Justise Winslow Is Ready To Elevate Miami Heat

If ever there was a time for Justise Winslow to get comfortable, this offseason was it.

The 10th overall pick from the 2015 draft had just completed his most productive NBA campaign to date. His stat sheet was essentially a string of career highs, including his 12.6 points, 4.3 assists and 1.5 threes per game. His 43.3 field-goal percentage was a new personal best. Ditto his 51.3 true shooting percentage. His 37.5 percent perimeter success rate narrowly missed his best mark, but it shattered the dismal 25.8 percent from his first two seasons.

If he wanted to kick his feet up and bask in the finest offerings available on South Beach, who could’ve blamed him?

But that’s not how Winslow operates. That season—a mini-breakout at the very least in the eyes of everyone—wasn’t what he wanted.

Before his second season even started, he made his grandiose ambitions known. The then 20-year-old told assembled media at the Bahamas-based training camp that he not only wanted to lead the team “but to be a star and have my own team one day.”

So, Winslow didn’t settle this summer. He barely left the gym.

Despite skyrocketing his three-point percentage over the previous two seasons, he overhauled his shooting form. He changed his release point and sped up his stroke. He took hundreds of shots per day, from all spots on the court.

He had turned his three-ball from a worrisome weakness to something he could unleash when he really needed it. But that wasn’t enough. In his mind, his outside shot can be one of the sharpest weapons in his arsenal.

“I think I should be [shooting] around five or six threes a game, but shooting a high percentage,” Winslow told Five Reasons Sports. “I want to shoot plus-40. I’ve been around 38, but I think shooting more will make it easier to get that percentage.”

Winslow relays this information so calmly and confidently it’s easy to overlook what he’s saying. Ten players shot 40-plus percent with five-plus attempts last season. Four maintained that accuracy rate on six-plus shots a night.

It’s a wildly ambitious aim to join that company, but dreaming big is kind of his thing.

When laying out his roadmap for the season at Media Day, Winslow’s laundry list of self-imposed duties and goals included: “Starting point guard. Playmaking. Second-Team All-Defense. Most Improved [Player].”

Remember when Winslow’s pining for the point guard spot caused such a media frenzy in September? Well, there he was running the first team offense on opening night while veteran Goran Dragic steered the second team.

Winslow ran it tremendously, too. He scored 27 points, dished seven dimes and snagged seven boards. When the cameras deservedly came his way in the locker room afterward, he essentially shrugged, stared straight into the lens and asked, ‘What did you expect?’

“This is who I am,” Winslow told reporters. “I’m not going to have 27, seven and seven every night. But my role is to lead this team, and I want to be held accountable to it. I’ve earned it.”

Once billed as a potential franchise savior, Winslow again finds himself with a franchise that doesn’t need saving. Not when four-time All-Star Jimmy Butler will make $142 million to fill that very role.

But for Miami to elevate its ceiling, to leap from a lottery team to one hosting a first-round playoff series, to post elite ranks on defense and above-average ones on offense, it could certainly use a costar.

Winslow—hungrier, more confident, more aggressive than ever—looks ready to share the center stage.

“He has an ability to impact winning, put his fingerprints on winning in a lot of different facets,” coach Erik Spoelstra said. “That’s not just with the statistics or the box scores, but it’s with his voice, with his leadership, with his command of the game on both sides of the floor. He really truly has to be a great two-way basketball player for us.”

The Heat don’t need Dion for the playoffs

There are two planets. One’s ozone is collapsing, with overheating oceans causing superstorms.

The other is 2700 light years away, moderate amount of sunlight, with and 297 day calendar. That is the solar divide between living on Planet Dolphins and Planet Heat.

Pat Riley’s organization had an 89 percent chance of going to the playoffs before the last game of the preseason. The Dolphins have a 42 percent chance of finishing dead last and garnering the number one draft pick.
For the past two years the Heat have been one game away from making it into the playoffs. This summer they had the chance for Russell Westbrook but the ledger price would cost them the majority of the roster. Imagine parting with Goran Dragic, Justice Winslow, and Bam Adebayo- who’ve all proven to be Biscayne Bay approved, for one player. Especially coming off a season where Klay Thompson and Kevin Durant just got injured. The math didn’t make sense.

