Dallas Mavericks victory in the NBA Finals against Miami Heat? That was so last year

Category : Miami Heat


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Dallas Mavericks victory in the NBA Finals against Miami Heat? That was so last year

MIAMI – Udonis Haslem didn’t linger during Dallas’ celebration.

While Eddie House was sitting on the scorer’s table and Chris Bosh was breaking down in tears in the tunnel, the veteran Heat forward was already back in the home locker room.

“You know, I had my opportunity to celebrate on their floor,” Haslem said. “They didn’t do anything they weren’t supposed to do. They won.”

The Mavericks did win on June 12, 2011. They won their third straight game of the NBA Finals, rallying from a 2-1 deficit in the series to take their first title, turning the tables on the franchise that had ousted them in 2006.

The Mavericks won Game 6 in Miami by a count of 105-95 against a team that will start the same lineup Thursday night against Dallas that it did that night, and has 10 of the same players on its roster.

That feels like forever ago.

The memories? They really haven’t lingered, either.

There are so many reasons for the absence of special significance in this encounter.

For starters, the lengthy, rancorous lockout sapped some of the appreciation for the Mavericks’ accomplishment; fewer fans were talking about whether they could defend the title this season than whether there would be a season at all.

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By ETHAN J. SKOLNICK, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

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Miami Heat matchup with Oklahoma City Thunder could be Finals preview

Category : Miami Heat


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Miami Heat matchup with Oklahoma City Thunder could be Finals preview

OKLAHOMA CITY – It’s a potential preview of the NBA Finals.

It’s one MVP candidate versus another.

It’s Sunday night in Oklahoma City, which has quickly become one of the wildest places to watch a basketball game in the NBA.

As far as regular-season games go, it doesn’t get any better than the Miami Heat vs. the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Heat is back on track after losing four consecutive road games while the Thunder is coming off an emotional double-overtime win against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

“[Oklahoma City] is one of the best teams in the NBA,” Heat guard Dwyane Wade said. “It’s a very exciting team. It’s going to be a great atmosphere for the fans. It’s a great marquee matchup.”

Last season, the Heat defeated the Thunder in Oklahoma City on a last-second shot by Eddie House, but more is at stake on Sunday than simple pride.

The Heat (35-11) and the Thunder (36-12) have nearly identical records and a win at Chesapeake Arena for either team could possibly determine home-court advantage if the two teams meet in the NBA Finals.

The team with the best record during the regular season has home court advantage in the playoffs.

Last year the Heat earned home-court advantage against the Dallas Mavericks on the last day of the regular season. Despite the game’s potential significance, LeBron James tried to downplay the matchup on Saturday.

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BY JOSEPH GOODMAN
JGOODMAN@MIAMIHERALD.COM

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Harris, Gladness make Heat opening day roster

Category : Miami Heat


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Harris, Gladness make Heat opening day roster

MIAMI (AP) – Mickell Gladness and Terrel Harris thought they were competing against each other for the last spot on the Miami Heat roster.

Instead, the former NBA Development League teammates both played their way onto the club.

The Heat announced Saturday that they waived veteran guard Eddie House, meaning a pair of rookies in Gladness and Harris were on the 15-man roster to open the season and therefore earned seats on the plane to Dallas. Miami opens the season against the Mavericks on Sunday in a rematch of last season’s NBA finals.

“I had my bags packed,” Gladness said. “One bag is in the room, just ready to go back to North Dakota. The second bag was packed to get on the plane. So eeny, meeny, miney, moe, pick which one.”

The 33-year-old House was told of the decision Friday night by Heat coach Erik Spoelstra and team president Pat Riley. House had left knee surgery last month and is not yet ready to play, one of the many factors Spoelstra said went into what became an extremely tough decision.

“He’s part of our Heat family. … Those are the toughest decisions you have to make,” Spoelstra said.

House was drafted by the Heat in 2000 and has also played for the Los Angeles Clippers, Phoenix, New Jersey, Boston, Charlotte, Milwaukee, Sacramento and New York. House scored 35 points for Miami in the regular-season finale last season, a win at Toronto.

“It’s always hard when you see a brother like Eddie House have to be waived,” Heat forward LeBron James said. “He’s been through the fire with us all last year. So I wish the best to him and hopefully a team will pick him up. But those kids, Gladness and Harris, they played extremely hard. And there was never a time when they didn’t try to give it their all.”

Harris shot 50 percent in Miami’s two preseason games, and now the former Oklahoma State standout gets to start his pro career in his hometown of Dallas. A 6-foot-11 center from Alabama A&M, Gladness had eight rebounds in 21 minutes during the preseason.

