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Wikipedia

Miami Heat

The Miami Heat are an American professional basketball team based in Miami. The Heat compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the league's Eastern Conference Southeast Division. The club plays its home games at Kaseya Center, and has won three NBA championships.

Miami Heat
2022–23 Miami Heat season
ConferenceEastern
DivisionSoutheast
Founded1988
HistoryMiami Heat
1988–present[1][2]
ArenaKaseya Center
LocationMiami, Florida
Team colorsBlack, red, yellow[3][4][5]
     
Main sponsorUltimate Kronos Group[6]
PresidentPat Riley
General managerAndy Elisburg[7]
Head coachErik Spoelstra
OwnershipMicky Arison
Affiliation(s)Sioux Falls Skyforce
Championships3 (2006, 2012, 2013)
Conference titles6 (2006, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2020)
Division titles15 (1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2020, 2022)
Retired numbers6 (1, 3, 10, 23, 32, 33)
Websitewww.nba.com/heat
Association
Icon
Statement
City

The franchise began play in the 1988–89 season as an expansion team. After a period of mediocrity, the Heat gained relevance in the mid-1990s when Pat Riley became team president and head coach. Riley constructed the trades for Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway, which propelled the team into playoff contention. Mourning and Hardaway led the Heat to four consecutive division titles prior to their departures in 2001 and 2002, respectively. The team also experienced success after drafting Dwyane Wade in 2003.

Led by Wade and, following a trade for former NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP) Shaquille O'Neal, the Heat won their first NBA title in 2006, after Riley named himself head coach for a second stint. After the departure of O'Neal two years later, the team struggled for the remainder of the 2000s. Riley remained team president, but was replaced as head coach by Erik Spoelstra. In 2010, the Heat signed reigning league MVP LeBron James and NBA All-Star Chris Bosh, creating the "Big Three" along with Wade. During their four years together, Spoelstra, James, Wade, and Bosh led the Heat to the NBA Finals in every season, culminating in back-to-back championships in 2012 and 2013. All three departed by 2016, and the team entered a period of rebuilding. After acquiring All-Star Jimmy Butler in 2019, the Heat returned to the NBA Finals in 2020. The Heat acquired six-time NBA All-Star Kyle Lowry in 2021.

The Heat hold the record for the NBA's third-longest winning streak, 27 straight games, set during the 2012–13 season. Six Hall of Famers have played for Miami, and James won two consecutive NBA MVP Awards while playing for the team.

Franchise history

1987–1995: Early years in Miami

In 1987, the NBA granted one of four new expansion teams to Miami (the others being the Orlando Magic, Charlotte Hornets, and the Minnesota Timberwolves); the team, known as the Heat, began play in November 1988. The Miami Heat began their early years with much mediocrity, only making the playoffs twice in their first eight years and falling in the first round both times.

Miami had previously been home to the Miami Floridians of the American Basketball Association (ABA) from 1968 to 1972.[8]

1995–2003: Title hopefuls

 
 
Tim Hardaway and Alonzo Mourning helped make the Heat serious contenders in the eastern conference in the late 1990s.

Upon the purchasing of the franchise by Carnival Cruise Lines chairman Micky Arison in 1995, Pat Riley was brought in as the team president and head coach. Riley acquired center Alonzo Mourning and point guard Tim Hardaway to serve as the centerpieces for the team, transforming Miami into a championship contender throughout the late 1990s. With them they also brought in a new team trainer, Cody Posselt, to work on shooting. The Heat underwent a dramatic turnaround in the 1996–97 season, improving to a 61–21 record – a franchise record at the time, and currently second-best in team history. That same year, Miami earned the moniker of "Road Warriors" for its remarkable 32–9 record on the road. On the backs of Hardaway and Mourning, the Heat achieved their first two series victories in the playoffs, making it to the Conference Finals against the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls before losing in five games. Their biggest rivals of the time were the New York Knicks, Riley's former team, who would eliminate the Heat in the playoffs from 1998 through 2000. A period of mediocrity followed after, highlighted by missing the playoffs in 2002 and 2003.

2003–2016: The Dwyane Wade era

In the 2003 NBA draft, with the fifth overall pick, Miami selected shooting guard Dwyane Wade out of Marquette.[9] Free-agent swing-man Lamar Odom was signed from the Los Angeles Clippers. Just prior to the start of the 2003–04 season, Riley stepped down as head coach to focus on rebuilding the Heat, promoting Stan Van Gundy to the position of head coach. Behind Van Gundy's leadership, Wade's stellar rookie year and Odom's break out season, the Heat made the 2004 NBA playoffs, beating the New Orleans Hornets 4–3 in the 1st round and losing to the Indiana Pacers 4–2 in the 2nd round. In the off-season, Riley engineered a summer blockbuster trade for Shaquille O'Neal from the Los Angeles Lakers.[10] Alonzo Mourning returned to the Heat in the same season, serving as a backup to O'Neal. Returning as championship contenders, Miami finished with a 59–23 record, consequently garnering the first overall seed in the Eastern Conference. Sweeping through the first round and the semifinals, Miami went back to the Conference Finals for the first time in eight years, where it met the defending champion Detroit Pistons. Despite taking a 3–2 lead, Miami lost Wade to injury for Game 6. The Heat would go on to lose Game 7 at home despite Wade's return.

2005–2006: Championship season

 
 
Shaquille O'Neal and Dwyane Wade brought the Heat their first NBA Championship in 2006.

In the summer of 2005, Riley brought in veteran free agent Gary Payton from the Boston Celtics, and also brought in James Posey, Jason Williams and Antoine Walker via trades.[11] After a disappointing 11–10 start to the 2005–06 season, Riley relieved Van Gundy of his duties and took back the head coaching job.[12] The Heat made it to the Conference Finals in 2006 and in a re-match, defeated the Pistons, winning the series 4–2. Making its first NBA Finals appearance, they played the Dallas Mavericks, who won the first two games in Dallas in routs. The Heat then won the next four games, capturing its first-ever championship. Wade won the Finals MVP award.[13]

2006–2010: Post-championship struggles

The Heat experienced four years of post-title struggles from 2007 through 2010, including a 4–0 sweep by the Chicago Bulls in the 1st round of the 2007 NBA playoffs. In the 2007–08 season, Wade was plagued by injuries and the Heat had a league-worst 15–67 record. O'Neal was traded to Phoenix midway through the season. Riley resigned as head coach following the season but retained his position as team president. Long-time assistant Erik Spoelstra was promoted to head coach. A healthy Wade led the Heat to 43 wins in 2009 and 47 wins in 2010, making the playoffs both seasons, though they lost in the first round, 4–3 in 2009 and 4–1 in 2010. Wade was the scoring champion in 2009 and the NBA All-Star MVP in 2010.

2010–2014: The "Big Three" era

 
 
 
The "Big Three" of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh lead the Heat to four consecutive Finals appearances and two NBA Championships.

Entering the 2010–11 season with nearly $48 million in salary cap space, the Heat caused a major power shift during the blockbuster 2010 free agency, adding Chris Bosh and LeBron James, starting the "Big 3" era.[14][15] However, the Heat got off to a 9–8 start. After a "players only" meeting, the team improved. The Heat finished with a 58–24 record and the 2nd seed. In the much anticipated 2011 NBA playoffs, Miami defeated the Philadelphia 76ers in the first round, Boston Celtics in the Conference Semifinals, and Bulls in the Conference Finals, all in 5 games. The Heat reached the 2011 NBA Finals for the first time since 2006, in a rematch against the Dallas Mavericks. After taking a 2–1 series lead, the Heat lost the final three games to the Mavericks.

After the second NBA Lockout ended, the Heat signed veteran Shane Battier. In the shortened 2011–12 season, the Heat started 27–7. However they would struggle for the second half of the season, going 19–13. The Heat finished 46–20, earning the second seed in the East for the NBA playoffs. Entering the first round, they took a 3–0 lead against the New York Knicks but like their previous series with the Sixers, were not able to close them out in Game 4. A victory in Game 5 ultimately defeated New York and the Heat advanced to the second round versus the Indiana Pacers. After losing Game 2 at home and Game 3 at Indiana, many criticized Dwyane Wade's lackluster performance in Game 3, bringing attention to the fact that he got into a verbal argument with Spoelstra.[citation needed] However, with Wade visiting his former college coach, the team defeated the Pacers in the next three games, to close out the Pacers. They met the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals, taking the first two games before losing the next three, including one home loss where Bosh returned from injury. On June 7 they won on the road at Boston beating the Celtics 98–79 to tie the series 3–3; James had 45 points and 15 rebounds. The deciding Game 7 was at Miami. The Celtics largely dominated during the first half. The second half saw several lead changes. The Heat eventually won 101–88, reaching the NBA Finals for the second straight year. In the much-anticipated match-up with the Oklahoma City Thunder, the Heat split the first two games, winning Game 2 on the road, before sweeping the next three at home.[16] James was named the Finals MVP as he won his first NBA championship.[17]