Last Friday night Erik Spoelstra, before God and Mike D’Antoni, sent out the JV squad to keep pace with James Harden and Russell Westbrook. The fourth quarter mirrored a finals game. Westbrook ran off the floor with an injured finger. Kendrick Nunn, a total unknown here before July, scored 32 points in 30 minutes — and ended the game with eight more. The Heat were within five. Spoelstra’s motive wasn’t to win. He came to compete. Jimmy Butler was on the bench, Dragic saw little time. This was about turning everyone into the first string.

The real glitch didn’t come from the Rockets. It was obvious Spoelstra wanted to see his second tier compete against Harden and D’Antoni. The main problem was Dion Waiters complaining as Nunn and Herro were scoring. A clear shot of the bench saw everyone clapping. Waiters, at one point, had his arms crossed.

If you’re sulking in preseason, what the hell happens during the playoffs? One of the biggest worries about bringing Butler down to Miami was how he would mesh with an already formed team. Meanwhile Waiters is on Instagram liking comments that say trade him. On Twitter, he’s doubling down on how “anyone can win with the Big Three.” He must have been on 2K when Hassan Whiteside was put on a plane to Portland.

While Jimmy Butler is getting everyone in the gym at 3:30am, the other serves friction. His message, “They’re stealing my showtime.” Pat Riley didn’t concede the team to Lebron James. What makes Dion Waiters think that he owns Miami? If Butler had instigated half of this, there would be hell to pay. Eighty-nine percent. The Miami Heat are going to the playoffs. Just don’t expect Dion Waiters to be there.

Panthers coach Joel Quenneville focuses on the positives from opening-night loss to Lightning. (Craig Davis for Five Reasons Sports)

Panthers Multiple Comebacks Fall Short

The Panthers opened up their road trip in a spot they haven’t been familiar with in quite some time, a good start to the season. Entering tonight’s game, the Panthers were sitting at 4-2-3 and held Wild Card # 2. They entered the game with points in 7 of their first 9 games.

The Panthers faced adversity to start the game, with defender Mike Matheson and Vincent Trocheck hurt and not playing. Mike Matheson didn’t make the trip with the team while Trocheck is day to day. 

The Panthers were down multiple times tonight in this game, being down 1-0, 3-2 and 4-2. The Panthers came back every time, which has been a theme for them this season. In this point streak, the Panthers have came back from a 2+ goal deficit 3 times in the 3rd period.

At the 14:59 point in the third period, defender Mark Pysyk (who has oddly been playing as a forward) scored what had seemed like the go ahead goal but just 3 minutes later, the Flames’ Sam Bennett tied it to go to OT, where the Panthers eventually fell in a shootout.

The loss today continues on what seems to be a trend for this Panthers team, great scoring who never seem to be out of the game but still to be struggling on the defensive ends.

Sergi Bobrovsky continues to struggles as he gave up 5 goals tonight. It’s the 5th game that he has let up at least 4 goals.

Though the Panthers loss, their point streak was extended and remain one of two teams who still have 2 or less regulation loses.

Now at 4-2-4, the Panthers climbed up in the standings and sit third in the Atlantic, trailing first place Buffalo by 5 points with a game in hand.

The Panthers continue on their road trip Sunday vs the Edmonton Oilers.

———————-

Fun factoid about the game by Roy Bellamy of the Dan LeBatard show, the Panthers participated in their 162nd ever shootout in franchise history, which is the most in NHL history since that time. That is right on #Brand.

 

Ryan Ragone making the field as a Hurricane walk-on should be celebrated

Ryan Ragone joined the Miami Hurricanes this year as a walk-on after redshirting his freshman year at Arkansas State. He went on to play his way onto the field for a few snaps here and there before playing most of last week’s game vs. Georgia Tech in place for the injured Michael Pinckney. 

