Thursday, August 12, 2010

Miami Heat tickets

Anyone got season tickets?

They were sold out as soon as Wade and Bosh announced they were going to play in Miami.

Any lucky season ticket holder out there?

If you are not, how would you pay for one?

Post your comments!!

Friday, July 23, 2010

Carlos Arroyo officially re-signs with Miami Heat

BY BARRY JACKSON
bjackson@MiamiHerald.com

Carlos Arroyo's efficient play, especially his good work as a late-season starter, has earned him a second season with the Heat. His return, long expected, was made official Thursday when the team formally announced he is now the 13th Heat player under contract.

``By re-signing Carlos, we feel we have accomplished another big step in adding to this team,'' Heat president Pat Riley said. ``Carlos showed last season that he was one of the most competitive and efficient point guards in the NBA and we are happy to have him back.''

Arroyo started 35 games last season -- including the final 21 of the regular season and all five playoff games -- and averaged 6.1 points, 3.1 assists and 22.0 minutes in 72 appearances.

He shot a career-high 47.5 percent from the field and 84.4 percent from the free throw line and finished second to New Orleans' Chris Paul in assist-to-turnover ratio, at 4.17 to 1.

Arroyo, who signed for the $1 million veteran's minimum, has appeared in 505 career games, including 148 starts, over eight seasons with the Nuggets, Raptors, Jazz, Pistons, Magic and Heat. Arroyo, who attended Florida International University, turns 31 on July 30.

Heat guard Dwyane Wade said this week that the starting point guard position is ``Mario Chalmers' job to lose,'' but Arroyo will challenge him.

The Heat can invite as many as 20 players to camp but can keep no more than 15. The final two roster spots likely will go to perimeter players. Free agent perimeter players still available include Jason Williams, Mike James, Anthony Johnson, Marcus Williams, Eddie House, Jerry Stackhouse, Larry Hughes and Michael Finley, among others.

AROUND THE LEAGUE

Timberwolves: General manager David Kahn, who acquired Michael Beasley from the Heat two weeks ago, told Minneapolis radio station KSTP: "He's a very young and immature kid who smoked too much marijuana and has told me that he's not smoking anymore, and I told him that I would trust him as long as that was the case.''

Kahn added of Beasley, "He had a very issue-free season last season in Miami."

In exchange for Beasley, the Heat received second-round picks in 2011 and 2014, plus cash considerations.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Miller signs Heat deal, joins Wade, James and Bosh

By TIM REYNOLDS
AP Sports Writer

MIAMI -- By the time next season's NBA playoffs arrive, nine years will have passed since Mike Miller last enjoyed a postseason victory.

He's coming to Miami to change that.

Miller signed his long-awaited five-year contract with the Heat on Thursday, becoming the latest player to take less money than he could have made elsewhere to play for Miami. LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and Udonis Haslem all did the same in recent days, all with eyes on winning a championship.

"It's official!" Miller wrote on Twitter, thanking the Heat, owner Micky Arison and team president Pat Riley for making it happen.

After James, Bosh and Wade decided to team up, the Heat knew they needed a shooter to complement the All-Star trio, and that only raised Miller's stock in Miami. Riley met with Miller in the very first moments after free agency opened at 12:01 a.m. eastern time on July 1, sitting down with him in a Beverly Hills hotel room for a sales pitch unlike any other.

The Heat, Riley said that night, were going after James and Bosh to join Wade. And they wanted Miller to join the party.

Miller talked with at least four other teams after that, but in the end, nothing was going to change his mind about coming to the Heat.

"Pat had a vision for the team, a vision that he laid out with evangelical fervor," Miller's agent, Arn Tellem, wrote on his blog earlier this week. "We left the room converted."

The convert now has a contract, worth around $25 million. It was signed on the same day the Minnesota Timberwolves planned to introduce former Heat forward Michael Beasley to their fan base, which is more than coincidental. By trading Beasley for draft picks, that cleared the cap space Miami needed to sign Miller.

He agreed to the deal in principle late last week after James picked Miami. Some minor hangups in the contract process sparked speculation that Miller would go elsewhere, rumors that were proven unfounded.

Miller shot a career-best 48 percent from 3-point range last season with Washington, with career averages of 13.7 points and 5.1 rebounds.

James played a significant role in recruiting Miller to Miami, and in turn, that made Haslem's decision to stay much easier as well. Haslem and Miller have been close for many years, going back to their time together as Florida Gators.

"That's my college roommate," Haslem said earlier this week. "Our relationship is a lot deeper than just basketball. He's like Dwyane is to me, except we're just different colors. I would say Dwyane is my brother and I would say Mike is brother. Different backgrounds, obviously different races, but that's my brother."