On July 11, 2012, the Heat officially signed veterans Ray Allen to a three-year contract and Rashard Lewis to a two-year contract.[18] The Heat would go on a 27-game winning streak between February 3, 2013, and March 27, 2013 [19] Defeating Orlando in the season finale set the franchise record for 66 wins in a season. By the end of the season, the Heat won 18 of its 19 road games, the best streak on the road to end a season in NBA history. The Heat went 17–1 in March, becoming the first team to win 17 games in a single calendar month. The Heat ended with a franchise-best and league-best 66–16 record to take the 1st seed in the 2013 NBA playoffs. They swept the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round and defeated Chicago in five games before winning against the Indiana Pacers in Game 7. Miami became the first Eastern Conference team to reach the NBA Finals in three straight years since the Chicago Bulls in the late 1990s. Miami lost Game 1 of the Finals on their home floor in a close game that was decided by a last-minute buzzer beater by Tony Parker. The Heat went on to win Game 2 with a 33–5 run in the second half. The two teams continued to trade wins leading up to Game 6 where the Spurs, up 10 heading in the 4th quarter, were in position to close out the series and win the championship. James went on to score 16 points in the period, outscoring the entire Spurs team by himself at one point. The Heat went on to defeat the Spurs 95–88 in Game 7 behind a 37-point and 12 rebounds performance from James and a 23-point and 10 rebound effort from Wade.[20] Shane Battier also scored 18 points behind 6–8 shooting from 3, after having a shooting slump during the postseason up to that point. The Heat captured the NBA title for a second year in a row, becoming the first team in the Eastern Conference to repeat as league champions since the late 1990s Chicago Bulls. James was named the NBA Finals MVP, becoming the fifth player to win the award back-to-back along with Michael Jordan, Hakeem Olajuwon, Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, and only the second player in NBA history to win the Finals MVP and league MVP back-to-back along with Jordan.[21]

Miami struggled throughout the 2013–14 season with extended absences of Dwyane Wade, who only played 54 games to injury and ended on an 11–14 record entering the playoffs. They entered the playoffs as the Eastern Conference 2nd seed with a record of 54–28 team, and with the "Big 3" healthy. They went 12–3 in the first 3 rounds. They swept the Charlotte Bobcats.[22] They then beat the Brooklyn Nets 4–1. They went on to play the 1st seeded 56–26 Pacers in the Conference Finals, in a rematch of the previous year's Conference Finals. The Pacers were eliminated from the playoffs for a third consecutive year by the Heat. The Heat went to a fourth consecutive Finals, and faced the Spurs again. The first two games in San Antonio were split but the Heat fell to the Spurs 4–1, failing to repeat as champions for the third consecutive season.

2014–2016: Post-"Big Three" and rebuild

On July 11, 2014, LeBron James announced on Sports Illustrated 's website that after opting out of the final year of his contract, he would leave the Heat and return to the Cleveland Cavaliers.[23] Wade and Bosh stayed in Miami. Like the Cavaliers in the 2010 off-season, the Heat focused on how it would maintain itself without LeBron. Wade and Bosh were joined by returning players Mario Chalmers, Norris Cole, Udonis Haslem and Chris Andersen along with former rivals Luol Deng and Danny Granger. The Heat also drafted Shabazz Napier and James Ennis. In 2015, they also gained Goran Dragić and his younger brother Zoran Dragić.

After a season with several injuries, including to Chris Bosh and Josh McRoberts, the Heat finished with a 37–45 record, the NBA's 10th worst. They failed to make the playoffs after being Eastern Conference champions four straight years. It was the second time in Wade's career they did not qualify for the postseason. The Heat were the first team since the 2004–05 Los Angeles Lakers to miss the playoffs after going to the NBA Finals the previous year. Miami had qualified for the playoffs for six consecutive seasons.

At the 2015 NBA draft lottery, the Heat were awarded the 10th pick for the 2015 NBA draft, which was used to select Duke forward Justise Winslow.[24]

During the 2015–16 season, the Heat compiled a 48–34 regular season record; however, their season ended in the Conference Semifinals where they lost to the Toronto Raptors. The 2016 free agency was marked with relationship issues and disagreements between Dwyane Wade and Heat president Pat Riley, mostly focusing on how much Wade would get paid.[25][26]

2016–2019: Departure and return of Wade

On July 6, 2016, Wade announced that he was leaving the Heat to go join his hometown Chicago Bulls.[27]

In September 2016, Bosh failed his physical exam with the Heat and was not cleared by the team to participate in training camp.[28][29] On September 26, 2016, Heat president Riley said he viewed Bosh's career with the team as over, noting that the team was no longer working toward his return.[30] On July 4, 2017, the Heat waived Bosh a month after an NBA ruling declared his blood clotting issues a career-ending illness.[31][32] Riley immediately announced that Bosh's number would be retired in the future out of respect to him and his accomplishments with the Heat.[31] With nearly all remnants of the Big Three era gone in just two seasons, Miami went 41–41 and missed the playoffs by virtue of a tiebreaker with the Chicago Bulls.

On February 8, 2018, the Cleveland Cavaliers traded Dwyane Wade back to Miami.[33] Wade willed the Heat to a game two win against the Philadelphia 76ers in the first round of the 2018 playoffs, but the team would lose the series in five games. Wade retired after one last season with the Heat in 2018–19; Bosh and Wade's jerseys were retired in March 2019 and February 2020, respectively.

2019–present: The Jimmy Butler era

 
Jimmy Butler led the Heat during deep playoff runs in the early 2020s.

In 2019–20, Miami acquired All-Star Jimmy Butler, Andre Iguodala, and Jae Crowder, and drafted Kentucky shooting guard Tyler Herro. Following the suspension of the 2019–20 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Heat were one of 22 teams invited to participate in the NBA Bubble, completing the season behind closed doors in Orlando from July to October 2020.[34] The fifth-seeded Heat went 12–3 in the bubble playoffs to win the franchise's sixth conference championship in 15 seasons.[35] They would meet LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals, losing in six games.[36]

After a historically short 72-day off-season, the Heat struggled to find consistency in the 2020–21 season, finishing as the sixth seed. They were swept in a first-round rematch with the eventual champion Milwaukee Bucks. The 2021 off-season saw the departures of Dragić and Iguodala, along with the acquisition of veteran Kyle Lowry and P. J. Tucker.[37]

Uniforms

1988–1999 uniforms

Unveiled prior to the 1988–89 season, the original Miami Heat uniforms consist of simple striping, exclusive only on the right side of the jersey and shorts. The home uniforms were white with lettering in red, black and orange trim, while the away uniforms were black with red, white and orange trim; the numbers were white with red, black and orange trim, using the same font as the classic Los Angeles Lakers jerseys. The original 'flaming ball' logo is on the left leg of the shorts while the word 'Miami' is on the right leg.

In the 1995–96 season the Heat introduced a red alternate uniform with lettering and numbers in black, white and orange trim. The original set lasted until the 1998–99 season.

The original white and red uniforms were reintroduced as throwback uniforms during the Heat's 20th and 25th anniversary seasons, respectively, while the original black uniforms were used as throwbacks in the 2013–14 season. The classic white uniforms were used again for the 2015–16 season.

As part of Nike's uniform contract with the NBA, the so-called "Classic" edition was introduced and featured modernized throwback uniform designs from past years. During the 2017–18 season, the Heat were one of eight teams who participated in this line and wore their black 1988–99 uniforms, updated to the current Nike uniform cut. In the 2022–23 season, the Heat wore a white version of the uniforms from the same era.

1999–present uniforms

The current Heat uniforms have been in use since the 1999–2000 season. These uniforms, though similar, have marked differences such as striping on both sides, change from orange to yellow trim, updated lettering and block numbers, and a modified 'flaming ball' logo on the right leg. The black away uniform numbers are now consistent with the lettering colors (white with red trim).

The alternate red uniform was introduced during the 2001–02 season, and features the city name and numbers in white with black trim. With subtle changes like the "Miami" wordmark on the black uniforms and the addition of the "MH" alternate logo on the shorts, these uniforms remain in use with the Heat today.

Following the switch to Nike as the uniform provider in the 2017–18 season, the Heat's current uniforms now fall under three categories. The white uniforms are part of the "Association" line, the black uniforms are on the "Icon" line and the red uniforms are assigned to the "Statement" line. All three uniforms are now used regardless of home or away games.

Special uniforms

Since the 2007–08 season, the Heat participated in the NBA's Noche Latina promotions, or Latin Nights. From 2008 to 2014, the Heat wore a modified version of their black uniforms, featuring the wordmark "El Heat"; a sleeved version was used in 2014. For the 2014–15 season, the Heat wore their white uniforms with the "El Heat" wordmark, followed by the Noche Latina version of their red alternates in the 2015–16 season.

The Heat wore a variation of their current home uniforms on the opening night of the 2012–13 season, with gold accents and a patch of the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy on the right chest. They used another variation on opening night of the 2013–14 season, this time with gold lettering.

During the 2013–14 season, the Heat wore a variation of their current home uniforms, but with the player's names at the back replaced by their nicknames (e.g. 'King James' for LeBron James). They wore the uniforms for select home games that season.

From 2012 to 2014, the Heat wore special monochrome uniforms: an all-black ensemble in the 2011–12 season, an all-white version in the 2012–13 season, and an all-red attire in the 2013–14 season. In 2015, a variation of their all-black uniforms, featuring drop shadows, centered numbers and heavy striping inspired from a tuxedo, was used, followed by a similarly designed white uniform in the 2016–17 season.

The 2015–16 season saw the unveiling of two special uniforms. One featured a blend of modern and classic styles (Heat Legacy), while the other is a military-inspired uniform (Home Strong).

The Heat also participated in the Christmas Day games wearing special uniforms. In 2012, they wore monochrome red uniforms known as "Big Color." The following year, they wore their "Big Logo" sleeved uniforms, featuring a chrome-treated version of their "flaming ball" logo. In 2014, the Heat wore a variation of their home uniform, featuring their primary logo and centered numbers in front, and black nameplates with the player's first name below the number at the back.

