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Herro’s 3-pointer with 2.5 seconds left lifts Heat over Kings 110-107 in Butler’s absence

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Miami Heat guard Kyle Lowry drives the ball while being defended by Sacramento Kings guard Davion Mitchell during the first half at FTX Arena on Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2022 in Miami. (John McCall, South Florida Sun Sentinel)




The difference this time was Jimmy Butler was not there at the finish to save the night at FTX Arena, as he did a night earlier in the victory over the Golden State Warriors.

Perhaps it was hubris by the Miami Heat, thinking they could rest Butler on a night the Sacramento Kings were without ailing De’Aaron Fox. Perhaps Butler’s hip actually was sore.

But with Butler unavailable, closing time turned into something far different Wednesday night, but equally satisfying, with the Heat pushing past the Kings 110-107.

The game was decided when Tyler Herro converted a 3-pointer in a 107-107 tie with 2.5 seconds to play, on a double-pump attempt, closing out his 26-point, 12-rebound night.

“I got all the space I needed to knock it down,” Herro said.

Or, as coach Erik Spoelstra said, Butler 2.0.

“He just did what Jimmy did last night,” Spoelstra said, “just create something out of nothing.”

The climb to .500 from the 2-5 start now can be achieved as soon as Friday night on the road against the Indiana Pacers.

“The last 48 hours we’ve made some progress,” Spoelstra said. “I just like us showing some grit.”

Without Butler, and before Herro’s heroics, the Heat turned to Kyle Lowry, with the point guard closing with a season-high 22 points, seven assists and five rebounds. There also was a quality Heat contribution from Bam Adebayo, who closed with 20 points and 11 rebounds.

“I think we know what can be,” Lowry said of the back-to-back wins.

The Kings got 22 points from former Atlanta Hawks guard Kevin Huerter and 22 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists from center Domantas Sabonis, in addition to 19 points from longtime Heat killer Malik Monk.

Five Degrees of Heat from Wednesday’s game:

1. Closing time: The Heat led 33-32 at the end of the first period, 53-51 at halftime and 77-76 going into the fourth.

From there, the Kings moved to an 88-81 lead with 8:34 to play on 10-0 run that led to the Heat timeout.

“Well, the game certainly was not simple,” Spoelstra said.

But with 5:10 to play, a putback by Adebayo drew the Heat within 94-92, forcing a Kings timeout.

Eventually, the Heat moved to a 96-96 tie, only to see the Kings’ Huerter drain a 3-pointer for a 99-96 Kings lead with 3:09 to play.

But back came the Heat, with a Max Strus 3-pointer putting them up 103-99 with 1:43 to play.

The Kings then would push back to a 105-105 tie with 32.7 seconds left, before Lowry converted an 11-foot jumper with 27.8 seconds left for a 107-105 Heat lead.

Off multiple passes, the Kings got the ball inside to Sabonis with 12.5 seconds to play, with his free throws tying it 107-107.

That set up the decisive sequence, and Herro’s 3-pointer with 2.5 seconds to play.

2. Herro ball: With Butler out, Herro became the Heat’s closing creator out of necessity.

Herro not only stepped up with timely jumpers, but also again stepped forward on the glass, as the Heat continue to close with smaller lineups, in this case Gabe Vincent playing in place of Caleb Martin.

“He’s a gutsy kid and he wants those moments and he really delivered tonight,” Spoelstra said.

Herro closed with 13 of the Heat’s 33 fourth-quarter points.

“My teammates gave me the ball, and Coach gave me the ball in the right positions,” Herro said. “They made it easy for me.”

Kings coach Mike Brown insisted Herro traveled on the winning shot, calling the missed call, “Just unbelievable.”

Said Herro, “I don’t think it was a travel.”

3. Lowry early: With Butler out, Lowry was far more active at the outset than in recent games, at 4 of 5 for 10 points and two assists in his initial seven-minute stint, the game’s first player to reach double figures in points.

He then was up to 12 points by the end of the opening period, his highest-scoring first quarter as a member of the Heat, matching his previous season high of 17 points by the early stages of the second period.

“It shows you his mental toughness,” Spoelstra said of Lowry, 36, coming through on the second night of the back to back. “I thought he really kept us afloat and really put pressure on the defense.”

Lowry this season typically had prioritized getting teammates involved before turning to his own offense. The absence of Butler on Wednesday night changed that approach.

“I got to my spots and got some easy, open looks,” Lowry said.

4. Rotation readjustment: With Butler given the night off after Tuesday’s heroics against the Warriors, listed with tightness in his left hip, Strus was shifted into the Heat starting lineup.

While the rest of the starting lineup remained intact, with Adebayo, Martin, Herro and Lowry, there was a three-player substitution midway through the opening period, with Dewayne Dedmon, Duncan Robinson and Vincent entering.

That proved to be the limit of the rotation, going just eight deep on the second night of the back to back.

Strus, coming off a game-high 24 points performance in Tuesday’s victory over the Warriors, had the Kings’ attention, his first shot not coming until he converted a 3-pointer 36 seconds into the second half.

5. Dedmon steps up: Seemingly refreshed from his two-game break last week, Dedmon was up to eight points and six rebounds by half, also at 2 of 3 on 3-pointers, and then with 10 points and eight rebounds going into the fourth quarter.

That contribution was necessary, with Adebayo called for three first-half fouls.

With his big-muscle approach, Dedmon again showed why he has a place in the rotation, this time utilized for 15:54.

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Originally published at Tribune News Service
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