The tackling from the defense was subpar overall and the Yellow Jackets were able to rush for 207 yards and beat the Hurricanes 28-21 in overtime, but Ragone got the brunt of the fans frustration on social media.

That led to teammates and coaches defending him soon after.

“I thought Ryan Ragone went in and did a heck of a job,” Miami defensive coordinator Blake Baker said. “If he was struggling maybe that was something we could’ve discussed but he went in there, he played 31 snaps, we had him down finding his way around the ball 10 times from either an assist or a solo tackle. There’s some plays that I’m sure just every kid that walked on that field would like to have back but I tip my hat to him.”

The consensus from fans, blogs and media alike was that freshman scholarship linebacker Sam Brooks should’ve filled in at weakside linebacker. However he is middle linebacker Shaq Quarterman’s backup. If he was in that position, he would be going in green. 

“He’s moving from defensive end, what he played in high school, to linebacker, so he’s learning a new position,” Diaz said. “It would be unfair of us to expect him to understand how to play Mike [middle linebacker] and Will, right? That’s why he didn’t feature defensively on Saturday.”

Fans typically don’t care about the players on a personal level because there’s always a great distance between the two. College football is not a professional sport but since it’s on TV and in a venue that holds more people than towns across America, it might as well be. The brand and uniforms are professional even though the kids are not, but they are treated as such in their criticism.

Linebacker is a position of historic pride at the University of Miami and for Ragone to position himself for playing time in an ACC game as a walk-on is an accomplishment worth celebrating.

“It’s one of those deals where his number was called,” Baker said, “and I thought he answered it.”

But the fans are so blinded by the rewards of the score to have any interests of who he or any other student-athlete is as people. Whether or not it’s any fault of their own, is for another column.

Miami Heat Predictions: Five Reasons Sports Network

The Miami Heat start their 2019-20 season with the most optimism in at least four years… and perhaps longer.

They have a real star, a streamlined roster and an intriguing group of young players.

What do some of the Five Reasons Sports Network contributors expect?

 

Zach Buckley (@ZBuckleyNBA): This Heat team has sneaky-good upside to climb as high as No. 3 in the East. Jimmy Butler might be my favorite surprise top-five MVP finisher, with a leap similar to (if a bit more subdued than) the one Paul George made last season. If Miami has a finalist for both Rookie of the Year (Tyler Herro) and Most Improved Player (Bam Adebayo or Justise Winslow), it could sneak its way into 50-win territory. My crystal ball sees the Heat riding a top-five defense to a 48-34 finish and the conference’s No. 4 seed.

Alejandro Villegas (@AlejandroVG32): The Miami Heat season is finally here and we’re all excited.  No more Hassan Whiteside whining (though now we have Dion Waiters filling up that role), and finally a superstar who needs to win now. Jimmy Butler is in his 30s already and there is no time to be wasting his time. So we’ll probably see his best version from the go, with a bunch of exciting young guys. I see the Miami Heat winning 50 games this season, with a solid defensive season and hopefully a set productive rotation (and Erik Spoelstra not trying to figure it out the entire season). Hopefully they make it to the East Conference semifinals at least.

Greg Sylvander (@LeftyLeif): The arrival of Jimmy Butler should do wonders for the scoring challenges this group faced in recent seasons. Just how big of a leap Bam Adebayo and Justise Winslow take in starting roles will be the crucial element in how far this team can go this season. If Tyler Herro is as good as advertised, it further elevates the trajectory in a big way. Having flexible depth that should allow the team to survive the occasional injury bug, and a combination of expiring contracts and young players to remain in position to execute a trade for another frontline player, I see 50 wins.

Paul Austria (@PaulAustria_): The addition of Jimmy Butler is enormous, especially when you consider that the Heat “culture” is what drew him in versus staying with a better contender in Philadelphia.  I’ve always felt like what Miami was lacking these past two years was a wing player that can create his own shot, aka a guy that can just “get buckets.” Now they have two in Butler and Herro. Winslow seems to be getting more and more confident playing point guard by the day and Adebayo as well. I think the addition of Meyers Leonard is slept on, but what ultimately will decide the success of the Heat this season will be how well they rebound, as they lost an elite rebounder in Hassan Whiteside. The cohesion the team showed in the preseason is absolutely noteworthy and a 52-30 record with a 4-5 seed in the playoffs is surely within reach for Spo and company.

