Q to the Nine Teams: "Why Haven't You Adopted the Miami Way?"
A: "Because we don't want to go 44-38 for twelve fucking years."
That's a point, Barry.
The answers for Barry Jackson are the same no matter who is learning from whom: No "lessons learned" (save a little shuffling)
It was April 10, 2022 — the final day of the NBA’s regular season — that the Heat stood atop the Eastern Conference standings. It hasn’t happened a single day in four seasons since.
[Since then] a bunch of teams jumped the Heat. Nine teams finished ahead of them in this season’s Eastern Conference standings.
Those nine do not include the injury-riddled Pacers...
...
The Heat, frankly, could have schooled many of these teams on roster-building for the first 25 years of the Pat Riley era.
But those teams who jumped Miami didn't want to attend Pat Riley U!
For the Heat, there’s no lesson to be learned from tanking. There’s no lesson to be learned from Cleveland acquiring Donovan Mitchell...
Jackson's (601 Biscayne's) answers become tautological as here. There's no lesson from tanking because we're not tanking.
So I’m not going to sit here and say that most of these teams that jumped the Heat have discovered the magic elixir.
But in our view, there are a few lessons that could be learned — or at least ideas worth considering — from what other teams did the past four years:
▪ Boston: There’s no lesson to be learned from landing generational talents high in the lottery...
Pause: Accepting Beans' offer of multiple draft picks to jump and draft non-generational-non-talent Justise Winslow is a lesson unlearned. Unpause
▪ Indiana and Toronto: We understand the Heat doesn’t like trading a good player for another good player unless it believes the move clearly improves the team.
But sometimes, simply shuffling the pieces can help, in our view.
Lesson 1: learn how to shuffle.
▪ New York: Let’s be real: The Knicks have risen to this spot mostly because they smartly projected that Jalen Brunson would be far better than he was...