Erik Spoelstra admits Jimmy Butler saga had impact on Heat: ‘Always second-guessing what we could have done’

Jesse Cinquini
4 Min Read
Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The Miami Heat were bounced from the 2025 NBA Playoffs in embarrassing fashion on Monday. Miami lost Game 4 of its first-round series against the Cleveland Cavaliers by more than 50 points at home, allowing the Cavs to complete the sweep.

In light of Miami’s second consecutive first-round playoff exit, Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra admitted that the drama between the Heat and forward Jimmy Butler before he got traded to the Golden State Warriors had an impact on the team’s season.

“It certainly had an impact,” Spoelstra said. “Always second-guessing what we could have done. It is not as if that would have moved the needle for us to be first in the conference. That’s unrealistic… it was a good five-year run. When things end, often times they end not as loudly as this. But it ends where there’s something. We all feel like it didn’t have to go to that level. We have clarity now. We have turned the page. We are moving on.”

Miami was thoroughly outplayed by the Cavaliers, as three of its four losses came by 20-plus points. The only game of the best-of-seven series that was decided in the final stretch was Game 2. Miami was down only four points with just over two minutes to play in the contest.

The Heat suffered a first-round exit just a few months after Butler saw his Heat tenure end in a messy fashion. Butler said publicly that he had lost his joy for basketball with the Heat in January, and he was sidelined for much of the time in the weeks leading up to his exit due to suspensions.

One time, Miami suspended Butler because he walked out of practice in response to the news that the Heat were planning to replace him in the starting lineup with forward Haywood Highsmith.

While Miami’s stint in the 2025 NBA Playoffs is over, Butler’s Warriors have gotten off to a strong start to the playoffs. Despite the fact that the Warriors are the No. 7 seed taking on the No. 2 seed Houston Rockets, Golden State is ahead 3-1 in the series with Game 5 scheduled for Wednesday night.

Butler missed Game 3 of the Rockets-Warriors series with a pelvic contusion but made his return to the court in Game 4 and played at a high level. He scored a team-high 27 points and shot 7-of-12 from the field as well as 12-of-12 from the charity stripe.

If the Warriors don’t let go of the rope and lose the next three games of the series, they will play the winner of the series between the Los Angeles Lakers and Minnesota Timberwolves. Minnesota is in the driver’s seat to come out on top in that series, as it owns a 3-1 lead.

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Jesse is an aspiring sports journalist that has previously worked as a staff writer at SB Nation’s CelticsBlog and The Knicks Wall.