Although they managed to finish November winning their last five games, it was not with the same dominance as many would have expected from a reigning NBA champ. ?In a schedule that can be considered pretty light by Miami Heat standards, they only managed to beat three of their eleven opponents by convincing margins--the Boston Celtics by 13 (10/30/2012), the Phoenix Suns by 25 (11/5/2012), and the Brooklyn Nets by thirty (11/7/2012). ?As for the other eight games, those wins were very far from impressive as they barely beat most of them by rather close margin, an average of 4.6 points to be exact--teams that the Heat had no business to allow to come so close. ?Miami allowed a team like the Denver Nuggets, who should not even hold a candle to the heat, to score 116 points on the Heat's home floor before narrowly scraping past the Nuggets by just three points (11/3/2012) and again at Denver by just five (11/15/2012). ?The most embarrassing of their wins came at the expense of the Cleveland Cavaliers, one of worst teams in the league, where the Heat allowed the Cavs to score 108 points on them and then barely win by just one bucket (11/24/2012).
From what can be seen by November's rather lukewarm performance, the Heat have not played to the standard of a championship team that sports not just, or two, but three of the greatest NBA players in their generation. ?Add the fact that during the offseason, Miami added one of the league's deadliest three point shooters in former NBA Champion Ray Allen combined with the returning players that brought a second NBA title to South Beach, the Heat should be an even more devastating force than they ever were last season. ?Unfortunately that has not been the case as Miami, despite boasting the fact of having four potential hall of famers in its lineup, has yet to strike fear in the hearts and minds of their opponents. ?They certainly do not strike fear amongst their fellow upper echelon peers as can be seen by their drubbing at the hands of the Knicks nor even amongst the best in their conference. ?They do not even garner any real respect from their own division, which many expected the Heat to own this season as it was projected to be one of the weakest divisions in the league with the four other team either in the midst or on their way to head for a painful rebuild.
For starters, the Atlanta Hawks, who were expected to sink like a stone upon entering the season have thus far been nipping at Miami's heels at second place in the Southeast division with just a game or two behind them. ?In their first matchup, the Heat narrowly edged Atlanta on the Hawks' home court by just six points (11/9/2012) and this was a team that currently has no real go to scorer, nor nearly the amount of depth in terms of size, talent and athletic ability that the Heat supposedly has. ?Even the Washington Wizards, a team that finished the month November winning just one game, had nothing to fear from the Heat as they started November shockingly defeating Miami earning just their second win for the season. In that game, Miami allowed Washington--a team who ranks dead last in the league in points scored at under 90 per game and at the time shot just .396 from the field--to score a season high 105 points on them and shoot a season's best .486 from the field. ?That is certainly not becoming of a team whose proclaimed goal supposedly was to finish amongst the greatest NBA teams if all time--in fact, it is downright shameful.
If one looks back at all the great Championship dynasties in the NBA, the most common facet of them was their intimidation factor--no one wanted to face because they just frozen in fear when they came to their arenas. ?Just take a look back at the great dynasties that the NBA has ever seen: ?the Red Aurbach led Boston Celtics teams in the 1950s and 60s, the "Showtime" Lakers of the 1980s, the Michael Jordan led Chicago Bulls that basically owned the 1990s, and even the "Bad Boy" Detroit Pistons team that finished a decade winning two consecutive NBA titles in 1989 and 1990. ?These teams were simply unstoppable forces of nature destorying everything in their path divining hoops fans to either look upon them with great awe and admiration or just simply resent them for their invincibility and their home team's inability to stop them. ?None of that can be said for the Miami Heat, who have played just lukewarm at best so far this season only encouraging fans and opponents alike to simply shrug their shoulders and say "whatever, man!!" ?Because right now, the Heat?have not shown that are deserving of any respect whatsoever, and if Miami continues to play the way they have been, it will no doubt remain so. ? ?
Source: http://slapdoghoops.blogspot.com/2013/01/sdh-presents-nbas-worst-to-first-for_11.html
mls superdraft school cancellations bald barbie peoples choice awards deplorable mls draft mark davis
No comments:
Post a Comment