Miami becomes Miller's fifth NBA team, after stints with Orlando, Memphis, Minnesota and Washington. He hasn't appeared in a postseason game since 2006, and has never played in the second round of the playoffs. The last time he was part of a playoff win was with Orlando in 2002; Miller's teams are 0-14 in postseason contests since.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Ilgauskas follows LeBron to Miami

By Sports Network
The Sports Network

Center Zydrunas Ilgauskas has apparently decided to join former Cavaliers teammate LeBron James in Miami.

The Plain Dealer of Cleveland reported Tuesday afternoon that Ilgauskas will sign with the Heat, citing the player's agent. The report said Ilgauskas will sign for the veteran minimum of $1.3 million.

Additionally, James posted an apparent confirmation on his Twitter account.

"Welcome Big Z," James wrote. "Glad u are joining me in South Beach my friend. Also thanks for the encouraging words big fella"

Ilgauskas had only ever played for the Cavaliers during his career. Cleveland selected the 7-foot-3 Ilgauskas with the 20th overall pick of the 1996 draft, but he did not make his debut until the 1997-98 season.

Ilgauskas went on to become the franchise's all-time leader in games played (771), offensive rebounds (2,336) and total rebounds (5,904). The 35-year-old averaged 13.8 points and 5.4 rebounds in his Cavaliers career, earning All- Star selections in 2003 and 2005.

The Cavaliers traded Ilgauskas to Washington this past February in the deal that sent Antawn Jamison to Cleveland. However, Ilgauskas never played for the Wizards after reaching a mutual agreement on a contract buyout, and returned to the Cavaliers in March.

He averaged a career-low 7.4 points and 5.4 boards in 64 games in 2009-10, when he primarily came off the bench in order for Shaquille O'Neal to start.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Miami Heat's Dwyane Wade, LeBron James on same team: Why not?

By DAN LE BATARD
dlebatard@MiamiHerald.com

Dwyane Wade and LeBron James are always talking about what great friends they are. They are so bonded by shared sensibilities and experiences and excellences that Wade would stay at James' mansion when the Heat played in Cleveland. Both men say winning matters most. And here they are, at a career crossroads together, and all they have to do to find the best teammate available to them in free agency is look at each other.

Three years ago, they talked and decided together to sign similar contracts so that now, in a few days, they would have the same freedom of choice at the same time. In other words, they planned this; they've already teamed to make one really big business decision at a time of maximum value. Everything that has happened in the time since -- Wade exiting national relevance early every postseason while required to do too much heavy lifting alone, James winning every individual accolade without winning anything that matters -- brings them together now with just the right amount of appreciation and frustration and freedom and power and perspective in their prime.

Why in the name of all that is holy and sane wouldn't they choose each other?

Isn't this simple?

Hog the championships. Own the sport they love as young men. Make millions upon millions of dollars while teaming on commercials and winning and having fun. We can quibble about if their games fit together, which means you'd be arguing that it is better to have Amare Stoudemire with Wade than LeBron Bleeping James, but otherwise the only thing keeping them apart is something we all learn as little kids.

Sharing.

That's Plan A for salesman-to-the-stars Pat Riley, who has pushed all his chips to the middle of the table on free agency with a suited ace and a King. Riley knows how star-struck and event-driven this market can be. He copyrighted basketball flash and glitz in Los Angeles. He knows James-Wade will sell here in a way that Joe Johnson won't. So his job and his legacy now is to convince these two to share the stage and glory and fame the way he once sold Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, basketball's all-time leading scorer, on the hypnotic powers of Magic.

The entire upbringing and wiring of Wade and James in sports has preached team, harmony, unity and the importance of sacrifice, but here's the problem: Maybe neither of them wants to be Scottie Pippen. Athletes tend to lie or lack self-awareness when they say that all they want to do is win. What they really want is to be the reason for said winning. Michael Irvin articulated that well when he got bummed watching teammate Alvin Harper running toward the end zone in the Super Bowl with his football.

Maybe this is childish or maybe it is human nature, but there's something about this arena that turns muscular men into infants. That isn't a criticism. Growing up is overrated, and being a kid is forever fun. But you know that goofy thing the Cavs did before games? Where all the other players would gather for a team photo and James would kneel down and pretend to snap their picture with an imaginary camera?

You have to convince James to share that play camera with Wade and hope they don't fight over it. That's all you have to do for James and Wade to get all the toys and turn the league into their personal playpen.

It seems pretty simple, doesn't it?

Share winning with your friend or play defense to keep him from it? What would you do if it was your good friend?

Winning and championships are going to take a back seat to something as silly as Wade feeling threatened by a bigger star coming to his city? A-Rod was LeBron in this scenario once. He didn't come and steal New York from Derek Jeter.

