As the NBA regular season counts down to its final days, things look worse and worse for the Miami Heat. They’re on a nine-game losing streak but have a chance to snap it Friday evening when they host the Houston Rockets. Miami is coming off a heartbreaking defeat to the Detroit Pistons two nights ago. It was a defeat that should have gone the other way, but Cade Cunningham had other plans. It was his insane buzzer-beater that downed the Heat and extended their losing streak. The last-second loss was a theme throughout the season in Miami, as it happens, and it’s not one to get up for. Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra is closely familiar with this theme but can’t seem to find a way around it.
Heat HC Erik Spoelstra Stonewalled by Clutch-Time Struggles
Heat Coach Erik Spoelstra is ‘Racking His Brain’ Around Late-Game Issues that Miami Has Died by All Season
Cunningham’s three-point bank shot came in the dying seconds of Miami’s three-point loss (116-113) to Detroit on Wednesday. It was as clutch as you’ll ever see—something that Miami has not been all season. The Heat have been the opposite of clutch this year, and it’s attributed to a 13-23 record in games that are considered “clutch games.” Miami has endured varying levels of struggles this season. When it comes to closing out games in the fourth quarter, though, they have fallen short significantly—case in point: the loss to the Pistons. Miami was up three, and all they had to do was not allow Detroit to get a shot off, and the game would have been in hand. Worst of all, the shot that did get off was by way of Cunningham, the last person Miami wanted the ball to get to.
Miami has repeatedly failed in the clutch. While Spoelstra sees the problem clearly, he hasn’t been able to find a solution. According to Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald, Miami’s late-game issues are racking his brain.
“That’s the thing that we’ve been racking our time, our brains, everything, trying to find solutions for that. We have not come up with solutions, and we’ve pretty much tried everything. This has been one of the biggest challenges of a regular season that I’ve been a part of.”
An Eventual Fix, Or Something Deeper?
Take Spoelstra at his word that he and his coaching staff have tried everything; he’s too good of a coach and too smart of a coach. Nevertheless, the Heat have blown leads of double-digits in 19 of their 40 losses this season. Furthermore, 17 of those 19 were fourth-quarter letdowns after leading after three quarters. They lead the league in this category. It’s hard not to chalk some of this up to the absence of Jimmy Butler. That said, Miami was dealing with this issue even when Butler was still with the team earlier in the season.
How Spoelstra fixes this issue remains to be seen. The deeper question is how Miami can help themselves going into the play-in and, provided they survive that, the playoffs. Their chances of advancing anywhere this year are next to hopeless. Still, it doesn’t help to make progress on a problem that needs fixing. If not between now and the season’s end, then the offseason will provide all the time Miami needs to figure it out.
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