Alex Trevelyan wrote:and I'm still furious. I made an analogy before the Finals began comparing the Spurs to the 1991 Lakers, a team from the previous decade making their last stand against a younger, hungrier, better team that would dominate the next decade, the Heat were supposed to be the Bulls! It turns out we were the Lakers! How hilariously misguided that analogy seems today. The Miami Heat set a record for greatest average margin of defeat in an NBA Finals, that's a historic accomplishment this team should be embarrassed to have hung around their necks, but there it is. They not only lost, they were humiliated. They lay prostrate on the ground and let the Spurs beat them, kick them, take their manhood from them. It was a sickening display of gutlessness from everyone but LeBron. Sorry, I can't sugarcoat it. They were a few missed free throws from being swept like LeBron's Cavaliers were! That's inexcusable, I don't care how good the Spurs are.
Everyone comes in for excoriation here. The coaches, the players and Pat Riley. We like to take shots at Spoelstra and it is easy to do after watching his emotionless concession during his game 5 press conference, complimenting the Spurs on their exquisite basketball, or whatever the adjective he used, while seemingly doing nothing as a coach to prevent the exquisiteness of their execution. I assume Spoelstra is more stubborn than stupid, so perhaps an undressing like this will force him to junk his exposed defensive system and adopt something that might actually work without wearing players down to a nub. It might force him to junk small ball except where it actually works! As opposed to trying to use it as a universal construct.
And while it's easy to thrash the players for not performing, you can't really blame a washed up baller for not being able to outwork or outperform guys they just can't outwork or outperform anymore. For that I blame Pat Riley, a sainted figure who in my estimation comes in for some heavy criticism here. No one thinks more highly of Riles then I do, but the day you start thinking one guy is beyond reproach, your organization is going down a drain. Outside of Tony Parker and Tim Duncan, the 7 heaviest usage players on the Spurs roster are 27, 31, 22, 26, 36, 25 and 29! Outside of LeBron and Bosh, the 7 heaviest usage players on our roster are 27, 25, 38, 32, 35, 35 and 32! And frankly the 27-year old will not and should not be back. Riley constructed a roster of dinosaurs. We had another one that was amnestied. This was partly out of financial need, but a lot of it is Riley's philosophical inclination, he shuns young players for wiley vets, but when the wiley vets can't play anymore, it's a disaster. This notion that the Big 3 would just obfuscate our weaknesses or would just overcome them by sheer blunt force was flawed from the beginning.
It's looking very bad as a construct when you consider that Bosh has been neutered and Wade is just done as a force of nature on a basketball court. There is no getting around this, no paying deference to a legend. Wade had no impact on either series against the Spurs. I doubt it's because he was coasting. He wants to win as badly as anyone, so the only logical explanation is that he is spent as a player, he is an outright liability in the system we currently run. He has to have a new role, but can he have a new role when he's not developed his game any? This scares me. He's not retiring. I'd be shocked if he opted out of his deal. In my opinion we need to clean house. This team needs 5 or 6 new role players. Bosh needs to be utilized as a second option and Wade needs to start working on becoming a Ginobili type of player, but will his ego allow it? This team isn't going to win a championship next year merely by channeling anger about what happened in the Finals. It wasn't just a revenge motif that propelled the Spurs. They became much better as a team.
What I'm afraid of is the Heat might just go the route of trying to bring Melo in here and do what they did in 2011, just try to overcome the team's myriad weaknesses by bludgeoning opponents with the talent at the top of the roster. It might work against the Thunder or Clippers, but from here on out, if you can't field a team that can abuse the Spurs, then you're just admitting the team is constructed on the hope they don't play the Spurs again. Get 3 quality players in here for the price of a Melo, Riley needs to stop trying to buy depth and start trying to cultivate it, do what he did with guys like Bowen, Brown and Lenard back in the day, find some gems for crying out loud and force Spoelstra to give these guys burn. If this team isn't the #1 overall seed next year with a defense at or near the top of the league, they're just not serious anymore. I hope what just happened to the Heat burns their collective asses into becoming Supermen and frankly, I'd love to return the favor to the Spurs next year, I mean humiliate, don't just beat them, beat them down. Rant over.
Bravo...Well said. I sometimes forget that there are non-idiots on sports boards and then something like this comes along and reaffirms my faith in humanity. Thank you Alex.