Last week, I put the question to two basketball Hall of Famers, one NBA coach and one NBA owner: Why wouldn't two great players and great friends do this?

The owner said, ``Ask Orlando and Tracy McGrady and Grant Hill how that works. One friend may like a great sports town. The other may like the beach. And friends don't mean there are two balls in a game. LeBron and D-Wade both need the ball, and neither are knock-down shooters. So I don't know that those two together are better than LeBron with the cast he had in Cleveland. In fact, unless you got the right players, the Cleveland team is probably better.''

The coach said, ``Ego. Those two don't want to share the top billing. They want talent around them, but it has to be complementary talent. They want to win, but winning isn't the only thing or even the most important thing. The most important thing is their standing in comparison to their peers.''

Charles Barkley said, ``Attention. You'd be surprised how much guys want all the attention.''

Only Isiah Thomas made it sound like it was any kind of possible. Thomas was a champion and Hall of Famer and star before he was the basketball coach at FIU. I asked him, in his prime, how he would have felt if someone of the stature of James came to his team to overshadow him.

``I would feel lucky,'' he said.

Not threatened?

``Sometimes the moment calls for you to step forward,'' he said. ``Sometimes the moment calls for you to step back.''

But what about the idea that stars don't merely want to win but want to be the reason for winning?

``Those are the guys who always lose,'' Thomas said. ``Those are the guys that champions prey on. Those are the losers.''

That sounds good, right? So do this:

``If real winning is what you are pursuing, ego and money and glory don't get in the way,'' Thomas said. ``Great players always play well together until they win the championship. That's when the `disease of more' creeps in. But LeBron hasn't won. There's always an ego sacrifice with winning. Pau Gasol and Ron Artest can do a lot more scoring elsewhere. Kareem was the greatest player ever, and he gave room to Magic. Do you want to be The Man or do you want to be a champion? What really matters to you?''

Thomas has been a coach for a long time now. He says the things coaches teach once they have wisdom and perspective.

He laments all the ego in this generation of players. Problem is, he also flashes a Hall of Famer's teeth when I asked him what he would do if he were LeBron.

``Show me the hardest challenge,'' he says. ``I'd want to go to New York. That's the hardest place, right? Well, f--- you then. I'm going to do it there.''

Sunday, June 27, 2010

NBA Predictions: LeBron James to New York, Dwyane Wade Staying in Miami

by
Brian Mosgaller
Correspondent Written on June 27, 2010

Believe it or not, the NBA’s free agency period is actually going to start later this week.

After months—nay, years of speculation and amateur prognostication, the biggest of the big names in basketball will finally start inking their John Hancock's to new deals, and the landscape of the NBA will be altered for the foreseeable future.

At this point, the list of potential signees is mesmerizing.

LeBron, D-Wade, Bosh, Boozer, Amar’e, and Joe Johnson, to name the cream of the crop.

The imminent frenzy—as well as the preceding financial preparation—is unprecedented.

As we speak, Miami has only three players under contract!

The Knicks have spent three years wheeling and dealing in an effort to maximize their available cap space.

But let’s not kid ourselves—all but two teams will emerge from The Great NBA Talent Realignment disappointed and wondering where their sales pitches went awry.

This is about two players, and two players only: LeBron James and Dwayne Wade.

Every other big name on the market is only so appealing when placed next to one of these two generational stars.

So, the question is begged—who will be the two lucky teams?

Obviously, the only people that know the answer are James and Wade themselves (along with their inner-circles, and, most likely, World Wide Wes).

But here’s my best guess.

Unless LeBron and Wade actually do follow through on their hinted conspiracy to combine forces for NBA domination—which I’m betting will not happen—the scenario that makes the most sense is Wade remaining in Miami and LeBron heading to the Big Apple.

Earlier in this free agency period, Wade made it pretty clear that the ugly end to the Jordan/Jackson/Pippen-era in Chicago convinced him that returning to his home city was not going to happen.

He has also emphasized, again and again, that staying in South Beach would be his ideal situation.

The only bargaining chip necessary is for the Heat to put some real talent around him.

And by clearing enough cap space to lock up three max-contract players, the Heat will almost undoubtedly be able to fulfill Wade’s wishes.

As for LeBron, I’m thinking it boils down to either NY or Chicago.

We know that LeBron has always been very legacy conscious, and what better franchises to build a legacy with than the Knicks and Bulls.

While it would be great in my mind for James to stay in Cleveland to deliver a long-awaited title to the poor city, he has had enough of his hometown.

Sure, it will weigh on him that the only place he has ever lived or worked is going to hate him, but he has had enough of that pressure.

He has also had enough of his supporting cast.

