
'Rock bottom' Chelsea need manager with PL experience
Chelsea's poor form raises questions about managerial choices and experience.

The Miami Heat face challenges in rebuilding while managing draft capital due to past trades. A three-year turnaround is uncertain, and the team's current strategy lacks clarity.
Q: If I were this teamās top dogs, send Bam Adebayo to a contender and do the right thing for him and get draft capital back, and do the same for Tyler Herro and get draft capital. I think fans will appreciate a three-year plan and could actually enjoy the development of our younger players. We have, I think, enough in Kelāel Ware and other young assets to keep games interesting while development goes on and draft picks come in and our books get better for the right stars to be bought into South Beach. One thing this team had in years past was a clear articulation and vision of what the franchise was doing to achieve contention, and I do not see that clarity. ā Jerry, Miami.
A: First, there is no guarantee that such a turnaround only would require a mere three years (See: The Process). Evidence is the Magic still in search of their first win in a playoff series since 2010. Plus, the type of rebuild you suggest means maximizing draft capital, with the Heat hamstrung in that regard due to the 2027 or ā28 first-round pick due to the Hornets from the lamentable Terry Rozier trade. When one of your next three first-round picks is going out, it is difficult to stack picks as needed, even with others potentially coming in. When you take a step back (which the Heat have said they will not do), having your own draft capital (and therefore lottery picks) can be paramount. The type of plan you suggest requires foresight, not necessarily some of the actions the Heat have taken in recent years, including the Rozier trade and extending Nikola Jovic.
Q: Youāre ignoring evidence that says the Heat are already an improving team. So the real interesting question is how many of the teams above them will the Heat catch up to as they continue to improve? And why do you keep ignoring in your articles the fact that the Heat have a bevy of young talent from excellent drafting over the last three years, thatās every bit as good as what the drafted several years ago? Iāll bet those Heat draftees will be even better than the Pacers draftees. ā Morgan, .
The Heat struggle with limited draft capital due to past trades, making it difficult to execute a successful rebuild.
There is no guarantee that a turnaround would only take three years, as historical examples show longer timelines are possible.
The Heat have young assets like Kel'el Ware and others, which could keep games interesting while they develop and acquire draft picks.
Having their own draft capital is crucial for the Heat to secure lottery picks, which are essential for a successful rebuild.

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A: But the Pacers also have Tyrese Haliburton, Pascal Siakam and Ivica Zubac, and Iām not sure the Heat have three to match those three. As for the Heatās youth, it comes down to this: Will any (Kelāel Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Pelle Larsson, Nikola Jovic, Kasparas Jakucionis) be an All-Star, let alone All-NBA, at some point in their careers? Iām not sure you can say that at the moment, and until you can, youāre essentially talking about supporting pieces. So, supporting whom?
Q: All I hear when it comes to trades is the Heat giving up most of their assets for old, broken-down stars. Why not chase a younger player who could develop into a star like one of the Thompson brothers. ā Ron, Columbus.
A: Because Ausar and Amen arenāt going anywhere. Because teams donāt give up on young talent, especially while under rookie-scale (and rookie-extension) control. You get such talent in the draft, either by luck or through tanking. With the Heat bypassing the tank-a-thon, you wind up instead searching for the best possible older talent, as they have done with Shaquille OāNeal, Goran Dragic, Jimmy Butler, and potentially now such players as Giannis Antetokounmpo or maybe Kevin Durant.