Ethan Skolnick (@EthanJSkolnick): Well, here we are, back to relevance. It seemed like everyone (but Dion Waiters and James Johnson) has been smiling since the summer. Erik Spoelstra has been freed from his major malcontent (Hassan Whiteside) and has interchangeable parts that he can deploy countless ways. The hype train may have gotten a little ahead of itself locally, but this is a good team with a chance to improve significantly after a rough early schedule stretch. Oh, and don’t rule out a trade prior to the deadline. I’ll conservatively say 47-35, which should be good for third or fourth in a shallow East.

Michael Sonbeek (@Dutchbeek): The Heat field a team that they haven’t had in a long time……a high upside young team. Adding Jimmy Butler to the mix should put an end to their recent mediocre streak — especially now that they have realized their mistakes from summers past and have begun to clean that up. I’ll say 48 wins and a second round loss, possibly better if Tyler Herro turns out to be legit.

David Friedman (@TacoBoutSports): As we move into a new era of Dwyane Wade-less Miami Heat basketball, the fresh faces of Jimmy Butler and Tyler Herro have Heat fans feeling cocky once again. Butler oozes Heat culture and it feels as if it’s contagious in the locker room. Herro has gone from a “huh?” draft pick to someone that Heat fans view as untouchable. The Heat should continue to make moves during the season, maybe a little Philly cheese special, and will push for a top 4 seed. Let’s say 47-35 and a third spot.

Ricky J. Marc (@RickyJMarc): After finally acquiring that bridge star to move Miami into a new, post-Flash era, the Heat finally have direction again. Most players’ roles are going to be clear now, and Erik Spoelstra looks to be rejuvenated after a tough go at it these last few years. Jimmy Butler and the Heat look to be a attitudinal match made in Miami, and with the ever-improving Justise Winslow as the team’s future PG, Bam Adebayo as the team’s center of the future (now that Hassan Whiteside is finally gone), and Tyler Herro looking to be Miami’s starting SG of the future, this team looks good again. Expect a scrappy defensive squad that will look like a 55-win team on good nights and a 44-win team on bad ones. If there’s one thing to know, it’s that this team won’t give up at any point this season. They’ll make some noise this year, and could very well sneak into the Eastern Conference Finals if one of the East’s contenders aren’t careful. I think 48-34 sounds about right.

5 Minute Dolphin Lead: the best time of our lives

For five minutes the Dolphins lead the Bills and it was the most hopeful moment of the entire Miami season.

The Buffalo Bills put up two field goals. In an act that surely scared the hell out of Brian Flores, the Dolphins marched right down the field to score a run-it-in backfield touchdown. In bright red flashing numbers on the screen: 7-6. I choked on air. What was happening.

I’ve said all year, there’s the team- then there’s management. The players want to win. Tanking only works for the coach, GM, and owner. There is no benefit as an Offensive Line Coach for my team to under perform. It’s even worse for players. Recovery is gruesome. Making them placeholders for your draft picks while they sustain injury is asinine. In week one when they were calling their agents, screaming get me outta here, like the Dwayne Wade T-Mobile commercial.

I watch every week for the players. Not for Stephen Ross or his New England hire. As happy as I was to see that touchdown, two minutes later you’re angry because you know this isn’t a management that wants to win. Wasting an entire year on a method that doesn’t work for unproven rookies. As happy as I was to watch them take the lead, sheer rage followed. The Dolphins don’t just have to beat the team on the field, they have to beat their own organization.

Relish that 7-6 lead all year long. Winning isn’t something you stop doing this year and magically turn on next year. Just ask the Cleveland Browns.

Miami’s kickers should learn from Jose Borregales’s example at FIU

The Week 8 slate of college football in Miami felt like a famous quote from Charles Dickens’ novel “A Tale of Two Cities”.

