In the 26 seasons of existence of the Miami Heat franchise, there is a clear demarcation point between two eras in ownership and front office; the founding era and the present era. During the founding era, the Miami Heat were owned by Ted Arison and the day-to-day business of the franchise was run by Billy Cunningham and Lewis Schaffel. In February of 1995, Ted's son Micky Arison bought the shares from his father and assumed full control of the franchise with Cunningham and Schaffel also leaving. Mickey Arison then brought in Pat Riley during the 1995 offseason following Riley's unceremonious departure from the New York Knicks. Pat Riley immediately put his stamp on the team with acquisitions of Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway during the 1995-96 season. It is in that season, where the present era of ownership and front office begins. During this era spanning 19 seasons, the Miami Heat have become an elite standard-bearing organization in the NBA.
- 1995-96 season: 42-40, 8th seed, First Round L to Bulls
1996-97 season: 61-21, 2nd seed, division title, ECF L to Bulls
1997-98 season: 55-27, 2nd seed, division title, First Round L to Knicks
1998-99 season: 33-17, 1st seed, division title, First Round L to Knicks
1999-00 season: 52-30, 2nd seed, division title, Second Round L to Knicks
2000-01 season: 50-32, 3rd seed, First Round L to Hornets
2001-02 season: 36-46, we got Caron Butler in the '02 draft at 10th overall
2002-03 season: 25-57, we got Dwyane Wade in '03 draft at 5th overall
2003-04 season: 42-40, 4th seed, Second Round L to Pacers
2004-05 season: 59-23, 1st seed, division title, ECF L to Pistons
2005-06 season: 52-30, 2nd seed, division title, conference title, NBA Champions
2006-07 season: 44-38, 4th seed, division title, First Round L to Bulls
2007-08 season: 15-67, we got Michael Beasley in the '08 draft at 2nd overall
2008-09 season: 43-39, 5th seed, First Round L to Hawks
2009-10 season: 47-35, 5th seed, First Round L to Celtics
2010-11 season: 58-24, 2nd seed, division title, conference title, NBA Finals L to Mavericks
2011-12 season: 46-20, 2nd seed, division title, conference title, NBA Champions
2012-13 season: 66-16, 1st seed, division title, conference title, NBA Champions
2013-14 season: 54-28, 2nd seed, division title, conference title, NBA Finals L to Spurs
That's an overall record of 880-640 (.579). The overall playoff record under them is 114-83, same winning percentage. In 19 seasons under Micky Arison's and Pat Riley's leadership the Miami Heat have accomplished
- 16 playoff appearances
11 division titles
7 trips to the conference finals
5 conference titles
3 NBA titles
A 27 game win streak, second longest in all professional North American sports
The following players have been named to All-NBA teams, NBA All-Star teams, or All-NBA defensive teams, or won major individual awards when playing for the Miami Heat in this era:
- P.J. Brown (defense)
Alonzo Mourning (multiple)
Bruce Bowen (defense)
Tim Hardaway (multiple)
Anthony Mason (all-star)
Dwyane Wade (multiple)
Shaquille O'Neal (multiple)
LeBron James (multiple)
Chris Bosh (all-star)
We've missed the playoffs only 3 times under their leadership. Of the 3 lottery picks, we nailed 2 of them. The Zo and Hardaway contender fell apart due to Zo being diagnosed with a rare kidney disease. The Heat eventually rebuilt to a champion with Wade and Shaq. The Wade and Shaq contender fell apart due to roleplayers getting old, Shaq demanding a trade, and Wade getting injured. The Heat eventually rebuilt to a two-time champion with LeBron, Wade and Bosh. Unlike a lot of long-tenured GMs in many sports who "see the game pass them by" and they win less as they get older, we've bounced back stronger than ever after every contending window built here falls apart. You compare this 19 season stretch with every single other team in the league during that same 19 season era and only the Lakers and Spurs have fared better than us. These are FACTS. Hold your head high and strong Heat fans regardless of what happens, because our leaders definitely do.