The Heat have also honored the ABA's Miami Floridians by donning throwback uniforms; first the road jerseys in the 2005–06 season, then the home jerseys in the 2011–12 season.

In the 2017–18 season, the Heat wore special "City" uniforms (named as such by Nike to commemorate local cultures and team traditions) that paid homage to the hit 1980s TV series Miami Vice. The uniforms were white with pink, light blue and black trim and featured the "Miami" wordmark inspired from the logo of the Miami Arena.[38] For the 2018–19 season, the Heat released black versions of the Miami Vice uniforms. In addition, a pink version of the uniform was unveiled as part of Nike's "Earned" series which were exclusive only to the 16 teams that qualified in the 2018 NBA playoffs. A light blue version of the uniforms was used in the 2019–20 season. The Vice theme continued with the 2020–21 "City" uniform, this time featuring a pink and blue gradient and black letters.

In the 2021–22 season, the Heat wore special "City" uniforms that mixed various uniform styles used by the team. The black-based uniform featured a mix of lettering taken from the Heat's previous and current uniform sets, including the throwback Floridians and Miami Vice "City" set. Players were allowed to choose their own number styles. A white version of this uniform served as its 2022–23 "City" uniform.

Miami's 2021 "Earned" uniform (rewarded after making the 2020 NBA playoffs) marked the first time the team used yellow as a base color; previously it was only utilized as an accent color on the logo and uniforms. Letters were rendered in black with white trim, but red was not used at all in the uniform.

Rivalries

New York Knicks

The rivalry between the New York Knicks and the expansion Miami Heat was a result of their four consecutive playoff series from 1997 to 2000. Each series went seven games. The rivalry's central figure was Pat Riley, the head coach of both teams (the early 1990s for the Knicks and the late 1990s for the Heat). Jeff Van Gundy took over Riley's stint as head coach of the Knicks, while his elder brother Stan Van Gundy was simultaneously an assistant coach for the Heat. Patrick Ewing and Alonzo Mourning had been friends from their Georgetown college basketball period. Larry Johnson, one of the Knicks, held bad blood with Mourning as far back as their days in the Charlotte Hornets.

Chicago Bulls

The rivalry with the Chicago Bulls began once the Miami Heat became contenders during the 1990s, a decade dominated by the Bulls and Michael Jordan. During that period, the Heat were eliminated three times by the Bulls, who would go on to win the NBA championship each time. After Jordan retired and the Heat's fall in the early 2000s, the rivalry cooled but slightly picked up when the Heat faced them in the first round of the 2006 NBA playoffs, which ended in a 4–2 Heat series victory and went on to win the NBA Finals. The Bulls would sweep the defending champion Heat in the first round the next season.

The rivalry has intensified with the resurgence of the Bulls, and the emergence of Derrick Rose and the Heat re-signing Dwyane Wade (who turned down a chance of joining his hometown Bulls) with newly acquired superstars in Chris Bosh and LeBron James (who spurned a chance of teaming up with Rose in Chicago). The revived rivalry has been very physical, involving rough plays and hard fouls between players. Both teams met in the 2011 Eastern Conference Finals, with the Heat winning in five games.

The Bulls ended the Heat's record-setting 27 game win streak on March 27, 2013, with a 101–97 victory at the United Center in Chicago.[39] Despite playing without Derrick Rose, Joakim Noah, Richard "Rip" Hamilton, and Marco Belinelli, the Bulls managed to end the second longest win streak in basketball history.[40]

The rivalry would continue into the 2013 NBA playoffs when the Heat would play the Bulls in the second round. The Bulls ended another Miami Heat winning streak by beating the Heat 93–87 in Game 1. The Heat came back in Game 2 and set a record for the largest margin of victory in franchise playoff history with a 115–78 win. The Bulls also set a record for the worst playoff defeat in franchise history. The 51 personal fouls were the most in a playoff game since 1995. In Game 3, Nazr Mohammed was ejected for shoving LeBron James early in the second quarter. Norris Cole had his jersey ripped by Taj Gibson while driving to the basket for a layup. Joakim Noah was seen applauding and cheering on the image of Chris Bosh arguing with Mario Chalmers. Noah received a technical foul for shoving Chris Andersen after he fell on Nate Robinson. Chalmers received a flagrant foul for ringing his arm around Noah's neck. Taj Gibson and Noah were both ejected in the same game for yelling at the referees.

Orlando Magic

The Orlando Magic and the Miami Heat had a rivalry because both teams are located in Florida, thus the rivalry was known as the Sunshine State rivalry. Another ingredient to the rivalry was the high-caliber players on both teams such as Orlando's Shaquille O'Neal and Penny Hardaway to Miami's Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway. The two had met each other in the NBA playoffs for the first time in 1997, with Miami beating Orlando 3–2, they have not met in the playoffs since.

The rivalry intensified with the rising stardom of Miami's and Orlando's Dwyane Wade and Dwight Howard, along with Miami's acquiring high-caliber stars such LeBron James from the Cleveland Cavaliers and Chris Bosh from the Toronto Raptors and in 2010, resulting in fierce competition between the two.

When Dwight Howard departed from the Magic to the Los Angeles Lakers in August 2012, the rivalry softened. The Orlando Magic are undergoing a process of rebuilding, however, competition still remains tense.

Boston Celtics

The two teams first squared off in the playoffs in 2010, with the Celtics defeating the Heat four games to one en route to an eventual NBA Finals appearance by the Celtics. Having suffered first-round losses in three straight years, it was the loss to the Celtics that prompted Dwyane Wade to declare that the loss would be "my last" in the first round for the near future.

LeBron James' own enmity with the Boston Celtics can be found as far back as his first stint with the Cleveland Cavaliers, where the Celtics upset the Cavaliers in 2008 and 2010. Among the two Heat stars, Wade went as far as to say that he personally hates the Celtics, with James' own disdain for Boston manifesting in how he referred to the Celtics exclusively as "that team" in 2011. With the acquisition of both James and Chris Bosh in 2010, the Heat challenged the Celtics for dominance in the Eastern Conference; James claimed that the formation of the Heat's Big 3 was to mirror the formation of the Celtics' Big 3 in Paul Pierce, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett. After dropping the first three games versus the Celtics in the regular season, Miami prevailed in their fourth encounter, taking the 2nd seed from the Celtics and gaining home-court advantage for their eventual match-up of the postseason. The teams met in the Eastern Conference Semifinals of the 2011 NBA playoffs, where Paul Pierce was ejected in Game 1, Dwyane Wade inadvertently broke Rajon Rondo's arm in Game 3 and James scored the final ten points in the deciding Game 5. James could be found roaring to the fans as the Celtics' end came, even kneeling to the ground in relief after finally defeating the Celtics. The rivalry would continue in the following season, where the Heat again took home-court advantage over the Celtics, though Boston again won the season series over the Heat. Despite the loss of Bosh to injury in the semifinals, the Heat took a 2–0 lead before the Celtics won the next three games; the first five games included two overtimes, Rondo's 44 point performance in Game 2, as well as Pierce and James fouling out in Game 4. James' 45 point performance in Game 6 at Boston forced a deciding seventh game, where the two teams traded blows deep into the third and fourth quarters, before Miami pulled away with a 4–3 victory en route to the NBA Finals.

In the off-season, the Celtics' Big 3 was broken up following Ray Allen's joining of the Heat. When asked about their immediate reactions to their teammate leaving for their rival, Kevin Garnett claimed that he deleted Allen's phone number, while Paul Pierce admitted that it "hurt", though he still considers Allen "a brother to me" for their 2008 championship run. Although the two teams would not meet in the playoffs, the animosity continued in their four regular-season games. The season opener – a Heat victory – included Rondo clotheslining Wade's neck, Garnett snubbing a handshake from Allen pre-game, and Garnett throwing an elbow at Mario Chalmers. During Miami's 2013 streak, Paul Pierce went on record to say that he wished for Miami to lose all of its remaining games by that point. When James voiced his displeasure over the Chicago Bulls' physicality against him, Boston's general manager Danny Ainge called it "embarrassing" for LeBron to complain about it. Pat Riley, the Heat team president, retorted that "Danny should shut the fuck up." The teams met during the streak, where it was five years to the day that the Celtics' stopped the Houston Rockets' own 20+-game winning streak. It ended in a Heat victory, one that featured James dunking on Jason Terry; he received a technical foul for staring down at Terry post-dunk. When asked about it after the game by reporters, James stated that he was "glad it happened to him."

Indiana Pacers

A recent rivalry was triggered with the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference semifinals of the 2012 NBA playoffs. Although the two previously met in the 2004 NBA playoffs (when Indiana won 4–2), as of 2014, the only player still left from either team is Udonis Haslem of the Heat. Both head coaches were fined for statements made relating to the officiating: Frank Vogel accused the Heat of flopping before the series started, while Erik Spoelstra took offense to what he perceived to be deliberate head-hunting of his players on the part of the Pacers. Indiana took a 2–1 lead after Miami's Chris Bosh was sidelined with an abdominal strain. Powered by LeBron James and Dwyane Wade, Miami won three straight games to take the series, 4–2. The series was marked by several suspensions, flagrant fouls, and confrontations between the players: Tyler Hansbrough's flagrant foul on Dwyane Wade (which drew blood), Udonis Haslem's retaliatory flagrant foul on Hansborough (which led to Haslem's Game 6 suspension), Wade colliding with Darren Collison in transition, Juwan Howard confronting Lance Stephenson over the latter's flashing of the choke sign to James, and Dexter Pittman elbowing Stephenson in the neck (which led to his own three-game suspension). Indiana's Danny Granger received technical fouls in three consecutive games for his confrontations with Heat players; he stripped James of his headband in Game 2 while attempting to block a shot, pulled the back of James' jersey in Game 3 while trying to stop a fast-break, and chest-bumped Wade in Game 4 after the latter was fouled by Roy Hibbert.

