basketball

Riley says Heat’s fun on the run might need to be reconsidered, hints at Spoelstra summit

Yahoo Sports

MIAMI — The novelty of playing at a league-leading pace undeniably added juice to the Miami Heat’s 2025-26 season. And yet, at the end, Erik Spoelstra’s 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 Heat’s best scorers need to have the ball in their hands. “For the most part with this pace-and-space game, you run it up in four or five seconds,” Riley said. “You’re 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. “And so, when you develop a philosophy about how you’re going to play, and Spo has, and I have done this many times .

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