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The Sports Network
Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) - To most NBA fans, Miami is the big time.
That's what happens when LeBron James and Chris Bosh decide to join Dwyane
Wade on a "superteam" that plays on the shores of Biscayne Bay and the shadow
of South Beach.
But Miami, at least in the real world, isn't as "big time" as you might
imagine. According to the Nielsen Company, the Miami-Fort Lauderdale
television market is only the 16th largest in the country, one spot ahead of
Denver and well behind places like Houston and Detroit, never mind New York,
LA and Chicago.
Meanwhile Forbes just labeled Miami as the "most miserable city" in all of
America, citing the housing crisis that has devastated the city with 47
percent of homeowners sitting on underwater mortgages. I'm not sure that
measuring stick is worthy of Scientific America but foreclosures, according
to Forbes, have been rampant with 364,000 properties in the area entering the
process since 2008.
To outsiders that only think about the glitz and glamour of Miami Beach or
still can picture Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas screaming across the
bay in a speedboat, that's probably a surprise.
Which got me thinking, maybe the city's basketball team has some smoke and
mirrors to it also.
When Miami raced out to a 5-0 start this season one national observer made the
ridiculous comment that "this team might win 60" in the lockout-shortened 66-
game season. Math is about to prove that pundit a liar unless LeBron and
Company rattle off 43 straight to end the season.
If you take a step back and look at things objectively, even after an
impressive 99-79 win against upstart Philadelphia, you'll see the Heat
for what they really are, a very good team with three great individual players
that struggle to play together at times.
Listening to Erik Spoelstra before the game, I couldn't help but be reminded
of Lou Holtz, the ex-Notre Dame coach that would talk up every team he was
playing whether it was No. 1 Miami or the Little Sisters of the Poor.
"They have as many athletes as we do," the Heat coach said when talking about
the Sixers, "maybe more."
In truth, Miami is a horrible matchup problem for the Sixers and has now
beaten them nine straight times. While Philadelphia does have a lot of
athletes, they simply don't have the skill and perhaps more importantly the
length of Miami's big three, making this an untenable matchup for the 76ers.
In fact, if styles make fights -- the Sixers are Marvis Frazier to the Heat's
Mike Tyson. Philly lost by 20 points tonight after losing by 21 at Miami on
Jan. 21. The team's other five losses are by a combined 24 points.
In the end, Miami probably does deserve its spot as the favorite to win an NBA
title. But to call that a foregone conclusion or expect some kind of dynasty
in South Florida is more than a stretch.
The Heat certainly have the game's best individual player in James, who took
over things tonight late in the third quarter and finished with 19 points, 12
rebounds and eight assists, but as great as "The King" is, we're nine years
into his career and it's time to admit he's never going to have the killer
instinct of a big-time closer like a Michael Jordan or Larry Bird.
"I've watched him play without Dwyane Wade and hes a totally different
player," Charles Barkley, a guy who knows a thing or two about being a
superstar, said when talking about James. "I'm going to challenge him to play
like that all the time. He's the best player in the world but for some reason,
when Dwyane is on the court, he takes a back seat."
Wade, remains the best "Robin" in today's NBA but his reckless style has
already taken a toll and the nagging injuries seem to pop up with greater
regularity each and every season. Meanwhile, Chris Bosh has upped his game
during his sophomore season in Miami but he's still not the type of
intimidating force you need at the defensive end for a team with no true
center.
After "Miami Thrice" the talent on Spoelstra's club drops off the table.
"The Heat are not that deep of a team," former NBA GM Steve Kerr recently
said, "but the ability of LeBron and Wade to take over games on their own
allows Miami to offset various loses throughout the lineup."
It's hard to argue with Kerr. Joel Anthony and Mario Chalmers have developed
into nice NBA role players that bring young legs and energy to the dance but
ask yourself how many other NBA could afford to start them?
Shane Battier and Udonis Haslem add veteran leadership and toughness but both
players have seen their better days, while Mike Miller is an excellent pure
shooter and a key cog as a weak-side threat off the double team but he's
also as one-dimensional as they come and Pat Riley gave serious thoughts to
amnestying him.
The rest of Riley's roster is filled with players that could just as easily be
featured in a D-League media guide with the possible exception of rookie guard
Norris Cole, who has flashed an upside with impressive quickness.
"When you have guys that can dominate the game like those three (James, Wade
and Bosh) can it doesn't allow other players to get into the flow of the
game," former player and current analyst Greg Anthony said. "It's important
that they figure out balance."
It's not like this is the first time three great players have toiled together.
Magic had Kareem and James Worthy for a good part of his run in Hollywood but
there was still room for borderline stars like Norm Nixon, Byron Scott and
Michael Cooper.
Bird had Kevin McHale and Dennis Johnson among others and still worked in
Robert Parish and Cornbread Maxwell when he was winning titles in Beantown.
The last championship team here in Philly was loaded with Moses Malone, Julius
Erving and Andrew Toney along with borderline Hall of Famers Maurice Cheeks
and Bobby Jones.
Keep it closer to this generation and understand San Antonio has three future
Hall of Famers in Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili that all fit like
a glove around solid role players.
"When you watch Miami, they play with arrogance," Anthony continued. "They
feel like they can turn it on and off like a light switch and win a game
whenever they want. That lack of intensity is one of the reasons why, at
times, they struggle."
On Friday, they were able to turn it on. With the game deadlocked at 61 late
in the third quarter, Thaddeus Young blew a bunny at the basket and James
decided that it was time to take over. First he drilled a 20-foot step back
jumper and followed that with a man's offensive rebound and a finger roll to
end the third quarter scoring
Less than nine minutes later Philadelphia was down by 23 and looking for the
locomotive that just ran them down.
You saw that arrogance bite the Heat, however, 48 hours earlier in Milwaukee
when Miami raced out to a 40-23 lead after the opening 12 minutes. James made
8-of-9 shots from the floor in the first quarter of that one, including going
3-for-3 from beyond the arc as the Heat shot 82.4 percent in the opening frame
and made all five of their three-pointers.
Satiated, the Heat took their foot off the gas and Brandon Jennings came back
to bite them. In fact, it got so bad that Miami didn't get any closer than
eight points over the final 4 1/2 minutes of regulation.
The Heat are a good, at times great team, but they're also a flawed bunch that
leaves the door ajar for a host of other NBA contenders.
Friday they were at the best with LeBron running the show next to Wade with
Bosh alongside Miller and Haslem up front.
"It's been a long time coming." James said when talking about that lineup.
"We've played that lineup a few times in the postseason last year but it
wasn't healthy. It's great to have that lineup out there now that we're
healthy, and me and D-Wade are able to handle the ball.
"That's what it's about, just camaraderie and teamwork."
If only it were about that every night.
The Sports Network