Doubters fueled Butler, Heat to Finals
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[September 30, 2020]
Experts anticipated a rebuilding
year, maybe a playoff appearance, while team president Pat Riley
contemplated his next chess piece to pair with All-Star addition
Jimmy Butler.
Oddsmakers went the tested path of the realist, opening the Miami
Heat at 60-1 odds to reach the NBA Finals. You could find 100-1 if
you searched hard enough. Not since the Nets in 2001-02 has a team
with odds this long in the preseason wound up in the NBA Finals,
playing for the Larry O'Brien Trophy.
Now that Miami is here, the Heat can shrug at again being framed as
massive underdogs to LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers.
"I just don't think that we're underdogs, I don't," Butler said
Tuesday on the eve of Game 1 of his first NBA Finals. "So what that
nobody picked us to be here, that's OK. ... Because at the end of
the day, we truly don't care."
The smart money, as it were, is again with Riley.
The team president, who unearthed a fistful of gems in Bam Adebayo,
Derrick Jones Jr., Tyler Herro and envisioned Butler in much more
than a Robin role, has the Heat in the Finals against all odds.
Miami took out Milwaukee and MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, dispatching
the Bucks, the No. 1 seed in the East, while also blitzing Boston in
the conference finals. In the first round, the Indiana Pacers easily
were swept aside.
Spoelstra is in his fifth Finals appearance -- tied with K.C. Jones
and Steve Kerr -- just one behind Gregg Popovich. But he, too, seems
to be tagged as the underdog.
"As Spo constantly says, we're not for everybody, I'm not for
everybody, but here I am," Butler said. "The guys we have, we're for
one another. We're going to constantly compete for one another, and
this is home for me."
Before the Heat offered $140 million over four years to land Butler
in July, he had other chances in the superstar role and another in a
supporting spot with the Philadelphia 76ers.
But the Chicago Bulls, who drafted Butler out of Marquette, were
hellbent on rebuilding with multiple draft picks and shipped Butler
to the Minnesota Timberwolves.
Minnesota, with top picks Andrew Wiggins and Karl Anthony Towns
already in place, failed to find individuals in any capacity to
match Butler's intensity. He famously cleaned out Wolves starters in
a practice session by running the table in scrimmages with the third
string before reminding front office officials the team can't win
without him. Eventually he was traded to the 76ers. The Timberwolves
won just 19 games this past season without him.
Given the opportunity to keep Butler last summer, first-time GM
Elton Brand opted to resist a four- or five-year max offer for
Butler. Instead, he gave Al Horford a four-year, $97 million deal
and retained Tobias Harris with a five-year, $180 million max. The
76ers were swept in the first round of the 2020 playoffs by the
Celtics and fired coach Brett Brown.
Perhaps Brand can be forgiven. He inherited a franchise building
around All-Stars Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons. Maybe he knew a Robin
role could never fit Butler.
He has plenty of time this winter to kick around any lingering
buyer's remorse.
Of course, Riley didn't want it this way, either.
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His preference six summers ago would have been irrefutably to hitch
the Heat wagon to the LeBron-Spoelstra pairing and build a dynastic
bully constantly perched in the favorite's role.
Instead, three times in five years the Heat finished ninth or 10th
in the East. Riley yearned to return to this stage, where James
stands in the path to another golden trophy and perhaps the greatest
legacy of winning in league history.
Butler proved his worth this season, and in these playoffs. The
stage is still becoming familiar.
"There's a lot of nerves for a lot of people, including myself,"
Butler said Tuesday.
Yet Butler readily confesses he's abrasive. He challenged Towns in
Minnesota because KAT was the most talented player on the roster.
And went chest to chest with Wiggins, since traded to the Warriors,
because the former No. 1 pick was the most naturally gifted. Yet
Butler, he says, was the hardest worker.
The mentality has Miami shrugging off the underdog label in the 2020
Finals.
Relative to James, Butler isn't viewed as the NBA alpha male. Even
Riley might agree with that pecking order.
Riley and James have their own history to settle, too. Riley
questioned why James didn't have "guts" enough to stay with the Heat
in 2014.
"One of the greatest minds this game has ever had. The league is not
the same without Riles," James said Tuesday when asked what comes to
mind when he thinks of Riley. "He's a great guy. A great motivator.
Someone that just knows what it takes to win."
James missed the Finals last season for the first time in eight
years. Wednesday's Game 1 marks his 10th Finals. At one time, there
were those who doubted whether James could get his team a title, if
he had championship DNA.
Riley has reached a Finals as a coach or executive in each of the
past four decades. He coached in nine NBA Finals.
James left Miami to return to Cleveland, won a title in 2016, lost
in the Finals in 2017 and 2018, then joined the Lakers. As he begins
his quest to win three championships with three different teams this
week, Butler strides to further embrace the only believers he knows.
They'll be wearing red, white and black.
Bonded and fueled by the underdog label, as James can attest.
"You (media) guys always said, ‘You have LeBron, (Dwyane) Wade and
(Chris) Bosh. Any coach can do it.' No," James said Wednesday. "If
any coach could do it, there would be a lot more champions in this
league. Spo likes that. That's what fuels Spo."
--By Jeff Reynolds, Field Level Media
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