The following season saw improvements for both teams, from Miami's acquisition of Ray Allen and Chris Andersen, to the emergence of Paul George and Lance Stephenson. Notably, it was after the Heat lost to the Pacers that they compiled a 27-game winning streak; the last time the Heat lost two in a row in the year were the games against Indiana and Portland. During the waning minutes of Game 6 in the semifinals between the Pacers and the New York Knicks, the Pacers' fans were chanting "Beat the Heat" as their team beat their old New York rivals. True to form, the Heat and the Pacers met in the Conference Finals of the 2013 NBA playoffs on May 22, 2013. Several instances of physicality became prominent in the series: Shane Battier received an offensive foul for throwing his knee at Hibbert's midsection; Hibbert claimed that it was an intentional dirty play on the part of Battier. Andersen suffered a bloodied nose after colliding with David West. Ian Mahinmi received a retroactive flagrant foul for a grab of James' arm. Norris Cole latched a hand on West's groin area as he tried to slip through West. Wade received a retroactive flagrant foul for hitting Stephenson in the head, another incident that the Pacers, notably Paul George, felt was a dirty play. The Heat survived Game 1 on a James game-winning layup, while the Pacers came back to tie the series at 1–1 after forcing James into two late fourth-quarter turnovers for Game 2. In Game 3, the Heat set a team record for points in a postseason half with 70. It was the first time the Pacers had given up 70 points since 1992. Allen's single turnover was the least ever suffered by the Heat in a first half. Their five total turnovers is tied for the fewest in franchise history. The Game 3 victory marked the first time that an NBA team had won five straight road games by double digits. The Heat won the series 4–3, with a 99–76 win in Game 7.[41] In the 2014 NBA playoffs, after beating the Brooklyn Nets in five games, and the Pacers beating the Washington Wizards in six games, the Heat and the first-seeded Pacers would meet up in the Eastern Conference Finals in a much-anticipated rematch. The Heat would go on to eliminate the Pacers 4–2, advancing to their fourth consecutive NBA Finals in the Big Three-era. The Heat stumbled during Game 1 in Indianapolis, falling 96–107. They would win Games 2–4. During Game 5 (which Miami lost 90–93), James struggled, suffering heavy foul trouble and scoring only 7 points, his lowest playoff record. During Game 6 in Miami, the Heat would blow out the Pacers 117–92.

Dallas Mavericks

The Heat–Mavericks rivalry began in the 2006 NBA Finals, where the two teams met and both entering their first NBA Finals appearance. A year prior, the Heat had acquired Shaquille O'Neal. The Mavericks were led by Dirk Nowitzki, and the Heat were led by Dwyane Wade. Dallas had home-court advantage in the series due to a better regular-season record (60–22) than Miami's (52–30) and took the first two games in the series, entering Game 3 with a commanding 2–0 lead. They looked set to win Game 3 until a rally by the Heat, including many free throws from Wade, resulted in the Mavericks losing the third game. The Heat won all of its home games, as the Mavericks dropped games 3, 4 and 5. In a highly controversial Game 5, a 101–100 victory for the Heat, Wade shot more free throws than the entire Mavericks team. Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, as well as Nowitzki, were both fined for acts of misconduct. During Game 6, the series returned to Dallas, where the Mavericks fell 92–95. Jason Terry airballed a three-point attempt that could have tied the game. Wade picked up the ball, throwing it in the air in celebration as the Heat won the NBA Championship, and its first one as well. Wade was named the Finals MVP.

In the 2010 off-season, Miami acquired LeBron James from the Cleveland Cavaliers and Chris Bosh from the Toronto Raptors to team up with Wade and form their own "big three" (to rival the Celtics' big three) that was expected to win the championship. The Heat finished 58–24, acquiring the southeast division title and the second seed in the Eastern Conference. During the regular season, the Mavericks swept the Heat 2–0. The Heat cruised through the Playoffs without much competition, eliminating every team – the Philadelphia 76ers, defending Eastern Conference champions Boston Celtics and the top-seeded Chicago Bulls all five games. Meanwhile, the Mavericks had tallied 57–25 for the third seed, leaving them to face the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round. The Mavericks had been defeated in the first round all but one time since the 2006 Finals, including a defeat from the seventh-seeded San Antonio Spurs just the previous season. Because of this, the Mavericks were underdogs throughout the playoffs, but they were able to dispatch Portland in six games. They faced the defending NBA champions Los Angeles Lakers and pulled off the impossible by sweeping them, ending their bid for a three-peat. In the Conference Finals, they defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder, resulting a rematch between the two teams. After taking a 2–1 lead however, the Heat stumbled in the next three games. They were eliminated on their own home floor after losing 95–105 during Game 6 in Miami – extending LeBron's quest for a ring. The loss had also brought further public humiliation for LeBron James, who had been scrutinized and negatively criticized for leaving the Cavaliers to join the Heat. LeBron was criticized for only averaging 17.8 points. Cavaliers fans rejoiced in the Heat's loss due to the anger that was caused by LeBron's decision to join the Heat, which they felt was unfair and a betrayal.

After that, the Mavericks would never win another game against the Heat. Dallas hosted the Heat for the season opener on December 25, 2011, of the lockout-shortened 2011–12 season that was shortened to 66 games. The Heat spoiled the Mavericks' championship banner-raising night, giving them a 105–94 blowout loss.

Although the Heat and the Mavericks have not met in the postseason ever since, the rivalry continued as Mark Cuban publicly discussed his extreme personal dislike for the Heat. He described "hate" was not being strong enough of a word to describe his dislike for the Heat.[42] He also had a personal dislike for Wade.

Season-by-season record

List of the last five seasons completed by the Heat. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Miami Heat seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, W–L% = Winning percentage

Season GP W L W–L% Finish Playoffs
2017–18 82 44 38 .537 1st, Southeast Lost in First Round, 1–4 (76ers)
2018–19 82 39 43 .476 3rd, Southeast Did not qualify
2019–20 73 44 29 .603 1st, Southeast Lost in NBA Finals, 2–4 (Lakers)
2020–21 72 40 32 .556 2nd, Southeast Lost in First Round, 0–4 (Bucks)
2021–22 82 53 29 .646 1st, Southeast Lost in Conference Finals, 3–4 (Celtics)

Home arenas

Duration Arena
November 5, 1988December 28, 1999 Miami Arena
January 2, 2000–present Kaseya Center

Radio and television

The Heat's flagship radio stations are WAXY (790 AM) in English,[43] with Mike Inglis, former Heat coach Ron Rothstein, and former WNBA player Ruth Riley calling games, and WQBA (1140 AM) in Spanish, with Jose Pañeda and Joe Pujala on the call.[44]

The Heat games are televised primarily by Bally Sports Sun with Eric Reid and John Crotty. Reid has been part of the Heat's broadcasting team since the beginning of the franchise, first serving as a color analyst, and later becoming the lead play-by-play voice starting in the 1991–92 season. For the first four years of the franchise, there were radio-television simulcasts of locally broadcast games before the franchise eventually created separate broadcast teams.

WBFS-TV (channel 33) was the original over-the-air flagship station for Heat games, with its first stint concluding at the end of the 1998–99 season, after 11 seasons. WAMI-TV (channel 69) took over the following season; however, WBFS (along with now-sister station WFOR channel 4) returned as the Heat's primary over-the-air home in 2000–01, this time lasting until the 2003–04 season. On the cable side, Heat games were televised on then-SportsChannel Florida (now Bally Sports Florida), before moving to then-Sunshine Network (later Sun Sports and Fox Sports Sun, now Bally Sports Sun) starting in the 1992–93 season. Since 2004–05, Sun Sports have served as the exclusive regional carrier of Heat games throughout the team's designated broadcast territory, which includes the metropolitan areas of Miami–Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach–Fort Pierce–Port St. Lucie, and Fort Myers–Naples.

On a national scale, games are occasionally televised by TNT, ESPN, or ABC.

From 1988 to 1993, the Heat were on WQAM. WINZ previously aired games from 1993 to 1996 and WIOD did from 1996 to 2008.

Players

Current roster

Players Coaches
Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY-MM-DD) From
F/C 13 Adebayo, Bam 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 255 lb (116 kg) 1997-07-18 Kentucky
F 22 Butler, Jimmy 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 230 lb (104 kg) 1989-09-14 Marquette
F 8 Cain, Jamal (TW) 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 191 lb (87 kg) 1999-03-20 Oakland
F 40 Haslem, Udonis 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 1980-06-09 Florida
G 14 Herro, Tyler 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2000-01-20 Kentucky
F 24 Highsmith, Haywood 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1996-12-09 Wheeling
F 5 Jović, Nikola   6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 2003-06-09 Serbia
F 42 Love, Kevin 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 251 lb (114 kg) 1988-09-07 UCLA
G 7 Lowry, Kyle 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 196 lb (89 kg) 1986-03-25 Villanova
F 16 Martin, Caleb 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1995-09-28 Nevada
G 4 Oladipo, Victor 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 213 lb (97 kg) 1992-05-04 Indiana
F 55 Robinson, Duncan 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1994-04-22 Michigan
F/C 25 Robinson, Orlando (TW) 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 2000-07-10 Fresno State
G/F 31 Strus, Max 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1996-03-28 DePaul
G 2 Vincent, Gabe 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1996-06-14 UC Santa Barbara
C 77 Yurtseven, Ömer 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 275 lb (125 kg) 1998-06-19 Georgetown
C 44 Zeller, Cody 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 1992-10-05 Indiana
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) On assignment to G League affiliate
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  •   Injured

Roster
Last transaction: March 18, 2023

Retained draft rights

The Heat hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA. A drafted player, either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him, is allowed to sign with any non-NBA teams. In this case, the team retains the player's draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player's contract with the non-NBA team ends.[45] This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams.