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”

Saturday in South Florida was a tale of two kickers.


Miami played Georgia Tech at noon and FIU followed it up with the 7 p.m. nightcap against UTEP. The Panthers’ kicker made all three field goals and won 32-17. The Hurricanes missed all three field goals between Turner Davidson and Bubba Baxa and they lost in overtime, 28-21. 

There was once a time this season where FIU kicker Jose Borregales was in the same slump that the Miami kickers are currently in. Through the month of September, the junior make 2-of-6 field goals. He made all but one extra point and his kickoffs mostly end in a touchback.

Through the first three games of October, Borregales made a perfect 6-for-6 FG and missed only one extra point. Against UTEP, he connected on his longest field goal of the season from 46 yards out.

“[Jose Borregales is] kinda getting back into what we expected out of him after last year,” FIU head coach Butch Davis said, “perfect in extra points and field goals. I think every one of his kickoffs, into the wind or with the wind, were all touchbacks with the exception of one.”

“He’s extremely reliable, obviously great to have,” FIU quarterback James Morgan said. “We know that every time we go down there we’re getting points, which is awesome. We always try to score touchdowns but having him as a resource and somebody who is consistently making them for you is great.”

The Panthers have won all three games this month. The bye week separated the best of times with the worst of times. So how did the change of fortune come about?

“Coming back from the seasons I’ve had before and then starting the way I have this season,” Borregales said, “you got to step back, look at your technique and just get back to basics.”

Boregales could relate to the plight in Miami. Every kicker feels the same way when their kick doesn’t make it through the uprights. In football, kickers are viewed at like machines. They are expected to work all the time but the second they don’t, fans want to toss them out or take their frustration out on them first.

“It’s the worst feeling ever,” Borregales said. “You’re in a hole. You’re thinking to yourself like ‘damn, I suck now. Where am I going? What am I gonna do?’ To get out of that, you got to get back to the basics, watch film, ask coaches that know what’s going on. So I just went and sent my film out to kicking coaches. They watched it and told me what I was doing wrong and all that. So I just go back to practicing that, do the little things and I think it’s working now.

“As a kicker, I know instantaneously when I hit my A ball,” he said. “If it’s good, I don’t even have to look and if it’s not, it’s the worst feeling in the world.”

An argument could be made if Miami had this version of Borregales, the Hurricanes would be ranked and on top of the ACC Coastal. Instead, Baxa has made 5-of-10 field goals and missed two extra points and Davidson went from a perfect effort against Virginia to missing both field goals against Georgia Tech. 

“All we know how to do is to manage the situation,” Miami head coach Manny Diaz said. “We continue to coach the guys, we give them all the psychological help that we can afford them and, as I’ve said from when this first became an issue, they are who we have. We do not have free agency, and we just have to continue to press on.”

There’s only one other kicker that they haven’t used but that might change. Cam Price was warming up during overtime and looked to be ready to kick the extra point should the Hurricanes have scored. Whether or not he will have his chance this Saturday at Pittsburgh will hopefully be addressed before the plane takes off.

Mike Gesicki has been giving the Dolphins better play at tight end in recent weeks. (Tony Capobianco for Five Reasons Sports)

Dolphins’ Walton, Gesicki show promise in entertaining loss to Bills

After committing an abomination to the game of football for most of this season, the ragtag Dolphins turned in a surprisingly entertaining effort Sunday at Buffalo.

The 31-21 loss was Miami’s best performance against a team with a winning record.

By staying in the game until the Bills sealed it in the final two minutes with a rare return of an onsides kick for a touchdown by Mincah Hyde, the Dolphins gained a measure of respectability.

And yes, by losing they kept pace with the Bengals, the other winless team, in the race for the first draft pick.

That is the ongoing consolation for long-suffering Dolphins fans that are banking on a path to a brighter future through a handful of high draft picks in the next couple of years.

The general perception of how quickly they can rise from the current depths to contention may be a bit lofty, though.

Who’s worth keeping?