Yes, adding a Chris Bosh or Amar’e Stoudemire would help, but unfortunately, he’s still working with Mo Williams (a mediocre shooting guard in a point guard’s body), Anthony Parker (the only NBA player who can say he’s worse than his sister), and Anderson Varejao (no comment necessary).

Do you think that sounds as enticing as signing in the Mecca of basketball, playing at a historic arena, and putting up a nightly triple-double under Mike D’Antoni alongside Carlos Boozer or Joe Johnson?

Plus, he’s got the likes of C.C. Sabathia, a former Cleveland star himself, telling him that winning in New York is unlike anything else.

Chicago may offer a better existing supporting cast, but unfortunately for the Windy City, it’s simply not the NBA’s biggest stage.

I concede that New Jersey may offer James the same viewing public—with an intriguing set of talent in place—but it won’t be leaving Newark for two years, and who wants to go to Newark?

Ultimately, though, it comes down to a domino effect: who will sign first out of the elite free agents?

If Boozer or Amar’e sign early with either Chicago or New York or New Jersey, it dramatically impacts the equation because the big two can then see tangible championship pieces set.

But, like I said, with all other things being equal, LeBron wants to be in New York and Wade wants to be in Miami.

It’s my contention that both of those franchises will do what they have to in order to make it happen.

Personally, I could see D-Wade, Boozer, and Amar’e joining forces in Miami, while James will team up with Joe Johnson and David Lee in Madison Square Garden.

That leaves Chris Bosh to unite with Derrick Rose in Chi-town, along with Rudy Gay.

Despite the riches of Mikhail Prokhorov, the Nets will be left with the free agency scraps.

As for the Clippers? Ha!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Wade's agent: Don't call it a summit

ESPN.com News Services

The agent for Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh says the characterization of discussions among the NBA's top free agents as a "summit" are not accurate, according to CNBC.com.

Last week, Wade told the Chicago Tribune that he planned to talk with fellow free agents LeBron James and Joe Johnson before making a decision on where he would sign this summer. A source told ESPN The Magazine's Chris Broussard that Bosh also would be part of those talks, and Amare Stoudemire, who is likely to opt out of the final year of his current contract with the Phoenix Suns, told AOL Fanhouse that he planned to be part of those talks, too.

But Henry Thomas, who represents Wade and Bosh, says conversations among players are not the same as a "summit."

"Dwyane never made reference to a summit," Thomas said, according to CNBC.com. "He said that he'd have conversations with some of these guys and that still will happen. These guys came into the league at the same time and they're in similar situations, so it's unrealistic to think that they won't talk. But there's no summit of any kind planned where they'll all be in the same location."

Wade insists he still hasn't started thinking about free agency. But having settled four lawsuits on Tuesday, the Miami Heat star says that's finally about to change.

Before leaving a Miami courtroom Tuesday, moments after the settlements in a restaurant case and three others were announced, Wade told The Associated Press he has not put together his "wish list" for the offseason, nor has he asked any other potential free agents about their plans.

He did repeat one thing: He wants to stay in Miami, saying "you know that hasn't changed." But to do that, he wants to see roster upgrades, which Heat president Pat Riley will desperately try to make happen starting with the July 1 opening of the NBA free agency window.

The word "summit" -- which invokes images of world leaders meeting at a central location to talk about global issues like economics, the environment and security -- is simply not what's going to happen, Thomas said, according to the report.

"The way it was first characterized and the way it continues to be characterized -- as if the only thing left to determine is a date and a location -- is not the reality," he said, according to the report.

"They're all friends and they all talk," added Happy Walters, who represents Stoudemire, according to the report. "But the idea that they're all in this together and they're going to say, 'OK, you go here and I go there,' that's not happening. People just need something good to talk about."

Thomas is part of CAA, a sports agency that also includes Leon Rose, the agent for James. That fact, Thomas acknowledged, does give the agency an advantage in pursuing deals for its clients, according to CNBC.com.

"To some extent, we do have control because we're all under the same umbrella," Thomas said, according to the report. "We're going to have really solid information on what's going on that will clearly benefit our guys. And that's the goal -- to get our players the best deals they can get."

James, Wade and Bosh became close while playing together on the U.S. Olympic basketball team that won the gold medal at the Beijing Games. While they've pondered the possibility of playing together in the NBA, only two of the stars are likely to wind up on the same team once the dust clears, given their likely salary demands.

Last week, the NBA said Wade did not break any league tampering rules with his comments.

Under league rules, players cannot tamper with other players, though it's a given that players talking among themselves not only happens, but is impossible to regulate.

The NBA metes out discipline only in what it said are "the most egregious" cases, and said Wade's comments "do not meet that standard."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.