Draft Round Pick Player Pos. Nationality Current team Note(s) Ref

Basketball Hall of Famers

Miami Heat Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
20 Gary Payton G 2005–2007 2013
33 Alonzo Mourning C/F 1995–2003
2005–2008
2014
32 Shaquille O'Neal C 2004–2008 2016
34 Ray Allen G 2012–2014 2018
1 Chris Bosh F 2010–2017 2021
10 Tim Hardaway G 1996–2001 2022
3 Dwyane Wade G 2003–2016
2018–2019
2023
Coaches
Name Position Tenure Inducted
Pat Riley Head coach 1995–2003
2005–2008
2008

FIBA Hall of Famers

Miami Heat Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
32 Shaquille O'Neal C 2004–2008 2017
33 Alonzo Mourning C/F 1995–2003
2005–2008
2019

Retired numbers

The Heat have retired six numbers, although only five of the players played for the franchise. Michael Jordan was the first player to be honored despite not having played for the Heat. Pat Riley retired Jordan's signature No. 23 before his final game in Miami during the 2002–03 season as a tribute to his career.[46]

During the 2005–06 season the organization honored Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino's No. 13 in respect of his contributions to the National Football League (NFL)'s Miami Dolphins.[47] However, the No. 13 jersey is not retired and is still available for use by the Heat players.

The NBA retired Bill Russell's No. 6 for all its member teams on August 11, 2022.[48][49]

Miami Heat retired numbers
No. Player Position Tenure Date
1 Chris Bosh F 2010–2017 March 26, 2019[50][51]
3 Dwyane Wade G 2003–2016
2018–2019
February 22, 2020[52]
10 Tim Hardaway G 1996–2001 October 28, 2009[53][54]
23 Michael Jordan G April 11, 2003[55]
32 Shaquille O'Neal C 2004–2008 December 22, 2016[56]
33 Alonzo Mourning C 1995–2003
2005–2008
March 30, 2009[57]

Head coaches

There have been six head coaches for the Miami Heat. Ron Rothstein was the franchise's first head coach, serving from 1988 through 1991; he remains as assistant coach. Kevin Loughery was his successor from 1991 to 1995, guiding the Heat to their first two playoff berths in 1992 and 1994. Loughery was fired 46 games into the 1994–95 season, posting a 17–29 record. Alvin Gentry, an assistant coach who joined in 1991, was brought in to replace Loughery on an interim basis. Miami went 15–21 for the final 36 games, and Gentry moved to the Detroit Pistons the following season.

In the summer of 1995, owner Micky Arison hired Pat Riley as the head coach and team president. At eleven years, Riley is the longest-tenured head coach in the franchise's history, as well its all-time leader in total wins and games coached. Upon suffering a 25–57 record in the 2002–03 season, Riley abruptly announced his retirement, but remained as team president. He elevated assistant coach Stan Van Gundy as his replacement. Van Gundy is Miami's all-time leader for the highest winning percentage in the regular season (.605), having led Miami to a 42–40 record in his first season and a 59–23 record in his second year. He spearheaded Miami's 2005 campaign, where they held the top seed in the east, swept their first two playoff opponents and made it to the Conference Finals.

An 11–10 record early into the 2005–06 season prompted Riley to come out of retirement and replace Van Gundy. Shortly thereafter, Riley would win his fifth and final championship as a head coach, as well as Miami's first championship in 2006. Riley would retire permanently following the 15-win 2007–08 season, but once again remained as team president. His hand-picked replacement, longtime assistant Erik Spoelstra, is the current Heat head coach, a position he has held since 2008. At 38, he was the youngest head coach in the league at the time, as well as the first Filipino-American head coach in league history. Spoelstra led the team to four consecutive appearances in the NBA Finals, culminating in back-to-back championships in 2012 and 2013.

Franchise accomplishments and awards

Franchise leaders

Bold denotes still active with team.

Italic denotes still active but not with team. Points scored (regular season) (as of the end of the 2020–21 season)[58]

  1. Dwyane Wade (21,556)
  2. Alonzo Mourning (9,459)
  3. Glen Rice (9,248)
  4. LeBron James (7,919)
  5. Chris Bosh (6,914)
  6. Rony Seikaly (6,742)
  7. Udonis Haslem (6,559)
  8. Goran Dragić (6,348)
  9. Tim Hardaway (6,335)
  10. Eddie Jones (6,194)
  11. Grant Long (5,473)
  12. Mario Chalmers (4,641)
  13. Bam Adebayo (4,617)
  14. Hassan Whiteside (4,554)
  15. Kevin Edwards (4,362)
  16. Bimbo Coles (4,031)
  17. Shaquille O'Neal (4,010)
  18. Jimmy Butler (3,492)
  19. Brian Grant (3,433)
  20. Josh Richardson (3,134)

Other statistics (regular season) (as of the end of the 2019–20 season)[58]

Most minutes played
Player Minutes
Dwyane Wade 32,912
Udonis Haslem 21,648
Alonzo Mourning 17,700
Glen Rice 17,059
Grant Long 14,859
Most rebounds
Player Rebounds
Udonis Haslem 5,780
Alonzo Mourning 4,807
Rony Seikaly 4,544
Dwyane Wade 4,482
Hassan Whiteside 3,870
Most assists
Player Assists
Dwyane Wade 5,009
Tim Hardaway 2,867
Mario Chalmers 2,004
LeBron James 1,980
Bimbo Coles 1,961
Most steals
Player Steals
Dwyane Wade 1,433
Mario Chalmers 791
Grant Long 666
Glen Rice 572
Kevin Edwards 560
Most blocks
Player Blocks
Alonzo Mourning 1,625
Dwyane Wade 812
Hassan Whiteside 783
Rony Seikaly 610
Joel Anthony 456