Using those three first-round draft picks in 2020 for the right quarterback — hopefully Tua Tagovailoa — and a couple other immediate contributors will make the Dolphins better next year. But so much is needed to build this stripped-down roster back up.

The main focal point during the interminable march through an otherwise pointless season is for players worth keeping who may contribute when the talent level rises.

Two that stood out Sunday were running back Mark Walton and tight end Mike Gesicki.

Walton, in his second start, averaged 4.7 yards on 14 carries, totaling 66 yards. Like fellow former Miami Hurricane Frank Gore, who had 55 yards on 11 carries for Buffalo, Walton has the knack for popping through holes and the drive to keeping gaining yardage after contact.

The difference was evident when Kenyan Drake (six carries for 21 yards) had the ball. Drake is fast and shifty, which makes him effective as a receiver. But he doesn’t provide the impetus for a tough ground game.

The contrast with Walton’s ability as a ball carrier makes it understandable why the Dolphins are reportedly trying to trade Drake to enhance their cache of draft picks.

Second-year improvement

Meanwhile, Gesicki, the 2018 second-round pick who disappointed as a rookie, is emerging as a potentially vital component in the offense. Gesicki had his most productive day as a pro with four catches (on four targets) for 41 yards, and he made use of his rangy frame and athleticism that was touted when he arrived from Penn State.

Most impressive was an acrobatic catch on fourth-and-8 that kept alive the Dolphins’ final touchdown drive. Earlier, he adjusted to an underthrown pass, which he grabbed while falling backward for a first down on third-and-long.

Another 28-yard completion to Gesicki was wiped out by a holding call on tackle J’Marcus Webb.

Some encouraging performances

There were other positives to point to in the Dolphins nearly pulling an upset on the road against the Bills, who are now 5-1.

Rookie wide receiver Preston Williams continues to stand out with productivity — Sunday with six catches for 82 yards. And inconsistency — his fumble in the fourth quarter led to a touchdown that extended the Bills’ lead to 10 points.

DeVante Parker, the long under-achieving 2015 first-round pick, had five catches and showed tenacity in turning one into a touchdown.

Honorable mention to the much-maligned offensive line that provided some positive push for the running game against a tough Bills d-line and allowed only one sack, on a razzle-dazzle play with receiver Albert Wilson looking to pass.

Some designed rollouts and Ryan Fitzpatrick’s ability to escape rushers and get rid of the ball quickly helped him avoid being sacked. The line had Evan Boehm at center in place of injured veteran Daniel Kilgore and Shaq Calhoun in Boehm’s spot at right guard.

On defense, Raekwon McMillan continued to provide solid play at linebacker, with a team-high six tackles including one for loss. Taco Charlton and Vince Biegel had sacks.

The overall performance of the defensive was commendable considering that veteran defensive backs Reshad Jones and Xavien Howard were both out with injuries and rookie defensive tackle Christian Wilkins got ejected for throwing punches on the second play.

Flip sides of Fitzpatrick

The game was actually fun to watch, especially the childlike joy that 36-year-old Fitzpatrick played with in the return to the site of the most distinguished period of his career when he was the Bills quarterback for 55 games (53 starts) from 2009-12.

Fitzpatrick’s 11-yard scramble for a touchdown, punctuated by lowering his shoulder and bowling his way into the end zone, stands out as the highlight play of the season so far for Miami. It brought the Dolphins to within three points with 1:45 remaining before Hyde’s runback snuffed out hope.

It was also Fitzpatrick who threw the interception near the Bills’ goal line that turned the game around. The Dolphins were on the verge of extending a 14-9 lead after pulling off a successful fake field goal.

That’s Fitzpatrick’s career in a nutshell: moments of gritty brilliance offset by gut-wrenching mistakes.

It is also what happens to bad teams: They find a way to lose even while giving an inspired effort against a superior opponent.

The challenge of this season is for coach Brian Flores and staff to develop some players on this roster who can help alter that equation when reinforcements arrive next season via the draft and free agency.

