Report: Miami Heat believe their ceiling is higher than recent playoffs suggested

Sam Leweck
4 Min Read
Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

The Miami Heat had a playoff appearance to forget against the Cleveland Cavaliers this year, as they were swept in the first round in the most lopsided playoff series in NBA history.

However, according to a report, the Heat feel like their ceiling is higher than the playoffs suggested.

The update falls in line with some other reporting from the Miami Herald‘s Barry Jackson, who indicated this week that the Heat feel like last season’s post-deadline roster is hard to accurately judge.

โ€œAccording to people with direct knowledge, Miamiโ€™s intention is to โ€˜let our young guys show what they can doโ€™ and see what this team looks like with Erik Spoelstra having a full training camp, with the Jimmy Butler distraction in the rearview mirror and with first-round pick Kasparas Jakucionis added to a core of young players that the organization believes has a high upside,” Jackson wrote in part.

Jackson later added more context.

“The Heat believes it cannot accurately judge last seasonโ€™s post-Butler roster because of the chaos that Butler created, a change in roles for different players, Andrew Wigginsโ€™ ankle injury and other factors,โ€ Jackson wrote.

โ€œIt also believes all of its recent draft picks โ€” Kelโ€™el Ware, Nikola Jovic, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Pelle Larssen and Jakucionis โ€” all have a chance to โ€˜be really good playersโ€™ and that at least some of their roles will become more significant, which it characterizes as โ€˜internal change.โ€™

โ€œAs one source said, โ€˜weโ€™re getting them in their developmental yearsโ€™ and moving them into larger roles if they earn it. The point was made that it takes players five or six years to reach their prime, so Miami has no idea has good this young core can actually become.โ€

It’s important to note that Jackson also indicated that the team plans to pounce if the right player becomes available via trade. Realistically, that may be what the team needs in order to get back to contention in the Eastern Conference.

While there were certainly factors working against the Heat in the playoffs this year, the team was still dominated in a way that doesn’t happen very often (or ever) at the NBA level. Miami was swept by a combined margin of 122 points, something that had never happened before.

The Heat do have some nice pieces in Bam Adebayo, Tyler Herro, Andrew Wiggins and others, but as of now, there’s no reason to believe that they’re going to challenge for the Eastern Conference crown in the 2025-26 season, even with the conference landscape looking far more manageable than it did just months ago.

Miami has swung and missed on a number of trade pursuits in recent years. This offseason, the team was linked to star forward Kevin Durant before he landed with the Houston Rockets. Now, the Heat are going to have to wait for another opportunity to acquire a top talent.

Clearly, Miami is navigating a murky time as a franchise. With any luck for fans in South Florida, the team will eventually return to glory and capture its first championship since its Big 3 era in the 2010s. The Butler era was successful in its own way but is now in the books.

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Sam is a copy writer and editor with experience covering professional sports and current events. He is excited about being a part of the Ahn Fire Digital team. You can follow him on X @samleweck.