Heat's visit to Thunder will complete bonding road trip
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[February 22, 2021]
The Miami Heat's turnaround
started a bit before their current seven-game road trip.
But heading into the trip finale against the Oklahoma City Thunder
on Monday night in Oklahoma City, Heat players, as well as head
coach Erik Spoelstra, say the road journey has been a turning point.
"When we're at home we can't really see each other," Bam Adebayo
said. "We're in the hotel now, we're traveling together on the
plane, getting to talk to one another and really getting that
cohesive brotherhood again that we had last year. It's great for us
and we just got to keep building from here.
The Heat are 3-3 on the trip, including victories in their last two
games. The trip is tied for the longest in franchise history.
Since starting 7-14, Miami is 6-3 to improve to 13-17.
And the Heat have done it while dealing with a variety of injuries.
"I think, without a doubt, this is one of the best segments of the
season for us," Spoelstra said. "We've made big strides I think in
the last eight, nine days of this trip and we've dealt with some
adversity together. I think that's always good for our group."
While the Heat are still working through those injuries, the Thunder
are starting to get healthy after a series of injuries that left
Oklahoma City without an active point guard for several games.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is coming off the best of his three games
since his return from missing four consecutive contests with a left
knee sprain.
Gilgeous-Alexander scored 31 points and had nine assists in Sunday's
victory at Cleveland.
The return of Gilgeous-Alexander and backup point guard Theo Maledon,
who has recently moved into the starting lineup alongside Gilgeous-Alexander,
has helped the Thunder become more efficient.
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Miami Heat forward Jimmy
Butler (22) shakes hands with guard Duncan Robinson (55) and forward
Andre Iguodala (28) during the fourth quarter against the Sacramento
Kings at Golden 1 Center. Mandatory Credit: Sergio Estrada-USA TODAY
Sports
"Transition offense is the big weapon that we have with the guards
that we have that are so aggressive getting downhill and putting
pressure on," center Mike Muscala said. "Then you're getting free
throws, which adds to that efficiency, and getting layups and dunks
and then you're getting 3-point shots."
Oklahoma City has averaged 25 free-throw attempts per game over
their last four, nearly five per game better than its season
average.
The Thunder are still trying to translate that aggressiveness into
victories. Oklahoma City dropped six of its last eight.
In their first meeting between the teams, Jan. 4 at Miami, the Heat
dominated in a 118-90 win with a balanced scoring effort. Adebayo
had 20 points on 9-of-10 shooting. Oklahoma City shot just 36.7
percent from the field.
The Thunder's bench, which scored 42 points in Sunday's win, shot
just 31.4 percent in the previous meeting.
The Heat are likely to be without Goran Dragic once again, but the
guard figures to return soon after missing the last eight games with
a sprained left ankle. Dragic has played in just three games since
Jan. 25.
Miami could be without Tyler Herro as well.
Herro is listed as questionable after not playing in the second half
of Saturday's win over the Los Angeles Lakers following a right hip
contusion.
--Field Level Media
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