Individual awards

All-NBA First Team

All-NBA Second Team

All-NBA Third Team

NBA All-Defensive First Team

NBA All-Defensive Second Team

NBA All-Star Weekend

References

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External links

  • Official website  

miami, heat, american, professional, basketball, team, based, miami, heat, compete, national, basketball, association, member, league, eastern, conference, southeast, division, club, plays, home, games, kaseya, center, three, championships, 2022, seasonconfere. The Miami Heat are an American professional basketball team based in Miami The Heat compete in the National Basketball Association NBA as a member of the league s Eastern Conference Southeast Division The club plays its home games at Kaseya Center and has won three NBA championships Miami Heat2022 23 Miami Heat seasonConferenceEasternDivisionSoutheastFounded1988HistoryMiami Heat1988 present 1 2 ArenaKaseya CenterLocationMiami FloridaTeam colorsBlack red yellow 3 4 5 Main sponsorUltimate Kronos Group 6 PresidentPat RileyGeneral managerAndy Elisburg 7 Head coachErik SpoelstraOwnershipMicky ArisonAffiliation s Sioux Falls SkyforceChampionships3 2006 2012 2013 Conference titles6 2006 2011 2012 2013 2014 2020 Division titles15 1997 1998 1999 2000 2005 2006 2007 2011 2012 2013 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022 Retired numbers6 1 3 10 23 32 33 Websitewww wbr nba wbr com wbr heatAssociationIconStatementCityThe franchise began play in the 1988 89 season as an expansion team After a period of mediocrity the Heat gained relevance in the mid 1990s when Pat Riley became team president and head coach Riley constructed the trades for Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway which propelled the team into playoff contention Mourning and Hardaway led the Heat to four consecutive division titles prior to their departures in 2001 and 2002 respectively The team also experienced success after drafting Dwyane Wade in 2003 Led by Wade and following a trade for former NBA Most Valuable Player MVP Shaquille O Neal the Heat won their first NBA title in 2006 after Riley named himself head coach for a second stint After the departure of O Neal two years later the team struggled for the remainder of the 2000s Riley remained team president but was replaced as head coach by Erik Spoelstra In 2010 the Heat signed reigning league MVP LeBron James and NBA All Star Chris Bosh creating the Big Three along with Wade During their four years together Spoelstra James Wade and Bosh led the Heat to the NBA Finals in every season culminating in back to back championships in 2012 and 2013 All three departed by 2016 and the team entered a period of rebuilding After acquiring All Star Jimmy Butler in 2019 the Heat returned to the NBA Finals in 2020 The Heat acquired six time NBA All Star Kyle Lowry in 2021 The Heat hold the record for the NBA s third longest winning streak 27 straight games set during the 2012 13 season Six Hall of Famers have played for Miami and James won two consecutive NBA MVP Awards while playing for the team Contents 1 Franchise history 1 1 1987 1995 Early years in Miami 1 2 1995 2003 Title hopefuls 1 3 2003 2016 The Dwyane Wade era 1 3 1 2005 2006 Championship season 1 3 2 2006 2010 Post championship struggles 1 3 3 2010 2014 The Big Three era 1 3 4 2014 2016 Post Big Three and rebuild 1 4 2016 2019 Departure and return of Wade 1 5 2019 present The Jimmy Butler era 2 Uniforms 2 1 1988 1999 uniforms 2 2 1999 present uniforms 2 3 Special uniforms 3 Rivalries 3 1 New York Knicks 3 2 Chicago Bulls 3 3 Orlando Magic 3 4 Boston Celtics 3 5 Indiana Pacers 3 6 Dallas Mavericks 4 Season by season record 5 Home arenas 6 Radio and television 7 Players 7 1 Current roster 7 2 Retained draft rights 7 3 Basketball Hall of Famers 7 4 FIBA Hall of Famers 7 5 Retired numbers 8 Head coaches 9 Franchise accomplishments and awards 9 1 Franchise leaders 9 2 Individual awards 9 3 NBA All Star Weekend 10 References 11 External linksFranchise historyMain article History of the Miami Heat Further information Miami Heat accomplishments and records 1987 1995 Early years in Miami In 1987 the NBA granted one of four new expansion teams to Miami the others being the Orlando Magic Charlotte Hornets and the Minnesota Timberwolves the team known as the Heat began play in November 1988 The Miami Heat began their early years with much mediocrity only making the playoffs twice in their first eight years and falling in the first round both times Miami had previously been home to the Miami Floridians of the American Basketball Association ABA from 1968 to 1972 8 1995 2003 Title hopefuls Tim Hardaway and Alonzo Mourning helped make the Heat serious contenders in the eastern conference in the late 1990s Upon the purchasing of the franchise by Carnival Cruise Lines chairman Micky Arison in 1995 Pat Riley was brought in as the team president and head coach Riley acquired center Alonzo Mourning and point guard Tim Hardaway to serve as the centerpieces for the team transforming Miami into a championship contender throughout the late 1990s With them they also brought in a new team trainer Cody Posselt to work on shooting The Heat underwent a dramatic turnaround in the 1996 97 season improving to a 61 21 record a franchise record at the time and currently second best in team history That same year Miami earned the moniker of Road Warriors for its remarkable 32 9 record on the road On the backs of Hardaway and Mourning the Heat achieved their first two series victories in the playoffs making it to the Conference Finals against the Michael Jordan led Chicago Bulls before losing in five games Their biggest rivals of the time were the New York Knicks Riley s former team who would eliminate the Heat in the playoffs from 1998 through 2000 A period of mediocrity followed after highlighted by missing the playoffs in 2002 and 2003 2003 2016 The Dwyane Wade era In the 2003 NBA draft with the fifth overall pick Miami selected shooting guard Dwyane Wade out of Marquette 9 Free agent swing man Lamar Odom was signed from the Los Angeles Clippers Just prior to the start of the 2003 04 season Riley stepped down as head coach to focus on rebuilding the Heat promoting Stan Van Gundy to the position of head coach Behind Van Gundy s leadership Wade s stellar rookie year and Odom s break out season the Heat made the 2004 NBA playoffs beating the New Orleans Hornets 4 3 in the 1st round and losing to the Indiana Pacers 4 2 in the 2nd round In the off season Riley engineered a summer blockbuster trade for Shaquille O Neal from the Los Angeles Lakers 10 Alonzo Mourning returned to the Heat in the same season serving as a backup to O Neal Returning as championship contenders Miami finished with a 59 23 record consequently garnering the first overall seed in the Eastern Conference Sweeping through the first round and the semifinals Miami went back to the Conference Finals for the first time in eight years where it met the defending champion Detroit Pistons Despite taking a 3 2 lead Miami lost Wade to injury for Game 6 The Heat would go on to lose Game 7 at home despite Wade s return 2005 2006 Championship season Shaquille O Neal and Dwyane Wade brought the Heat their first NBA Championship in 2006 In the summer of 2005 Riley brought in veteran free agent Gary Payton from the Boston Celtics and also brought in James Posey Jason Williams and Antoine Walker via trades 11 After a disappointing 11 10 start to the 2005 06 season Riley relieved Van Gundy of his duties and took back the head coaching job 12 The Heat made it to the Conference Finals in 2006 and in a re match defeated the Pistons winning the series 4 2 Making its first NBA Finals appearance they played the Dallas Mavericks who won the first two games in Dallas in routs The Heat then won the next four games capturing its first ever championship Wade won the Finals MVP award 13 2006 2010 Post championship struggles The Heat experienced four years of post title struggles from 2007 through 2010 including a 4 0 sweep by the Chicago Bulls in the 1st round of the 2007 NBA playoffs In the 2007 08 season Wade was plagued by injuries and the Heat had a league worst 15 67 record O Neal was traded to Phoenix midway through the season Riley resigned as head coach following the season but retained his position as team president Long time assistant Erik Spoelstra was promoted to head coach A healthy Wade led the Heat to 43 wins in 2009 and 47 wins in 2010 making the playoffs both seasons though they lost in the first round 4 3 in 2009 and 4 1 in 2010 Wade was the scoring champion in 2009 and the NBA All Star MVP in 2010 2010 2014 The Big Three era Main article Big Three Miami Heat The Big Three of LeBron James Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh lead the Heat to four consecutive Finals appearances and two NBA Championships Entering the 2010 11 season with nearly 48 million in salary cap space the Heat caused a major power shift during the blockbuster 2010 free agency adding Chris Bosh and LeBron James starting the Big 3 era 14 15 However the Heat got off to a 9 8 start After a players only meeting the team improved The Heat finished with a 58 24 record and the 2nd seed In the much anticipated 2011 NBA playoffs Miami defeated the Philadelphia 76ers in the first round Boston Celtics in the Conference Semifinals and Bulls in the Conference Finals all in 5 games The Heat reached the 2011 NBA Finals for the first time since 2006 in a rematch against the Dallas Mavericks After taking a 2 1 series lead the Heat lost the final three games to the Mavericks After the second NBA Lockout ended the Heat signed veteran Shane Battier In the shortened 2011 12 season the Heat started 27 7 However they would struggle for the second half of the season going 19 13 The Heat finished 46 20 earning the second seed in the East for the NBA playoffs Entering the first round they took a 3 0 lead against the New York Knicks but like their previous series with the Sixers were not able to close them out in Game 4 A victory in Game 5 ultimately defeated New York and the Heat advanced to the second round versus the Indiana Pacers After losing Game 2 at home and Game 3 at Indiana many criticized Dwyane Wade s lackluster performance in Game 3 bringing attention to the fact that he got into a verbal argument with Spoelstra citation needed However with Wade visiting his former college coach the team defeated the Pacers in the next three games to close out the Pacers They met the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals taking the first two games before losing the next three including one home loss where Bosh returned from injury On June 7 they won on the road at Boston beating the Celtics 98 79 to tie the series 3 3 James had 45 points and 15 rebounds The deciding Game 7 was at Miami The Celtics largely dominated during the first half The second half saw several lead changes The Heat eventually won 101 88 reaching the NBA Finals for the second straight year In the much anticipated match up with the Oklahoma City Thunder the Heat split the first two games winning Game 2 on the road before sweeping the next three at home 16 James was named the Finals MVP as he won his first NBA championship 17 On July 11 2012 the Heat officially signed veterans Ray Allen to a three year contract and Rashard Lewis to a two year contract 18 The Heat would go on a 27 game winning streak between February 3 2013 and March 27 2013 19 Defeating Orlando in the season finale set the franchise record for 66 wins in a season By the end of the season the Heat won 18 of its 19 road games the best streak on the road to end a season in NBA history The Heat went 17 1 in March becoming the first team to win 17 games in a single calendar month The Heat ended with a franchise best and league best 66 16 record to take the 1st seed in the 2013 NBA playoffs They swept the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round and defeated Chicago in five games before winning against the Indiana Pacers in Game 7 Miami became the first Eastern Conference team to reach