Miami

Have the Miami Heat fallen behind in NBA’s youth movement?


Q: Ira, two teams in the Heat’s division (Atlanta, Washington) have the first two picks in the draft, Orlando won the division with a young roster, and Charlotte’s rookie (Brandon Miller) finished ahead ahead of the Heat’s rookie (Jaime Jaquez Jr.) for third place in Rookie of the Year. When is Pat Riley going to get the message that we’re too old? – Lawrence.

A: Or you could make an argument that the Heat have a solid base of youth with Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Nikola Jovic, as well as this being a wide-open draft where No. 15 could turn out to be as solid a pick as one of the lottery selections. Plus, the Heat typically will zig while other teams will zag. Also, I wouldn’t get too caught up in youth until that youth produces. The Hawks for years loaded up on youth with uneven results (with perhaps no move as uneven as trading the draft right to Luka Doncic for Trae Young). And Charlotte and Washington assuredly are more than a single piece away. As for Orlando, that should be concerning going forward. If there is a concern about the Heat, it might be about how the latest round of two-way players has failed to impress, without a Max Strus or Gabe Vincent in that group. There had been high hopes initially with Jamal Cain, but that appears to have waned, based on his minimal usage this past season. That is an area that likely will have to be upgraded.



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