“Both simply overwhelmed us with their effort and their desire and their want this week,” Spoelstra said. “It was a little bit of a surprise and they continued to make us watch. That’s what training camps are all about.”

Gladness said getting the word on Christmas Eve became his best gift ever – topping, he said, a Sega Genesis game system he once got. Harris said he was first told by Shane Battier in the locker room before practice, initially being a bit confused as to why he was getting congratulations.

“It was a good day today,” Harris said.

NOTES: Center Eddy Curry, as expected, also made the club, though he’s not yet ready to play as he works his way back into shape. Curry has appeared in only 10 games over the past three seasons. … Spoelstra said Battier (left quad strain) will be a game-time decision in Dallas on Sunday.

By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

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Ilgauskas exercises player option for 2011-12

Category : Uncategorized

MIAMI (AP) – Heat center Zydrunas Ilgauskas is exercising his $1.4 million option with Miami for next season.

Ilgauskas started 51 games in the regular season for Miami, averaging 5.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and 15.9 minutes – all career lows.

He appeared in Miami’s first nine playoff games, starting eight of them, then didn’t appear in the final 12 Heat postseason contests.

He was the No. 20 overall pick by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 1996 draft, and after dealing with foot problems early in his career has logged at least 60 games in each of the last 10 seasons.

The Heat are still awaiting decisions from James Jones and Eddie House on their player options for 2011-12.

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More roster moves in Miami

Category : Miami Heat

Getting in position to try and keep Mario Chalmers has become the first personnel move of the Miami Heat offseason.

As expected, the Heat extended a qualifying offer Wednesday to Chalmers, making him a restricted free agent and giving Miami the right to match any contract he receives over the summer.

More roster moves are likely for the Heat in the coming days.

The Heat are awaiting decisions on options held by Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Eddie House and James Jones for next season, with those decisions due by June 30 – the day the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement is set to expire.

A lockout could begin July 1, the day free agency would begin, but no deals will be signed until a new CBA is in place.

The Heat have the first pick in the second round of next week’s draft, and will hold another workout for prospects.

It’s the Off Season

Mike Miller will soon have surgery to repair his left thumb.

Udonis Haslem revealed that he’s not 100 percent recovered from surgery to repair a ruptured foot ligament in November.

James and Wade are both planning trips to China this summer, along with some charitable events and camps.

Bosh will have some stressful moments as well: He’s got a wedding planned for next month.

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Bosh’s a winner in Dallas – for the 1st time

Category : Chris Bosh

DALLAS (AP) – Chris Bosh was teeming with confidence.

Unbelievable, but true.

His left eye was swollen, courtesy of an inadvertent first-quarter poke from Jason Kidd. His shooting throughout the NBA finals had been downright bad – 15 makes on 51 attempts. And he had never, ever won a game in his hometown of Dallas as a professional, winless in eight attempts.

None of that mattered.

Bosh’s jumper from the left baseline with 39.6 seconds left gave Miami an 88-86 lead, and it stayed that way until the end as the Heat won Game 3 against the Mavericks on Sunday night.

“I have confidence in my shot and my teammates have confidence in me, too,” Bosh said, dabbing every so often at his puffy eye with a tissue. “I just have to just let it go.”

That’s exactly what he did at the end of Game 3. Bosh told teammate Udonis Haslem moments before the basket that if Dwyane Wade or LeBron James penetrated, he wanted someone to screen Dirk Nowitzki and get him open.

That’s close enough to what happened. And Bosh delivered.

“It went just how we thought it would,” Haslem said. “He stepped up with confidence and knocked it down. He’s a great shooter. He’s a tough, tough shooter. He knocks down shots. He has a feathery touch. I’ve got confidence every time he shoots the ball that it’s going in.”

Wade dribbled right, throwing the ball over a double team to James in the high post as Haslem slipped toward Nowitzki to give Bosh room to step back to a spot on the left baseline.

James never even turned around or dribbled, shoveling a backward pass to Bosh, who caught the ball and shot as Haslem kept Nowitzki pinned.

“I don’t care if he missed 15 in a row,” James said. “He was wide open and that’s his sweet spot.”

Sweet result, too.

Nowitzki called it a mental breakdown, though he lauded the job Haslem did on the pick that freed Bosh. Nowitzki had a chance to atone for that basket later, but missed a potentially game-tying shot on Dallas’ final play.

“We definitely messed it up,” Nowitzki said.

