Miami Heat in familiar all-or-nothing spot vs Boston Celtics
BOSTON – The external expectation is an air of resignation.
The Miami Heat, after all, are in danger of becoming the first team to lose a series among the 151 in NBA history that have held a 3-0 lead in a best-of-seven matchup.
They also are a team devastated by a game-winning Boston Celtics putback basket with one-tenth of a second remaining in Saturday night’s 104-103 Game 6 loss that set up Monday’s winner-take-all Game 7 in the Eastern Conference finals at TD Garden.
But that, those on the inside insist, misses the point.
The air of resignation comes from what predated – by minutes, hours, days, weeks – Derrick White’s Saturday tip lay-in at a suddenly hushed Kaseya Center.
This is who the 2022-23 Heat are, have been, and, frankly, hope to continue to be: a team of every last breath, one somehow still breathing.
“I mean, this group’s pretty much been here before. We’re just running it back,” guard Gabe Vincent said of again swimming against the current in desperate straits. “It’s almost like it’s supposed to be this way.”
On April 14, it was a fourth-quarter comeback in a winner-take-all play-in game against the Chicago Bulls. In the first round of the playoffs, it was a pair of fourth-quarter, double-digit rallies to oust the top-seeded Milwaukee Bucks. In the next round, it was overcoming New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson morphing into Michael Jordan.
And now this, from up 3-0 against the Celtics to an against-all-odds last chance in hostile territory, with the carrot of a trip to the NBA Finals starting Thursday on the road against the Western Conference champion Denver Nuggets.
Heat hope did not end Saturday . . . it just felt that way in a moment frozen in time.
“Part of the journey,” forward Duncan Robinson said, reiterating, “part of the journey.”
A journey harrowing and exhilarating, sometimes in the same game, sometimes in the same minute, as was the case Saturday after three Jimmy Butler free throws put the Heat up one with 3 seconds to play.
“You’re going to get the same test until you pass it, I swear. We were in this same position last year,” Butler said, the difference being last year the Heat’s Game 7 loss to the Celtics in the East finals was in Miami. “We can do it. I know that we will do it. We’ve got to go on the road and win in a very, very, very tough environment.
“We have got to go on the road and do something special. But we’ve got a special group, so why not it be us?”
This ride could have been over in mid-April. It could have ended without those fourth-quarter turnarounds against the Bucks. Could have been extinguished if the Knicks forced a Game 7 on their home court.
Now one more opportunity to turn a 44-38 regular season riddled with injuries and close games into a thrill ride all the way to the championship round.
“You’ve just got to be better than one team, than the other team, for one night, for 48 minutes,” forward Caleb Martin said after stepping away from his teammates in the locker room. “I’m taking that group all day long. I know what we’re about. I know what we’re capable of.”
So, yes, air of resignation. But not air of capitulation.
“There’s been nothing easy about this season for our group, and so we just have to do it the hard way,” coach Erik Spoelstra said. “That’s just the way it’s got to be for our group.
“This group has a competitive will and a competitive want to win that is up there with any team I’ve ever coached.
“The pressure can go back and forth in Game 7s quite a bit. We’re not going anywhere.”
Resilience is about to face its ultimate challenge.
“It’s just been crazy,” Spoelstra said. “That’s why when we say for the national media that didn’t follow us, and we didn’t expect you to follow us, when we say we did it the hard way, there were some bone-crushing losses where we did the right things, and then last-second shots just for the wins against us. And the competitive spirit of this group, we are never to be denied.
“Even after games like [Saturday], we would always come back the next game and find a way to get a win. That’s what we have to do right now.”