by kibaxx7 on Wed May 19, 2010 11:41 am

♦ Last Season: 43-39; third in Southeast Division
♦ Key Players Added: Quentin Richardson, Carlos Arroyo (free agents)
♦ Key Players Lost: Jamario Moon (Cleveland), Mark Blount (free agent)
♦ 3 Keys To Playoffs: a dominant Dwyane -- Wade matches the Big O and averages a triple double for the season without running out of gas by April ..... a creative Chalmers -- Super Mario grows as a floor leader and creates easy baskets for less-skilled teammates ..... a beastly Beasley -- Beasley is in the starting lineup and stays for the remainder of season, and puts issues behind.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -The one-man show performed by Dwyane Wade last season was the kind not normally witnessed in the NBA. In the last few decades, only two other sensational soloists come to mind: LeBron James in 2006-07, when he took the Cavs to the Finals, and Michael Jordan in 1986-87, when he averaged 37 a game and hauled the Bulls, pre-Scottie Pippen, to the Playoffs. What Wade did qualified as epic stuff, even if it didn't trump James and Jordan. Wade became the first player to register at least 2,000 points, 500 assists, 100 steals and 100 blocks in a single season, and the nightly shows he strung together were simply staggering. There was his 50 points against the Magic, followed by his 16 assists the next game against Detroit; the 50 points-through-three-quarters eruption on the Knicks; the 41-9-7-7 line against LeBron, and so on. A typical game for Wade was 30 points, seven assists, six rebounds and a handful of steals, along with plenty of clutch moments and new admirers. He did all this after playing for Team USA in Beijing last summer, and most impressively, did all this while leading the Heat to the playoffs. And oh, did we mention the Heat were virtually stripped of big-time talent other than Wade?
If that effort wasn't astonishing enough, consider that Wade will need to replay it this season for Miami to reach 40 wins and the postseason because, once again, he's light on help. No doubt, last season was an ego stroke for Wade. He certainly got a charge from flashing an all-around game while being doubled and tripled and pressing LeBron for league MVP honors. In that sense, Wade had one of the best seasons of any non-MVP winner. His 2008-09 is in the company of such greats as Wilt Chamberlain in 1961-62, when he averaged (get this) 50.4 points and 25.7 rebounds (Bill Russell won the award), and Rick Barry in 1974-75 (Bob McAdoo, team assistant coach, won it). Wade averaged just over 30 a game and shot 48 percent, high for a non-post player. He improved across the board, in all facets. “I had fun,” Wade said. And yet, when does the one-man act get old to a player?
Well, pretty quickly, actually. Wade didn't have a choice last season but to play the role, because Miami broke in two rookies, Mario Chalmers -- Heat hopes for the club's steadiest point guard since Tim Hardaway -- and Michael Beasley -- who had flashes during rookie season, but made news in off-season -- . And 2009-10 is shaping up as an experimental season. The Heat are loaded with young and barely-tested talent as the franchise prepares to slice payroll and set the buffet table for the free agent Summer of 2010, but make no mistake: Wade doesn't want to extend his solo act beyond this season. Either Miami must buy a star or two next summer, or the only star on the roster will be gone. Wade is a free agent, too, in 2010. That's a story for tomorrow. Right now, the trick for Wade is to stay healthy. He had durability issues until last season, when he played 79 games. And he must salvage the season by putting Miami into the playoffs.
“He's definitely one of the special players,” said Josh Smith of the Hawks, who weathered Wade through seven games in last season's first round. “I can't imagine where they'd be without him.” The Heat minus Wade would beg for 25 wins. And the only way that suspicion changes is if one of their two prized rookies from a year ago takes a bold step up. That might be too much to ask of Beasley, who had serious maturity issues and did time in John Lucas' rehab center over the summer, always a red flag. As for Chalmers, he started 81 of 82 games mainly by default, and the offense still went through Wade, who led Miami in assists. The only key additions are Quentin Richardson -- who can shoot three-pointers and take up scoring slack from Wade on occasion -- and Puerto Rican Carlos Arroyo.
