early last August, further putting the Heat on hold with other potential moves, after he was listed at the top of his wish list. Two weeks later, Durant said never mind, and continued on with the Nets.



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