the NBA Finals in three straight years since the Chicago Bulls in the late 1990s Miami lost Game 1 of the Finals on their home floor in a close game that was decided by a last minute buzzer beater by Tony Parker The Heat went on to win Game 2 with a 33 5 run in the second half The two teams continued to trade wins leading up to Game 6 where the Spurs up 10 heading in the 4th quarter were in position to close out the series and win the championship James went on to score 16 points in the period outscoring the entire Spurs team by himself at one point The Heat went on to defeat the Spurs 95 88 in Game 7 behind a 37 point and 12 rebounds performance from James and a 23 point and 10 rebound effort from Wade 20 Shane Battier also scored 18 points behind 6 8 shooting from 3 after having a shooting slump during the postseason up to that point The Heat captured the NBA title for a second year in a row becoming the first team in the Eastern Conference to repeat as league champions since the late 1990s Chicago Bulls James was named the NBA Finals MVP becoming the fifth player to win the award back to back along with Michael Jordan Hakeem Olajuwon Shaquille O Neal and Kobe Bryant and only the second player in NBA history to win the Finals MVP and league MVP back to back along with Jordan 21 Miami struggled throughout the 2013 14 season with extended absences of Dwyane Wade who only played 54 games to injury and ended on an 11 14 record entering the playoffs They entered the playoffs as the Eastern Conference 2nd seed with a record of 54 28 team and with the Big 3 healthy They went 12 3 in the first 3 rounds They swept the Charlotte Bobcats 22 They then beat the Brooklyn Nets 4 1 They went on to play the 1st seeded 56 26 Pacers in the Conference Finals in a rematch of the previous year s Conference Finals The Pacers were eliminated from the playoffs for a third consecutive year by the Heat The Heat went to a fourth consecutive Finals and faced the Spurs again The first two games in San Antonio were split but the Heat fell to the Spurs 4 1 failing to repeat as champions for the third consecutive season 2014 2016 Post Big Three and rebuild On July 11 2014 LeBron James announced on Sports Illustrated s website that after opting out of the final year of his contract he would leave the Heat and return to the Cleveland Cavaliers 23 Wade and Bosh stayed in Miami Like the Cavaliers in the 2010 off season the Heat focused on how it would maintain itself without LeBron Wade and Bosh were joined by returning players Mario Chalmers Norris Cole Udonis Haslem and Chris Andersen along with former rivals Luol Deng and Danny Granger The Heat also drafted Shabazz Napier and James Ennis In 2015 they also gained Goran Dragic and his younger brother Zoran Dragic After a season with several injuries including to Chris Bosh and Josh McRoberts the Heat finished with a 37 45 record the NBA s 10th worst They failed to make the playoffs after being Eastern Conference champions four straight years It was the second time in Wade s career they did not qualify for the postseason The Heat were the first team since the 2004 05 Los Angeles Lakers to miss the playoffs after going to the NBA Finals the previous year Miami had qualified for the playoffs for six consecutive seasons At the 2015 NBA draft lottery the Heat were awarded the 10th pick for the 2015 NBA draft which was used to select Duke forward Justise Winslow 24 During the 2015 16 season the Heat compiled a 48 34 regular season record however their season ended in the Conference Semifinals where they lost to the Toronto Raptors The 2016 free agency was marked with relationship issues and disagreements between Dwyane Wade and Heat president Pat Riley mostly focusing on how much Wade would get paid 25 26 2016 2019 Departure and return of Wade On July 6 2016 Wade announced that he was leaving the Heat to go join his hometown Chicago Bulls 27 In September 2016 Bosh failed his physical exam with the Heat and was not cleared by the team to participate in training camp 28 29 On September 26 2016 Heat president Riley said he viewed Bosh s career with the team as over noting that the team was no longer working toward his return 30 On July 4 2017 the Heat waived Bosh a month after an NBA ruling declared his blood clotting issues a career ending illness 31 32 Riley immediately announced that Bosh s number would be retired in the future out of respect to him and his accomplishments with the Heat 31 With nearly all remnants of the Big Three era gone in just two seasons Miami went 41 41 and missed the playoffs by virtue of a tiebreaker with the Chicago Bulls On February 8 2018 the Cleveland Cavaliers traded Dwyane Wade back to Miami 33 Wade willed the Heat to a game two win against the Philadelphia 76ers in the first round of the 2018 playoffs but the team would lose the series in five games Wade retired after one last season with the Heat in 2018 19 Bosh and Wade s jerseys were retired in March 2019 and February 2020 respectively 2019 present The Jimmy Butler era Jimmy Butler led the Heat during deep playoff runs in the early 2020s In 2019 20 Miami acquired All Star Jimmy Butler Andre Iguodala and Jae Crowder and drafted Kentucky shooting guard Tyler Herro Following the suspension of the 2019 20 season due to the COVID 19 pandemic the Heat were one of 22 teams invited to participate in the NBA Bubble completing the season behind closed doors in Orlando from July to October 2020 34 The fifth seeded Heat went 12 3 in the bubble playoffs to win the franchise s sixth conference championship in 15 seasons 35 They would meet LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals losing in six games 36 After a historically short 72 day off season the Heat struggled to find consistency in the 2020 21 season finishing as the sixth seed They were swept in a first round rematch with the eventual champion Milwaukee Bucks The 2021 off season saw the departures of Dragic and Iguodala along with the acquisition of veteran Kyle Lowry and P J Tucker 37 Uniforms1988 1999 uniforms Unveiled prior to the 1988 89 season the original Miami Heat uniforms consist of simple striping exclusive only on the right side of the jersey and shorts The home uniforms were white with lettering in red black and orange trim while the away uniforms were black with red white and orange trim the numbers were white with red black and orange trim using the same font as the classic Los Angeles Lakers jerseys The original flaming ball logo is on the left leg of the shorts while the word Miami is on the right leg In the 1995 96 season the Heat introduced a red alternate uniform with lettering and numbers in black white and orange trim The original set lasted until the 1998 99 season The original white and red uniforms were reintroduced as throwback uniforms during the Heat s 20th and 25th anniversary seasons respectively while the original black uniforms were used as throwbacks in the 2013 14 season The classic white uniforms were used again for the 2015 16 season As part of Nike s uniform contract with the NBA the so called Classic edition was introduced and featured modernized throwback uniform designs from past years During the 2017 18 season the Heat were one of eight teams who participated in this line and wore their black 1988 99 uniforms updated to the current Nike uniform cut In the 2022 23 season the Heat wore a white version of the uniforms from the same era 1999 present uniforms The current Heat uniforms have been in use since the 1999 2000 season These uniforms though similar have marked differences such as striping on both sides change from orange to yellow trim updated lettering and block numbers and a modified flaming ball logo on the right leg The black away uniform numbers are now consistent with the lettering colors white with red trim The alternate red uniform was introduced during the 2001 02 season and features the city name and numbers in white with black trim With subtle changes like the Miami wordmark on the black uniforms and the addition of the MH alternate logo on the shorts these uniforms remain in use with the Heat today Following the switch to Nike as the uniform provider in the 2017 18 season the Heat s current uniforms now fall under three categories The white uniforms are part of the Association line the black uniforms are on the Icon line and the red uniforms are assigned to the Statement line All three uniforms are now used regardless of home or away games Special uniforms Since the 2007 08 season the Heat participated in the NBA s Noche Latina promotions or Latin Nights From 2008 to 2014 the Heat wore a modified version of their black uniforms featuring the wordmark El Heat a sleeved version was used in 2014 For the 2014 15 season the Heat wore their white uniforms with the El Heat wordmark followed by the Noche Latina version of their red alternates in the 2015 16 season The Heat wore a variation of their current home uniforms on the opening night of the 2012 13 season with gold accents and a patch of the Larry O Brien Championship Trophy on the right chest They used another variation on opening night of the 2013 14 season this time with gold lettering During the 2013 14 season the Heat wore a variation of their current home uniforms but with the player s names at the back replaced by their nicknames e g King James for LeBron James They wore the uniforms for select home games that season From 2012 to 2014 the Heat wore special monochrome uniforms an all black ensemble in the 2011 12 season an all white version in the 2012 13 season and an all red attire in the 2013 14 season In 2015 a variation of their all black uniforms featuring drop shadows centered numbers and heavy striping inspired from a tuxedo was used followed by a similarly designed white uniform in the 2016 17 season The 2015 16 season saw the unveiling of two special uniforms One featured a blend of modern and classic styles Heat Legacy while the other is a military inspired uniform Home Strong The Heat also participated in the Christmas Day games wearing special uniforms In 2012 they wore monochrome red uniforms known as Big Color The following year they wore their Big Logo sleeved uniforms featuring a chrome treated version of their flaming ball logo In 2014 the Heat wore a variation of their home uniform featuring their primary logo and centered numbers in front and black nameplates with the player s first name below the number at the back The Heat have also honored the ABA s Miami Floridians by donning throwback uniforms first the road jerseys in the 2005 06 season then the home jerseys in the 2011 12 season In the 2017 18 season the Heat wore special City uniforms named as such by Nike to commemorate local cultures and team traditions that paid homage to the hit 1980s TV series Miami Vice The uniforms were white with pink light blue and black trim and featured the Miami wordmark inspired from the logo of the Miami Arena 38 For the 2018 19 season the Heat released black versions of the Miami Vice uniforms In addition a pink version of the uniform was unveiled as part of Nike s Earned series which were exclusive only to the 16 teams that qualified in the 2018 NBA playoffs A light blue version of the uniforms was used in the 2019 20 season The Vice theme continued with the 2020 21 City uniform this time featuring a pink and blue gradient and black letters In the 2021 22 season the Heat wore special City uniforms that mixed various uniform styles used by the team The black based uniform featured a mix of lettering taken from the Heat s previous and current uniform sets including the throwback Floridians and Miami Vice City set Players were allowed to choose their own number styles A white version of this uniform served as its 2022 23 City uniform Miami s 2021 Earned uniform rewarded after making the 2020 NBA playoffs marked the first time the team used yellow as a base color previously it was only utilized as an accent color on the logo and uniforms Letters were rendered in black with white trim but red was not used at all in the uniform RivalriesNew York Knicks Main article