Miami, FL
Winderman’s view: The night Cain, Jovic, Hampton went from deep freeze to Heat sizzle
MIAMI – Observations and other notes of interest from Thursday night’s 114-102 victory to the Golden State Warriors:
– No, not optimal with Jimmy Butler, Kyle Lowry, Caleb Martin and Josh Richardson out.
– But also an opportunity.
– So Nikola Jovic showed flashes for the Heat, cast more of a perimeter option on offense and was allowed to settle into the zone defense on the other end.
– In other words, not cast at center.
– Making his minutes matter.
– Jamal Cain also had his moments with his athleticism.
– Including seven first-half points off the bench.
– And kept going from there.
– Shockingly, as a leading man.
– Then there was RJ Hampton making the emergency start.
– And making a difference.
– With Cain and Hampton both taking defensive turns on Stephen Curry.
– Jovic. Cain. Hampton.
– Who saw that coming?
– A day earlier, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra hinted all three could soon be headed to the G League for seasoning.
– But the absences of others afforded opportunity.
– Opportunity largely seized.
– As it was, the lone Heat player sent to the G League was center Orlando Robinson.
– With the Heat’s smaller-ball approach allowing for that move.
– With even Thomas Bryant out of Thursday’s mix.
– At this point of the season, the opportunities are limited for the end of the bench.
– With this the rare night when everyone was brought forward.
– And stepped forward.
– With Butler, Lowry and Martin out, the Heat opened with a lineup of Bam Adebeyo, Haywood Highsmith, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Tyler Herro and Hampton.
– Hampton became the 14th Heat player to start at least one game this season.
– It was the Heat’s 17th lineup in their 31 games.
– Inactive for the Heat were Butler, Lowry, Martin, Dru Smith and Orlando Robinson.
– The Warriors opened with a lineup of Curry, Klay Thompson, Brandin Podziemski, Jonathan Kuminga and Kevon Looney.
– Kevin Love and Duncan Robinson entered together as the first two Heat reserves.
– Cain then followed for eight deep.
– Jovic then made it nine deep when he entered at the start of the second period.
– That left Bryant and Cole Swider as the lone available Heat players not to enter.
– The Heat entered with 60 first-half points in four in a row, one off the franchise record set in February 2020.
– That streak ended with their 58-51 halftime lead.
– The Warriors entered on an eight-game home winning streak.
– Golden State entered leading the league in rebounding.
– With the Heat holding their own in that regard.
– Even amid the Warriors’ uneven season, Spoelstra said at the morning shootaround that Golden State continues to present unique challenges.
– “They have a dynamic style of play with Curry and Thompson,” Spoelstra said, “create a lot of different triggers or overreactions.”
– He added of the challenge, “We have to stay true to what we do. And for us, we know what our identity is defensively, making tough, physical, multiple-effort plays and we have to stay with it emotionally and mentally, even if they hit some of those shots that have a high degree of difficulty. You just got to stay with it and take away easy ones as much as possible.”