Given that Wade went bananas the year before his contract season, allow your imagination to wander with regard to what he'll do for an encore. Not that he has anything to prove. If Wade isn't on the same level as LeBron and Kobe, his elevator is on the floor below and going up. He'll fetch big money next summer, and could wind up the biggest free agent prize if LeBron, as expected, stays with the Cavaliers. Everyone with money to spend knows what Wade can do without help. And in case they forgot what Wade can do with a little assistance, a 2005-2006 history lesson is in order.
Expected Record: 47-35- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Word From People on the Street
♦ Lamrock, from Seattle: “The question is: Will the Heat improve enough to convince Dwyane to re-sign? Now, will it matter? Wade can get more money from the Heat than he can from any other franchise. Even if an injury-wracked season keeps Miami out of the playoffs, Wade can warm himself to the idea of playing with Carlos Boozer, a Chris Bosh or an Amar'e Stoudemire if any of the three decide to take Miami's warm weather and heaps of cap space in the summer of 2010. As impatient as superstars can be, you'd have to think that Wade sees the writing on the wall with this current cast of expiring contracts.”
♦ dare, from Philippines: “Clearly, Beasley is a big part of the Heat. If his rehab stint was merely a bump, then he and the Heat should be fine. If the stint masked a bigger problem, then watch out. Beasley needs a solid season, and by all accounts, he should deliver. But the biggest rebound he'll grab all season must come away from the floor. But I don't care right now, I'm waiting for a billionaire to buy the Nets and take them to Brooklyn.”
♦ Oznogrd, from St. Louis: “Beasley has the ability to put the character issues behind him... he may be a goofball, but all indications are that he's willing to work hard on the court and be the best player he can be. And if that happens, he and Dwyane will be a very dangerous duo in the near future. Rooting for the Speed!”
♦ Jae, from Baltimore: “This general manager quits the Jazz one because the team was too stacked, to become manager of a future squad with Bosh and Wade lol? Hope he knows what he's doing. Hospitals around the country are in process of finding a vaccine for Thierryitis, I guess.”
♦ Valor, from Hong Kong: “This team is Dwyane. They will spend all year sweating over Wade's future with the team, while at the same time only going as far as Wade -- an MVP candidate if healthy -- can take them. They may swing a trade to bring in, say, Boozer, in an attempt to do better and make themselves more attractive to their mega-star guard. Or you can fantasize about next summer, when they can feasibly not only re-sign Wade, but also grab another one of the max free agents. The side plot: This team would like Beasley to convert his enormous potential into actionable skill, as well as probably hoping he can straighten out whatever addiction/depression issues he may or may not have. But they are not giving up! I don't know why I'm answering this when everyone knows I'm a fan of the Bulls, lol...”
♦ Martti, from Estonia: “Since the departure of Shaq and the retiring of Zo, the Heat's biggest hole is the center position. Year after year, the Heat try to develop a young center, but the products have been Earl Barron and Joel Anthony ... enough said. With the mid-season acquisition of Jermaine, the soft spot of the defense was hopefully going to be filled, but it seems only temporary. Perhaps with a Magloire, Anthony and O'Neal frontcourt, the Heat can contend with the size the East has to offer. HELL YEAH!!!1!!111!!11!!!!¤"#% GO HEAT!!!!1!!!!111! WADES THA BEST EVVER!!!!11"¤¤32&!! AND CB4'S COMING!!!!! •11!!•31◘”
♦ mp3, from Sacramento: “Zo's new role with the team is to be a mentor to Beasley is the only intangible I can think of. This could be a blessing or a curse... I'm thinking it will work out in the Heat's favor, and by midseason, a new, dedicated Beasley will be playing. I'm not expecting Beasley to have the fire that burned in Alonzo's soul, but a bit of an ember from it could start something that would be beneficial to the player and the person. We'll see. Go Sac-Town!”
♦ Sit, from Australia: “Miami? Why you asking me about Miami? The Lakers are going to win it all and I don't really care about any of the other 29 teams in the NBA. Lakers, that's all anyone needs to care about. Kobe, Gasol and now Ron Ron!”
Last edited by
kibaxx7 on Thu May 20, 2010 10:03 am, edited 5 times in total.
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