Bosh said he expected his shot to run exactly as it did, right down to James flipping the ball from the side instead of turning and facing the Mavs’ defense before making a move.

“It was the right play,” Bosh said. “We trust each other. Our guys have been doing a fantastic job of showing that trust, especially in crunch time situations. This is as big as it gets and when you can trust somebody to hit them real quick, I think that’s great.”

Bosh had been 0-8 in Dallas as an NBA player, the first seven of those losses during his annual visits with the Toronto Raptors before he joined the Heat last summer.

Never has a 1-8 record looked so good to him as it does now.

“It started with Dwyane,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “He threw it to LeBron, LeBron threw it to Chris. And that’s fundamental basketball at its best. When you see an open man, you hit an open man. And like I said, we made a few of those plays down the stretch. It was good to see him knock that one down.”

Miami leads the series 2-1 with Game 4 set for Tuesday night.

Bosh’s night started in rough fashion, getting poked in the left eye by Kidd and needing treatment on the Heat bench. Plus, for the third straight game in these finals, his shooting suffered – he made only 7 of 18 shots, and is now just 16 for 52 in the series.

He’s 1 for 1 on shots that matter: game winners.

“I’m happy for him,” Haslem said. “He’s been through a tough stretch in Toronto where he put it all on his back. But as we all know, it takes more than one player to be able to get this thing done. So I’m happy we were able to help him get his first victory in here. Hopefully we can try to get him another one.”

And the eye, Bosh said, will be OK. He said his vision isn’t impaired, even though he looked like a boxer who had been on the wrong end of one too many punches.

“We’ll spit on it and put a Band-Aid on it and patch it up later,” Bosh said.

Dallas has been a house of horrors for every player on the Heat roster. None of the 15 had a winning record in the city as an opponent. Not even close. Juwan Howard was 8-10 in road games at Dallas. Mike Bibby was 10-18. Eddie House was 5-8.

And they were the GOOD ones.

James was 2-6 in Dallas as a pro. Haslem was 1-9 and Wade was 1-6 – their previous lone win coming June 20, 2006, when the Heat clinched the title on the Mavs’ floor. Jamaal Magloire was 0-9, Mike Miller was 1-14 and Erick Dampier was 2-11 as an opponent, though it bears noting the Mavericks were 184-59 in home games where he played for Dallas.

But Bosh, winless in eight years in Dallas, was finally a hero in his hometown.

“I knew I was going to have an open shot,” Bosh said. “I know I have to shoot it. I just wanted to have good form, follow through. And I’m lucky.”

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By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

LeBron back in finals and hungry for an NBA ring

Category : Lebron James

MIAMI (AP) – LeBron James walked through the tunnel leading from the Miami Heat locker room Monday, stepped onto the court and gave a yell. He looked down at the NBA finals logo newly affixed on the floor, smiled and nodded.

With that, it became real.

His championship chance – the biggest reason he came to Miami – has finally arrived.

Swept out of his only other finals appearance four years ago, James will get his long-awaited second opportunity starting Tuesday night when the Heat play host to the Dallas Mavericks in Game 1 of the NBA’s title series. After a year like no other in his life, starting with the much-criticized “Decision,” his jerseys being torched in Cleveland and never-ending, intense scrutiny of his every move, the last challenge will likely prove to be the toughest of them all.

“I’m honored to be here once again,” said James, who led the Cavaliers to the 2007 finals and lost in four games to San Antonio. “Now with this franchise, it’s an honor. As players, we worked hard. I worked hard individually to get to this point. And I had a lot of visions of being in this moment and now it’s hit me, being on that floor, seeing the championship logos and everything, the finals logos. I’m very excited.”

It showed Monday.

He chatted with teammates, taking part in a long shooting contest with Dwyane Wade, Eddie House and others, looking perfectly comfortable as dozens of photographers clicked away for 30 straight minutes. By now, being in the microscope is an accepted part of the deal for James, who has been dealing with this since his high school days.

Away from the court, though, those who are around the two-time NBA MVP say his focus is even sharper than usual. Winning a title likely won’t change perceptions about James. His fans will surely remain fans, his critics will surely remain critics, no matter what happens. But to him, a championship would mean everything that took place since 9:27 p.m. on July 8, 2010 – the moment he publicly said he would join the Heat – was all worthwhile.

“He’s focused,” Wade said. “Obviously, we all want it. But in a different sense, he wants this, he wants to seize this moment. And you can tell by the way he’s been playing, especially in late games. He hasn’t left anything to chance, whether it’s guarding the other team’s best player, whether it’s taking big shots, doing anything it takes. That’s a player that I see hungry for a championship.”

