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The Miami Heat's fast-paced play style may need reevaluation after disappointing results. Pat Riley suggests a more cautious approach to end-of-clock situations as the team prepares for the draft lottery.
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MIAMI â The novelty of playing at a league-leading pace undeniably added juice to the Miami Heatâs 2025-26 season. And yet, at the end, Erik Spoelstraâs team seemingly was running on fumes when it came to results in the win column.
So as the Heat reset, with the draft lottery up next on Sunday in Chicago, the question is whether to build on what was installed last season or whether to reset to something more traditional on offense.
On one hand, the Heat closed the season first in pace and second in scoring to the Denver Nuggets (a team that then went out in the first round of the playoffs). On the other hand, even in closing the season No. 12 in offensive rating, the Heat were No. 17 in offensive rating in fourth quarters, No. 17 in overall offensive rating after the All-Star break and No. 20 in offensive rating over their final 15 games of the regular season.
For his part, Heat President Pat Riley last week indicated a middle ground might be required, citing end-of-clock situations when the Heatâs best scorers need to have the ball in their hands.
âFor the most part with this pace-and-space game, you run it up in four or five seconds,â Riley said. âYouâre trying to get a shot in the first eight seconds of the shot clock. And then you got the middle eight seconds to try to create something for anybody and everybody. And then you got the last eight seconds of the shot clock, and I think there should be a little more caution there as to who gets the ball, who gets the shot, and all that stuff.
âAnd so, when you develop a philosophy about how youâre going to play, and Spo has, and I have done this many times . . . the players that you paid, youâve got to create value for them.â
As in get them the ball. As in utilize them to attack the oppositionâs weakest defenders, just as opposing teams have gone at the Heatâs Tyler Herro and Norman Powell.
While the offense adopted this past season attacked mismatches, it wasnât always the Heatâs primary scorers doing the attacking.
âItâs just in a different way than the traditional call up the weakest defender and exploit it that way,â Spoelstra said the final week of the season. âThatâs not really a strength of this roster, anyway. Thatâs kind of why we went to this. But we still can get to matchups just in a different way.â
The approach allowed the Heat to close with 10 different players as leading scorers over the regular seasonâs 82 games, with 11 scoring 20 or more points in games.
But equal opportunity didnât necessarily equate to best opportunity, with the Heat finishing in 10th place in the East for a second consecutive season, missing the playoffs for the first time in seven years.
Pat Riley indicated that the Heat might need to adopt a more cautious approach in end-of-clock situations, emphasizing who should take the final shots.
The Heat ranked first in pace and second in scoring but struggled with a No. 12 offensive rating, particularly in fourth quarters and after the All-Star break.
The Heat's disappointing end to the season raises questions about whether to maintain their current offensive strategy or shift to a more traditional approach as they head into the draft lottery.
The Heat's offensive rating dropped to No. 20 over their last 15 games, highlighting issues in scoring efficiency, especially in critical moments.
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âSo when you get on that road as a coach and develop a philosophy about how youâre going to play,â Riley said, âthen youâve got to be committed to it. And then the plan and the system whereby you set up to execute that philosophy, if itâs not working, youâve got to tweak it, youâve got to change it, whatever those changes are.â
To Riley, in his metaphorical manner, it comes down to seeing the light.
âI always use the analogy of a traffic light,â he said. âAnd if you look at the traffic light, itâs red, itâs caution, itâs green. And Iâve always believed in the red, caution, and then green â which red is, OK, this is how weâre going to play. Iâve got to be cautionary in the middle of the offense. And then green is you let it fly, you let it run. Thatâs the traffic light turned upside down â green, caution, and red. Itâs turned upside down. And thatâs how we play.
âIf we turn the traffic light upside down, and we are running at pace at the beginning of the season, it was great. But you have to make adjustments to that with the players that you have and be a little more cautionary. And then at the end of the shot clock, youâve got to be almost red and make sure that Bam (Adebayo) gets it, Tyler gets it, Powell gets it, whatever.â
So, no, not equal opportunity at moments of truth, no matter how constant the movement, how stressed the pace.
âAmerican free-enterprise basketball in the last eight seconds is BS,â Riley said. âYou get it to your guy. Youâve got to get it to your guys. And so thatâs my philosophy.
âSo Spo and I have talked about this throughout the course of the season, and I think youâve got to make some adjustments.â