Craig Davis has covered South Florida sports and teams, including the Dolphins, for four decades. Follow him on Twitter @CraigDavisRuns

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Herro ball: Tyler’s a Big Bucket of Hope

Let’s cut to the chase and get right to what everyone is thinking. What on earth are we watching right now from Tyler Herro?

His latest performance against the Hawks was no exception, 23 points in 25 minutes, 9-14 from the field, 5-7 from downtown, 5 rebounds.

As someone who has followed every Heat rookie from Khalid Reeves to players who took the floor with DJ Khaled courtside, Tyler Herro looks different.

I’m not saying he is better than any previous Heat rookie, or even comparing his potential or career trajectory when I say Herro looks different.

Tyler Herro just has a mix of confidence, swagger and polish that is further developed than any Heat player his age ever. Yes, ever.

I asked him about that confidence.  After he almost blushed, laughing innocently at the question amongst his peers who were hyping him up in the background, he responded like this:

One teammate exclaimed “Tell him you’re a hooper T”

Herro instead modestly replied, “I put in a lot of work so I believe in myself when I’m out there”

Savvy answer from a 19 year old NBA rookie.

But his teammate was on point. Tyler Herro is a hooper indeed.

A hooper that, combined with the arrival of Jimmy Buckets, has Heat fans playing in traffic filled streets of hope.

Certain specific basketball functions do stand out when it comes to Herro hope. The unique mix of shooting accuracy, balance, play making, nifty footwork, I could go on and on. It all has been immensely impressive thus far.

Footwork that somehow translates into moves that while executing, make him look like he thinks he is significantly better than the opposing defender scrambling to keep up. I don’t know why it looks like that or what it means. It just does.

The swagger makes more sense when you know who Herro initially patterned his game after.

In his very early years:

“I liked Kobe, I looked up to Kobe all the time.”

Even Heat fans who have had one too many Wade vs Kobe debates have to appreciate studying Bryant in this context. Maybe that is where the polished footwork began to be cultivated.

As Tyler matured, the great players he studied evolved.

“Once I got a little older, I watched a lot of Lebron”

Perhaps where his underrated pull up jumper and playmaking chops, apparently suppressed at Kentucky, began to be developed.

However, he has his eyes on two current NBA players most when he looks for players to emulate. “Nowadays I’m watching Devin Booker, CJ McCollum, players like that.” See any similarities? I sure do. He has quite the gravitational pull to go along with a sweet step back move. Supremely fun to watch.

A player many people, including myself, were hesitant to get excited about initially, has shown more upside than any of the rookies the Heat front office was criticized for passing on back in June’s NBA Draft. The pick makes even more sense when you factor in the apparent inevitability of Jimmy Butler arriving in Miami a few weeks later.

I guess I’m obligated to say it’s only preseason and warn not to get ahead of ourselves when measuring levels of hope associated with what we’ve seen from Tyler Herro so far.

But this kid is special. Special in a way that makes Heat fans hope Herro ball is here to stay.

Right? Right.

Dolphins win by losing to Redskins

MIAMI GARDENS

Whew, that was close. Ryan Fitzpatrick nearly deep-sized the #TankForTua campaign with some fourth-quarter FitzMagic on Sunday.

There is no denying the overriding reality of this Dolphins season. A team that was constructed only to win in next year’s draft by losing on the field nearly mucked it up and pulled off an improbable comeback against an equally inept Redskins team.

Veteran quarterback Fitzpatrick came off the bench to replace an ineffective Josh Rosen and led two late touchdown drives only to fall short 17-16 when a do-or-die try for a two-point conversion failed.

The silver lining was that the 0-5 Dolphins stayed on track toward securing the first pick in next April’s draft after the Redskins emerged from the Winless Wonders Bowl 1-5.

The Bengals remained in the race by falling to 0-6, while the other winless team entering Week 6, the Jets, was threatening to upset the Cowboys in a later game.

Players not tanking, front office is

Of course, Dolphins players and coaches are doing their best to actually win the games, and they are to be commended for nearly pulling it off in this one. And you can’t fault coach Brian Flores’ decision to roll the dice and either win or lose by going for two with 10 seconds remaining.

