Robert Mayer-USA TODAY Sports
Let me start off by saying that the Indiana Pacers played a great game. They came out aggressive and showed the maturity to fight off the champs run. With that said, the Miami Heat are giving themselves head...
Robert Mayer-USA TODAY Sports
Let me start off by saying that the Indiana Pacers played a great game. They came out aggressive and showed the maturity to fight off the champs run. With that said, the Miami Heat are giving themselves headaches.
And while I would love to blame the referees for taking Miami out of the game, I can’t. The refs were equally bad on both sides of the floor — like they tried to overshadow the teams with calls. However that wasn’t the main reason they loss. Neither were the two late-game turnovers or the unexpectedly missed free throws (thanks Ray Allen).
They helped to close the door but they weren’t the biggest excuse for it closing. Miami can thank a season-long problem for that one.
They came out like they were ready to play then decided to coast. It felt like we were thumbing through a book that we all read before. They start off slow then try to finish quarters the same way Bernard Hopkins does, tip-toe through most of the day then try to end rounds with a flurry.
The difference is that Hopkins actually plays defense while he plays possum. The Heat played none — making it harder to cap a comeback when their stars couldn’t execute.
“We just didn’t finish the game like we’re capable of,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said (via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel). “We’re supposed to find a way to close out those games and we didn’t.”
Case in point, Miami’s three-on-two fast break with less than two minutes left. It was a typical play that we’ve seen all season. LeBron James gets the ball and pitches it to Dwyane Wade as he runs the left wing. To his left is Mario Chalmers. Wade sprints to the middle of the lane, jumps in the air and tosses the ball to a wide-open Chalmers in the corner — and he bricks it.
An advantage like that without a shot from Wade or James is a guaranteed win and that’s what it was — for Indy.
With Game 3 looming, the Heat need to figure out how to stop the issues that plagued them during the win-streak.
Please feel free to comment using the section below, or reach out to us using the hash tag #RML, for Rant My Life.
Richard Nurse is a Miami Heat columnist for RantSports.com. Follow him on Twitter @blackirishpr.