Heat forward Haywood Highsmith made a strong push to regain his role in Miami’s rotation with an impressive showing on Wednesday, Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald writes.
Head coach Erik Spoelstra is still figuring out his post-trade-deadline rotation with a roster featuring many players deserving of regular minutes. That experimentation led to Highsmith not playing in five of the Heat’s past six games.
“Who knows what the right decisions are with this team,” Spoelstra said. “That’s just the reality. I can’t claim that I’m making the right decisions.”
Highsmith finished the game with 14 points while making four of his five three-point attempts to go along with seven rebounds, five assists, a steal and a block. The swingman is in the first season of a two-year, $10.82MM deal.
“I was ready,” Highsmith said. “It was definitely gratifying to get the opportunity and just provide a spark, provide a plus.”
Spoelstra and Highsmith’s teammates were complimentary of his play, which helped the Heat achieve their largest margin of victory since mid-January. The Heat maintained their new post-deadline starting lineup, but utilized Highsmith, Duncan Robinson, Alec Burks, Jaime Jaquez, and Kyle Anderson off the bench. Nikola Jovic is out with a hand fracture while Terry Rozier, Pelle Larsson and Kevin Love didn’t play.
“I’m used to this, to be honest with you,” Highsmith said of his fluctuating role. “Sometimes playing, sometimes starting, sometimes playing seven minutes, 20 minutes, whatever. At the end of the day, I’m a pro. When my number is called, I’m going to be ready. If I’m not playing, I’m going to cheer on my teammates and provide energy on the bench somehow, someway.”
We have more on the Heat:
- Highsmith and Davion Mitchell give the Heat a rugged defensive duo when they share the court, Ira Winderman of South Florida’s Sun Sentinel writes. In his starting role, Mitchell is giving Miami some strong point-of-attack defense and is battling through screens. “I knew he was a great on-ball defender, forcing a lot of illegal screens, a pitbull,” Highsmith said. “He kind of fits the Heat culture in a sense. So when we got him, I’m thinking like, ‘Wow, me and him locking up people, that would be something special for sure.’“
- The Heat’s 131 points in their win over the Hawks on Wednesday represented their second-highest total of the season, Chiang writes in a separate piece. In the wake of that performance, it’s a matter of stacking quality wins, Winderman writes. Miami hasn’t won consecutive games since late January. The Heat are facing a tough schedule to get back to .500, though, as they have the Pacers, Knicks and Cavaliers on the horizon. As both Winderman and Chiang note, the Heat haven’t beaten a team over .500 since Jan. 7. They’re 8-20 this season in games against teams with winning records.
- Bam Adebayo played through a calf contusion in the win over Atlanta, but he still played 35 minutes and scored 20 points, according to Chiang. “Bam was banged up coming into this game,” Spoelstra said. “It just shows you how much he wants this for this group. He put himself out there and then was a force of nature out there with his physicality and his efforts and his voice, his spirit, all of that. There’s probably a lot of guys that would have sat out either for the back or the calf, and he was unquestionably going [to play] in what he felt was a must-win.“