He’s been that way since July.

When the Heat threw that much-maligned signing party for Wade, James and Chris Bosh – an idea that was born from the team hoping to simply welcome Wade back to Miami, those organizing the event never knowing it would be James and Bosh sharing the stage with him until less than 24 hours before the bash began – James talked about winning title after title after title.

With that, the bar was set.

“He’s been zoned in and he has that killer instinct that is warranted for the playoffs,” Heat center Jamaal Magloire said. “You can see that he’s willing to do whatever it takes to win.”

Even his detractors likely couldn’t argue that this season.

Despite sharing the ball with Wade and Bosh, James finished the season averaging 26.7 points, 7.5 rebounds and 7.0 assists, numbers very comparable to what he was accustomed to posting when he was starring for the Cavaliers. To prepare for facing Miami in this series, the Mavericks have used Dominique Jones and Corey Brewer in practice, asking them to do the impossible: play like LeBron.

Mavs coach Rick Carlisle lauded their efforts.

“You are trying to simulate a guy,” Carlisle said, “that many would argue is unsimulatable.”

The Heat have brought out their 2006 championship trophy at times this season for motivation – James was among the players and coaches that posed with this year’s trophy at ABC’s request, part of the promotional photos and videos that will be used on finals broadcasts, joking that he held it and was asked to do everything with it “besides take it home.”

No extra motivation is required now, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said.

“Both teams know what we’re playing for,” Spoelstra said. “Right now, I think it’s more important to stay in the moment, stay in the process.”

From the very beginning, this was Miami’s plan. Everything before the finals would seem like a warmup act. Wade, James and Bosh made no secret of that, all the way back to that first night they donned Heat uniforms together and rode a forklift to the top of a stage to greet 13,000 screaming fans.

Here’s a reminder of what Wade said that night:

- “We’re not here to sell jerseys,” he said.

Except they did that, with James having the No. 1-selling jersey this year, Wade at No. 6 on that list, and the Heat ranking third in overall sales.

- “We’re not here to pump up ratings,” he said.

Except they did that, too, with the Eastern Conference finals being the most-watched series ever shown on cable.

- “Our goal is to win championships,” he said.

Here comes that chance, and for as desperate as they all are, no one likely fits that bill more than James.

He’s spoken often in recent days of how getting swept by the Spurs was humbling, a driving force for him to get better over the past four years.

“I go back and look at some of those games, I look at myself and say, ‘You are a much better player than you were then,”’ James said. “That comes from playing games, playing postseason games, losing, winning.

“There’s a lot of guys that have been in the finals, and lost and never got back. … I’m humbled. I’m blessed that I’m able to get back to this point and be able to redeem myself for that time when I was in the finals against the Spurs.”

So it’s not just redemption he seeks for what’s happened over the past year.

It’s for what happened in 2007, too, and much more than that as well. He’s long been considered one of the game’s greats, but without a title, he knows that label would ring hollow.

“To be here is very humbling. It’s very satisfying at this point,” James said. “We want more.”

By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

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Game 82 win gave Heat home court for finals opener

Category : Playoff 2011

MIAMI (AP) – LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh will play Game 1 of the NBA finals on their home floor.

They can thank Eddie House, Juwan Howard and Jamaal Magloire for that privilege.

The story goes like this: On the final night of the regular season, the Miami Heat were playing against the Toronto Raptors – and had an eye on the Dallas Mavericks. The Heat were already locked into the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference, but the game was far from meaningless in the sense that by winning, Miami would finish with the NBA’s third-best record.

So?

Miami finished with 58 wins. Dallas finished with 57. Had the teams ended tied, Game 1 of the finals would be in Dallas, since the Mavericks swept the Heat in the regular season. Instead, the Heat hold home-court advantage going into the title series – hardly a minor deal considering Miami is the only team still unbeaten at home in this year’s playoffs.

“We knew at the time that if we won that game, it would put us in position to have home-court advantage against most teams,” Magloire said. “To us, it was very significant.”

House scored a career-high 35 points that night, fueled by an 8-of-9 shooting effort in the first quarter. Magloire grabbed 19 rebounds, the most by anyone coming off the bench in an NBA game this season. Howard scored 18 points, his highest total in four years. And the Heat outscored Toronto 27-10 in the fourth quarter for a 97-79 win.

James, Wade and Bosh got the night off, resting up since the playoffs were starting in less than 72 hours.

