Miami

Jaime Jaquez Jr. has impressive Miami Heat preseason debut


MIAMI — Finding immediate playing time for a rookie often is a delicate dance for Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra.

To his credit, Jaime Jaquez Jr. already has the footwork down.

One game into the preseason, last June’s No. 18 selection out of UCLA already has taken needed steps forward, adding intrigue to the coach-player two-step.

Tuesday night against the Charlotte Hornets at Kaseya Center, Jaquez showed early why the Heat was so intrigued through the draft process.

In the second quarter, against the defense of veteran forward Gordon Hayward, Jacquez dribbled left into the paint with his right hand, slipped the ball into his left hand while pivoting to his right back toward the foul line, turned back toward his left for what appeared would be an attempt at a short floating hook shot, stepped through contact from Hayward, ducked left into the paint, and then finished a layup with his right hand ahead of the help defense of shot-blocking Charlotte center Mark Williams.

“Keep ’em on their toes with a little shimmy and a shake,” Jaquez said respectfully of the sequence afterward in the Heat locker room. “And it ends up working up a lot of times.”

Among the reasons the Heat went for Jaquez in the first round was the four-year collegiate veteran mentality of the 22-year-old.

But this and other similar attempts on his 5-of-8, 13-point night in the 113-109 victory were beyond that level of that experience.

This was Kobe Bryant-type footwork, a Jimmy Butler type of sequence, undersized Hakeem Olajuwon Dream Shake, all while maintaining the perspective of a meaningless preseason game.

“Without getting into the obvious comparisons, but they are obvious,” Spoelstra said, with the Heat now off until Friday night’s nationally televised exhibition in San Antonio against Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs. “He’s watched a great deal of Kobe and Jimmy.

“I think it takes a unique person to be that observant and then have that kind of patience to be able to work on something, particularly as a young player. Most young players are sped up, and they’re trying to do everything so fast. And he has a patience to him, his game.”

To Jaquez, it is as simple as the school yard, going old school on the blacktop as most his age were playing more in attack mode or loading up from the 3-point line.

“I think that goes back to my park days, just watching guys like down on the low post, on the elbows and just really trying to go to the park and put that into my game,” he said. “So it started at a really young age, and just the way they move.





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