“I was like, ‘let’s do this.’ I don’t want to play overtime,” Dolphins offensive tackle Jesse Davis said. “I think it’s a good call. I think we’ve got to be aggressive doing that. What do we got to lose? Go for it. … I like the call.”

Kenyan Drake dropped Fitzpatrick’s short pass in the left flat, though it is unlikely he would have gotten to the end zone had he caught it.

Nonetheless, for the first time this season it felt like watching a real game, at least in the final quarter.

Earlier, it was dreadfully dull as two dysfunctional teams slogged through a first quarter in which both teams had three possessions and punted reach time. The Redskins didn’t record a first down. The Dolphins allowed three sacks in their first two possessions.

0-16 far from a certainty

One thought kept recurring through the early entertainment vacuum: What number will Tua Tagovailoa wear for Miami?

He can’t keep his No. 13 from Alabama.

The Dolphins have spent two decades trying to replace their own legendary No. 13.

Tua won’t get the number. And as Sunday showed, it’s no certainty the talented Hawaiian will get the chance to fill the void that has persisted since Dan Marino hung it up in Miami.

The way things can change in the unpredictable NFL, the Dolphins may win a game or two over the next 11 weeks.

They had been outscored 91-0 in the second half this season before tallying those final 13 unanswered points.

“Everyone kind of knows the woes we have had in the second half throughout the season,” Drake said, “So for us to come back and give our team something to make sure that we put ourselves in a position to win; that’s all you can ask for, to continue to improve on a week-to-week basis.”

Tua worth tanking for

The team’s determination to win each Sunday and the organization’s strategy to lose in the best interest of the future are both understandable.

Tagovailoa has thrown 27 touchdown passes and only one interception while completing 73.6 percent of his passes this season. In his career at Alabama, he has thrown for 81 touchdowns with only nine interceptions.

For anyone questioning that tanking is the intent for Miami, the decision to make Pro Bowl cornerback Xavien Howard inactive with knee soreness after he practiced through the week certainly looks suspicious.

Howard may have made the difference in a game in which the Redskins’ two touchdowns came on passes to Terry McLaurin, of 25 and 33 yards.

On the first, McLaurin easily beat someone named Ken Webster, who fell trying to keep up. (Webster was a seventh-round pick of the Patriots this year and released at the end of preseason.) McLaurin accounted for 100 of the Redskins 166 receiving yards on four catches.

The no-name secondary the Dolphins fielded Sunday actually turned in a respectable performance, and held up despite the pass rush putting no pressure on Case Keenum all day.

“I think our defense played really phenomenal and we just didn’t pick up our stuff [on offense],” Davis said. “Whenever the defense holds them to 17 [points], I think we should definitely beat that team.”

A few days after being declared the starter for the remainder of the season, Josh Rosen took a 180-degree turn in his quest to prove he is capable.

Rough day for Rosen

Rosen’s 32.9 passer rating certainly screamed Tua can’t get here soon enough. He threw for only 85 yards on 15 completions in 25 attempts and two regrettable interceptions.

He was often under heavy pressure, particularly in the first half. But the two interceptions were all on Rosen. He shouldn’t have attempted either throw. He had time and simply made bad decisions throwing to receivers who were covered.

The main thing the remaining games will reveal is which players may have value for the future. On defense, linebacker Raekwon McMillan continues to do a solid job as a run stopped. He had five solo tackles and four assists Sunday.

Former University of Miami running back Mark Walton got his first start and averaged 5.3 yards rushing (six carries for 32 yards) and added 43 yards receiving on five catches.

Second-year tight end Mike Gesicki is becoming more of a factor in the passing game. The 2018 second-round pick made a terrific catch over the middle for 30 yards that got the final touchdown drive going.

Then there’s Fitzpatrick, who was huddled with Marino in the locker room after the game. If the Dolphins aren’t careful, old FitzMagic just might put the kibosh on this whole #tankovailoa strategy.

Craig Davis has covered South Florida sports and teams, including the Dolphins, for four decades. Follow him on Twitter @CraigDavisRuns

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