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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Take the Heat


Expect Miami's Dwyane Wade, left, and Shaquille O'Neal to have another cheery year. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Brian Mahoney Associated Press

Once the South Beach parties had all dwindled and Pat Riley committed to coming back, the dapper Miami coach got to work on his plan for keeping the Heat atop the NBA.

When Riley surveyed his roster, there was Shaquille O’Neal, who looked every one of his 34 years while laboring for a pedestrian 13.7 points per game in the NBA finals. In key reserve roles, he saw 38-year-old Gary Payton and 36-year-old Alonzo Mourning.

Riley decided, despite his aging stars, to do practically nothing.

So back come the same old Miami Heat, who are convinced they’re still good enough to get by Cleveland’s LeBron James and Detroit’s Ben Wallace in the East, and then Dallas, San Antonio, Phoenix or whomever else survives in the West.

Sure, the Heat have flaws. But they’re also the only team with Dwyane Wade, a bona fide superstar who’s already proven he’s capable of hiding or overcoming his team’s shortcomings all by himself.

“However the prognosticators out there are evaluating our team based on what happened last year,” Riley said recently, “I would not want to be a team on the other side of us in a seven-game series, because this is a rise-to-the-occasion type of team.

“It might not be an everyday occasion type of team, but there’s something about them, when it’s the right time, and it gets hot and it gets real competitive, that they’re formidable. I think they showed that.”

So when the NBA’s new microfiber composite Spalding ball – no, it’s not leather anymore – gets tossed up on Oct. 31 in Miami to open the NBA season against the Chicago Bulls, you can bet O’Neal will want to tip it to Wade. As long as it’s in his hands, the Heat might still be the best in an NBA that lacks a dominant team.

“That guy is pretty good. I mean really, really, really good,” New Orleans Hornets assistant Darrell Walker said. “He’s getting to the point, and I’m telling you I love MJ, but we’re going to have start putting the Jordan rules on him. He’s a pretty special player.”

There are plenty of those.

Kobe Bryant beat out Allen Iverson and LeBron James to win a thrilling scoring race last season, while Steve Nash won a second straight MVP award.

Wade stands out as the brightest of all after what he did in the finals, turning the Heat’s 2-0 deficit against Dallas into a six-game victory in a Flash – Shaq’s nickname for him – and earning that highest of NBA compliments: comparisons to Jordan. So for all those teams hoping to pounce on what they see as a vulnerable champ, take heed:

“He’s going to only get better,” Philadelphia coach Maurice Cheeks said of Wade. “I don’t know him, but he looks like a guy that loves to play, loves to make his teammates better. To think that a guy won a championship in his third year and is only going to get better is a scary thought.

“Everyone said he couldn’t shoot a jump shot. Well, he got better at shooting a jump shot, kind of like when people said Michael Jordan couldn’t shoot a jump shot, and then he made his jump shot even deeper into a 3-pointer.”

Don’t call the Heat world champs, by the way. The only team that gets that title is Spain, which earned it by rolling through the world championships in Japan this summer.

The United States, even with Wade, James and Carmelo Anthony, finished third. Then two NBA teams lost to international clubs in exhibition games in Europe. So if you’re looking for an up-and-coming team, consider Toronto, in the NBA’s only non-U.S. city, where No. 1 overall pick Andrea Bargnani from Italy is among a handful of foreign players on the roster.

Not that the Raptors claim to notice their continental flair.

“We don’t talk about those things. We’re the Toronto Raptors, Canada’s team … we are an NBA team,” coach Sam Mitchell said. “And all our guys are proven players, and like all players, have a lot to prove once they get to the NBA.”