
Stanley Cup playoffs daily: What to watch in Sunday's four Game 1s
What to watch in Sunday's four Game 1s of the Stanley Cup playoffs
The Miami Heat are eager to avoid the play-in tournament but should be cautious about their ambitions. The team's history of success under Pat Riley has fostered a culture of high expectations.
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(Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images North America/TNS)
MIAMI — Institutional arrogance is what has made and what has driven the Miami Heat during these three-plus decades of Riley/Arison oversight.
It started with championship-or-bust in the form of Pat Riley’s “winning or misery.” It continued with an organizational refusal to turn to the tank. It has landed the Heat at this juncture of believing there could/should have been more this season and in recent seasons.
So be it. Largely, it has worked.
Which brings the Heat to this moment of reflection on a season soured by the suddenness of Tuesday night’s overtime postseason exit in Charlotte.
As coach and players on Thursday at Kaseya Center put to rest the season, the response was no more play-in, have to get out of the play-in, can’t keep placing the season in such a delicate one- or two-game balance.
The institutional arrogance of that they are better than this.
The reality is that there very well may stand a pathway out of the play-in.
A sobering pathway.
Based on this season’s regular-season finish, it is apparent that the Eastern Conference’s top four seeds aren’t going anywhere any time soon.
Detroit has proven it’s for real.
Boston’s staying power is undeniable.
New York is all-in for this moment.
Cleveland’s depth of talent again prevailed.
So that’s four almost sure things going forward for next season when it comes to the six seeds with direct entry into the best-of-seven first round of the playoffs.
And then there is the undeniable truth of this season’s No. 12 in the East possibly rising as high as No. 2 next season.
As in Indiana, which just a year ago was in the NBA Finals and next season will be getting back from his season-robbing Achilles tear and will have more than five games with , arguably the ’ best center since … , , Rik Smits? Factor in and it rivals any three-player core in the East, let alone Indiana’s talented supporting players again allowed to return to being supporting players.
The Miami Heat aim to avoid the play-in tournament to secure a more favorable playoff position and capitalize on their championship aspirations.
The Miami Heat's culture is driven by a long-standing philosophy of 'winning or misery' established by Pat Riley, emphasizing success over rebuilding.
The Heat's refusal to embrace a rebuilding strategy has led to a belief that they could have achieved more in recent seasons despite their competitive history.
Pat Riley's influence has been pivotal in shaping the Heat's identity and expectations, fostering a mindset focused on championships rather than mediocrity.

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So that’s five out of six that would appear firmly planted as perceived direct-entry playoff teams in the East next season.
Leaving one spot ahead of the play-in round of Nos. 7-10.
And leaving Atlanta, Toronto, Philadelphia, Orlando and Charlotte, who all finished ahead of the Heat this season.
If one of those joins the aforementioned seeming playoffs locks (Pistons, Celtics, Knicks, Cavaliers and Pacers), then all the rooms would be filled at the direct-entry 2027 Playoff Inn.
Further, consider that Washington, with the late-season acquisitions of Anthony Davis and Trae Young has made it clear it will be playing for keeps next season, while also playing with another high-end lottery pick to be added to its mix.
Which brings it back to the Heat and that institutional arrogance of being better than the conference’s chaff.
Remember, the Hawks are receiving the Pelicans' lottery pick; the rise in Atlanta could well continue.
The 76ers, as debatable as it stands, could have more of Joel Embiid, and will have more of Paul George, after this season’s suspension.
The Hornets, as the Heat learned on Tuesday night, have become emboldened by their run through the second half of the season.
And that’s not even getting to the combined 9-0 dominance over the Heat by the Magic and Raptors this season.
So the Heat have to pick a lane.
Institutional arrogance all too often has convinced the Heat that they’re better than the rest — even when they’re not.
As it stands, a third consecutive season at No. 10 might be the challenge, let alone rising into the top six.
The reality is that without change in roster and approach, making the play-in could stand as a quality achievement.
Because being stuck in the middle might not even be possible without change.
So … fork in the road.
With only two logical choices:
— Go all-in on a risk-taking major swing for the fences.
— Or sit back, develop the youth, offload the veterans, with the knowledge that their 2027 first-round pick only goes to the Hornets if outside of the lottery.
This is not a time for the timid.
Nor is it a time for Riley to offer pithiness of how health, internal growth, greater conviction can turn it around.
This will take more. Far more.
So swing for the fences if that is the pathway preferred, no matter the inherent risks with Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kawhi Leonard, Ja Morant or some other wild card that becomes available in the potential wake of a team’s playoff failure (and this time it has to be more than a Norman Powell type ).
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