It was a calculated gamble by Miami, which will reap the reward Tuesday night. In 15 postseason games for Miami so far, House, Magloire and Howard have combined for 14 points and 10 rebounds.

But what they did in Toronto – combining for 61 points – still resonates and is appreciated within the Heat locker room.

“That’s what our team is all about,” James said. “Eddie House and Big Cat (Magloire) don’t have a big role in this playoff run, but when we sat out that last game to rest for the playoffs, those guys stepped in. Eddie shooting the ball extremely well and going for 30-plus. Big Cat having almost 20 rebounds. They won that game for us to be put in this position if we faced Dallas in the finals. That’s just our team.”

Since 1985, when the league went to the 2-3-2 format for the finals, the team with home-court advantage has won 20 of 26 championships – a trend Miami bucked in 2006 when it toppled the Mavericks in six games for that title.

Dallas, however, has won its past five games on the road in these playoffs. The Mavericks (5-2) and Heat (4-3) are the only teams with winning road records through the first three rounds of the postseason.

“At this point, you hope the home court holds importance,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “Both teams have proven themselves as road teams. But we went into that last game trying to win, if you watched it. It was competitive and that’s why all of our guys have been important.”

Spoelstra said he wrestled a bit with the decisions made in that finale. Many in the crowd in Toronto were displeased that Bosh spent the night on the bench, robbing the Raptors fans to either cheer or boo the franchise’s best player for the previous seven seasons. The only thing at stake in the finale was home court over Dallas.

So he said to his team before the game: Why not?

“We went into that last game trying to win,” Spoelstra said.

This was why.

For their part, the Mavericks had their own issues on the season’s final night, with much of the seedings in the Western Conference undecided until the end. Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said Sunday that he barely paid any attention to the East race, or the overall NBA standings, because of all the possibilities in the West chase.

What makes that night even more interesting from the Miami perspective is that House, Magloire and Howard were likely feeling more than a bit rusty. House hadn’t played in any of Miami’s five most recent games entering the regular-season finale. Howard played more minutes in that game (32:04) than he logged in the previous five combined. Magloire played 29 minutes, his most in 27 months.

“It had been some time since I had been out there and got my number called,” House said. “You just go out there when you get the opportunity and go as hard as you can.”

And for that, the Heat won’t go anywhere until after Game 2 of the finals. They’ve loved going on the road and facing hostile crowds all season, but to open the title series, Wade said there’s no place like home.

“We understood at that time that you have to look forward,” Wade said. “At that moment, we believed in our guys that they would go out and get us the win. And they did. … It was inspiring for us, to see these guys who are in and out of the lineup, don’t know when they’re going to get time, always stay professional and always go out and do their job—no matter what.”

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By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

Heat part with Arroyo, clearing spot for Bibby

Category : Miami Heat

MIAMI (AP) – LeBron James spoke with Mike Bibby after a game last week, and the NBA’s two-time reigning MVP is keeping the exact details of that chat private.

This much is known: It was a recruiting pitch.

“I gave him the eye,” James said. “And I guess the eye worked.”

By Wednesday night, James and the Heat will be able to say that with certainty.

The Heat cleared a roster spot Tuesday by parting ways with Carlos Arroyo, and although the team made no formal pronouncements because of NBA rules, several players – James, Dwyane Wade and Mario Chalmers among them – said they will have Bibby aboard soon.

Bibby is expected to be in South Florida on Wednesday, will likely participate in Thursday morning’s shootaround practice and should be in uniform when the Heat play the Orlando Magic that night.

“I think it’s a big thing for us,” said Heat guard Eddie House, Bibby’s brother-in-law. “He’s going to do a lot of things that can help LeBron, Dwyane and everyone else around here.”

Miami announced the Arroyo move in time for the veteran guard to sign with another team and be eligible for its postseason roster.

“This was a very difficult decision to make because Carlos has done a great job for this team and this organization,” Heat President Pat Riley said. “He is truly a first class individual and professional. We wish him nothing but the best.”

Bibby was traded by Atlanta to Washington last week. He was in Miami on Friday for his first – and ultimately, next-to-last – game with the Wizards, saying he was aware of buyout rumblings but did not know what the future held.

“I can’t control it,” Bibby said.

The Wizards and Bibby reached a buyout agreement on Monday, and he didn’t take long to pick his next destination. It means the Heat, at a crucial time of the season, will be giving a new point guard on-the-fly training about how they play the game.

“It’s easier with veteran players with high IQs and if you have a definitive system and philosophy,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “Which we do.”

Since Bibby won’t be a Heat player until Wednesday, Spoelstra could not speak about him specifically.

James could.

“He’s going to help us out tremendously,” James said.

The Heat had conversations with other players who hit the market through buyouts, including Troy Murphy, who is expected to sign Wednesday with Boston. If Murphy picked Miami, the Heat would have likely waived little-used big man Jamaal Magloire to create another roster spot.

Magloire was relieved to be in practice Tuesday.

“I would have been disappointed otherwise,” Magloire said.

Spoelstra said he cannot wait for the speculating about what’ll happen with Miami’s roster to end.

“Once you get past this date, you can focus on absolutes – who you have and who you don’t have,” Spoelstra said. “And we’re close. … I feel that our team is good enough.”

Miami (43-17) entered play Tuesday one game behind Boston (43-15) and a game ahead of Chicago (41-17) in the race for the top spot in the Eastern Conference.

Bibby averaged 9.4 points and 3.6 assists as a starter with Atlanta this season, his 13th in the league. The Heat would become his fifth NBA team, a list also including Vancouver, Sacramento, the Hawks and the Wizards, with whom he shot 1 for 9 in two games after the trade that he said caught him by surprise last week.

He’s also appeared and started in 80 postseason games, which is more than any other current Heat player. James and Zydrunas Ilgauskas have been in 71 playoff games, all during their time in Cleveland together.

“Certain moves are surprising and unexpected,” Wade said. “The Mike Bibby (trade) was probably the most surprising, unexpected move. A lot of people think it was the Kendrick Perkins move (from Boston to Oklahoma City), but I think it was Mike Bibby. No one expected that. He became available and when opportunities present themselves you’ve got to jump on them.”

Arroyo was not at practice and did not immediately respond to a text message. He started 42 games for Miami this season and played in seven others, but logged only 27 minutes of court time since Jan. 30 – more than half of that coming in a Feb. 16 game at Toronto.

“It’s never easy,” Wade said. “It’s always bittersweet, especially in this situation for Carlos. You look at it, he was doing a great job starting, really didn’t do anything wrong. It’s very unfortunate. The one thing we can do is hope that he ends up in a good situation.”

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By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Sports Writer

Heat beat Pistons 106-92; Miami alone atop East

Category : Miami Heat

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) – Dwyane Wade scored 24 points and LeBron James added 16 points and 10 assists, helping the streaking Miami Heat take over sole possession of first place in the Eastern Conference with a 106-92 win over the Detroit Pistons on Friday night.

James took a moment early on to ask a heckler to lay off his family, then helped Miami pull away for its eighth straight victory. A fan who said he was seated near the heckler said James was being taunted when he told the fan he could say whatever he wanted about James, but: “Don’t say anything about my family – be respectful or we’re going to have a problem.”

James finished with eight rebounds, narrowly missing a triple-double.

Miami entered the night tied atop the conference with Boston, which was off after losing to the Los Angeles Lakers on Thursday.

The Celtics host the Heat (39-14) on Sunday.

Wade threw down an impressive alley-oop dunk from James in the first quarter to give his team a 16-7 lead. Although the Pistons trailed by only four after that quarter, Miami broke the game open with a 12-2 run to start the second.

Austin Daye scored 18 points for Detroit.

Chris Bosh had 17 points and 10 rebounds for Miami, which had six players in double figures, including all five starters. Reserves Mike Miller and Eddie House made 3-pointers during the run to start the second quarter, which Wade capped with a bank shot for a 37-23 lead.

Miami later went on a 21-5 run to make it 64-41. The Heat led 64-43 at halftime and weren’t seriously threatened after that.

The game might have been more interesting for what was taking place off the court. While James was dealing with a heckler on one side of the court, a more famous fan was taking in the action on the other. Aretha Franklin was on hand for the game in what was believed to be one of her first public appearances since undergoing surgery Dec. 2 for an undisclosed ailment.

Also before the game, representatives for Pistons owner Karen Davidson and investor Tom Gores acknowledged that Gores is negotiating to try to buy the team.

If he does take control, he’ll have a challenge on his hand rebuilding the Pistons, who never led against Miami. The Heat aren’t known for their depth, but their starting five outscored Detroit’s 77-41.

Mario Chalmers and Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored 10 points each for Miami, and Miller finished with 16.

Ben Gordon scored 16 points for the Pistons, and Tayshaun Prince – the only Detroit starter in double figures – added 11.

By NOAH TRISTER, AP Sports Writer