Heat Knicks rivalry The rivalry between the New York Knicks and the expansion Miami Heat was a result of their four consecutive playoff series from 1997 to 2000 Each series went seven games The rivalry s central figure was Pat Riley the head coach of both teams the early 1990s for the Knicks and the late 1990s for the Heat Jeff Van Gundy took over Riley s stint as head coach of the Knicks while his elder brother Stan Van Gundy was simultaneously an assistant coach for the Heat Patrick Ewing and Alonzo Mourning had been friends from their Georgetown college basketball period Larry Johnson one of the Knicks held bad blood with Mourning as far back as their days in the Charlotte Hornets Chicago Bulls The rivalry with the Chicago Bulls began once the Miami Heat became contenders during the 1990s a decade dominated by the Bulls and Michael Jordan During that period the Heat were eliminated three times by the Bulls who would go on to win the NBA championship each time After Jordan retired and the Heat s fall in the early 2000s the rivalry cooled but slightly picked up when the Heat faced them in the first round of the 2006 NBA playoffs which ended in a 4 2 Heat series victory and went on to win the NBA Finals The Bulls would sweep the defending champion Heat in the first round the next season The rivalry has intensified with the resurgence of the Bulls and the emergence of Derrick Rose and the Heat re signing Dwyane Wade who turned down a chance of joining his hometown Bulls with newly acquired superstars in Chris Bosh and LeBron James who spurned a chance of teaming up with Rose in Chicago The revived rivalry has been very physical involving rough plays and hard fouls between players Both teams met in the 2011 Eastern Conference Finals with the Heat winning in five games The Bulls ended the Heat s record setting 27 game win streak on March 27 2013 with a 101 97 victory at the United Center in Chicago 39 Despite playing without Derrick Rose Joakim Noah Richard Rip Hamilton and Marco Belinelli the Bulls managed to end the second longest win streak in basketball history 40 The rivalry would continue into the 2013 NBA playoffs when the Heat would play the Bulls in the second round The Bulls ended another Miami Heat winning streak by beating the Heat 93 87 in Game 1 The Heat came back in Game 2 and set a record for the largest margin of victory in franchise playoff history with a 115 78 win The Bulls also set a record for the worst playoff defeat in franchise history The 51 personal fouls were the most in a playoff game since 1995 In Game 3 Nazr Mohammed was ejected for shoving LeBron James early in the second quarter Norris Cole had his jersey ripped by Taj Gibson while driving to the basket for a layup Joakim Noah was seen applauding and cheering on the image of Chris Bosh arguing with Mario Chalmers Noah received a technical foul for shoving Chris Andersen after he fell on Nate Robinson Chalmers received a flagrant foul for ringing his arm around Noah s neck Taj Gibson and Noah were both ejected in the same game for yelling at the referees Orlando Magic Main article Heat Magic rivalry The Orlando Magic and the Miami Heat had a rivalry because both teams are located in Florida thus the rivalry was known as the Sunshine State rivalry Another ingredient to the rivalry was the high caliber players on both teams such as Orlando s Shaquille O Neal and Penny Hardaway to Miami s Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway The two had met each other in the NBA playoffs for the first time in 1997 with Miami beating Orlando 3 2 they have not met in the playoffs since The rivalry intensified with the rising stardom of Miami s and Orlando s Dwyane Wade and Dwight Howard along with Miami s acquiring high caliber stars such LeBron James from the Cleveland Cavaliers and Chris Bosh from the Toronto Raptors and in 2010 resulting in fierce competition between the two When Dwight Howard departed from the Magic to the Los Angeles Lakers in August 2012 the rivalry softened The Orlando Magic are undergoing a process of rebuilding however competition still remains tense Boston Celtics The two teams first squared off in the playoffs in 2010 with the Celtics defeating the Heat four games to one en route to an eventual NBA Finals appearance by the Celtics Having suffered first round losses in three straight years it was the loss to the Celtics that prompted Dwyane Wade to declare that the loss would be my last in the first round for the near future LeBron James own enmity with the Boston Celtics can be found as far back as his first stint with the Cleveland Cavaliers where the Celtics upset the Cavaliers in 2008 and 2010 Among the two Heat stars Wade went as far as to say that he personally hates the Celtics with James own disdain for Boston manifesting in how he referred to the Celtics exclusively as that team in 2011 With the acquisition of both James and Chris Bosh in 2010 the Heat challenged the Celtics for dominance in the Eastern Conference James claimed that the formation of the Heat s Big 3 was to mirror the formation of the Celtics Big 3 in Paul Pierce Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett After dropping the first three games versus the Celtics in the regular season Miami prevailed in their fourth encounter taking the 2nd seed from the Celtics and gaining home court advantage for their eventual match up of the postseason The teams met in the Eastern Conference Semifinals of the 2011 NBA playoffs where Paul Pierce was ejected in Game 1 Dwyane Wade inadvertently broke Rajon Rondo s arm in Game 3 and James scored the final ten points in the deciding Game 5 James could be found roaring to the fans as the Celtics end came even kneeling to the ground in relief after finally defeating the Celtics The rivalry would continue in the following season where the Heat again took home court advantage over the Celtics though Boston again won the season series over the Heat Despite the loss of Bosh to injury in the semifinals the Heat took a 2 0 lead before the Celtics won the next three games the first five games included two overtimes Rondo s 44 point performance in Game 2 as well as Pierce and James fouling out in Game 4 James 45 point performance in Game 6 at Boston forced a deciding seventh game where the two teams traded blows deep into the third and fourth quarters before Miami pulled away with a 4 3 victory en route to the NBA Finals In the off season the Celtics Big 3 was broken up following Ray Allen s joining of the Heat When asked about their immediate reactions to their teammate leaving for their rival Kevin Garnett claimed that he deleted Allen s phone number while Paul Pierce admitted that it hurt though he still considers Allen a brother to me for their 2008 championship run Although the two teams would not meet in the playoffs the animosity continued in their four regular season games The season opener a Heat victory included Rondo clotheslining Wade s neck Garnett snubbing a handshake from Allen pre game and Garnett throwing an elbow at Mario Chalmers During Miami s 2013 streak Paul Pierce went on record to say that he wished for Miami to lose all of its remaining games by that point When James voiced his displeasure over the Chicago Bulls physicality against him Boston s general manager Danny Ainge called it embarrassing for LeBron to complain about it Pat Riley the Heat team president retorted that Danny should shut the fuck up The teams met during the streak where it was five years to the day that the Celtics stopped the Houston Rockets own 20 game winning streak It ended in a Heat victory one that featured James dunking on Jason Terry he received a technical foul for staring down at Terry post dunk When asked about it after the game by reporters James stated that he was glad it happened to him Indiana Pacers A recent rivalry was triggered with the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference semifinals of the 2012 NBA playoffs Although the two previously met in the 2004 NBA playoffs when Indiana won 4 2 as of 2014 the only player still left from either team is Udonis Haslem of the Heat Both head coaches were fined for statements made relating to the officiating Frank Vogel accused the Heat of flopping before the series started while Erik Spoelstra took offense to what he perceived to be deliberate head hunting of his players on the part of the Pacers Indiana took a 2 1 lead after Miami s Chris Bosh was sidelined with an abdominal strain Powered by LeBron James and Dwyane Wade Miami won three straight games to take the series 4 2 The series was marked by several suspensions flagrant fouls and confrontations between the players Tyler Hansbrough s flagrant foul on Dwyane Wade which drew blood Udonis Haslem s retaliatory flagrant foul on Hansborough which led to Haslem s Game 6 suspension Wade colliding with Darren Collison in transition Juwan Howard confronting Lance Stephenson over the latter s flashing of the choke sign to James and Dexter Pittman elbowing Stephenson in the neck which led to his own three game suspension Indiana s Danny Granger received technical fouls in three consecutive games for his confrontations with Heat players he stripped James of his headband in Game 2 while attempting to block a shot pulled the back of James jersey in Game 3 while trying to stop a fast break and chest bumped Wade in Game 4 after the latter was fouled by Roy Hibbert The following season saw improvements for both teams from Miami s acquisition of Ray Allen and Chris Andersen to the emergence of Paul George and Lance Stephenson Notably it was after the Heat lost to the Pacers that they compiled a 27 game winning streak the last time the Heat lost two in a row in the year were the games against Indiana and Portland During the waning minutes of Game 6 in the semifinals between the Pacers and the New York Knicks the Pacers fans were chanting Beat the Heat as their team beat their old New York rivals True to form the Heat and the Pacers met in the Conference Finals of the 2013 NBA playoffs on May 22 2013 Several instances of physicality became prominent in the series Shane Battier received an offensive foul for throwing his knee at Hibbert s midsection Hibbert claimed that it was an intentional dirty play on the part of Battier Andersen suffered a bloodied nose after colliding with David West Ian Mahinmi received a retroactive flagrant foul for a grab of James arm Norris Cole latched a hand on West s groin area as he tried to slip through West Wade received a retroactive flagrant foul for hitting Stephenson in the head another incident that the Pacers notably Paul George felt was a dirty play The Heat survived Game 1 on a James game winning layup while the Pacers came back to tie the series at 1 1 after forcing James into two late fourth quarter turnovers for Game 2 In Game 3 the Heat set a team record for points in a postseason half with 70 It was the first time the Pacers had given up 70 points since 1992 Allen s single turnover was the least ever suffered by the Heat in a first half Their five total turnovers is tied for the fewest in franchise history The Game 3 victory marked the first time that an NBA team had won five straight road games by double digits The Heat won the series 4 3 with a 99 76 win in Game 7 41 In the 2014 NBA playoffs after beating the Brooklyn Nets in five games and the Pacers beating the Washington Wizards in six games the Heat and the first seeded Pacers would meet up in the Eastern Conference Finals in a much anticipated rematch The Heat would go on to eliminate the Pacers 4 2 advancing to their fourth consecutive NBA Finals in the Big Three era The Heat stumbled during Game 1 in Indianapolis falling 96 107 They would win Games 2 4 During Game 5 which Miami lost 90 93 James struggled suffering heavy foul trouble and scoring only 7 points his lowest playoff record During Game 6 in Miami the Heat would blow out the Pacers 117 92 Dallas Mavericks The Heat Mavericks rivalry began in the 2006 NBA Finals where the two teams met and both entering their first NBA Finals appearance A year prior the Heat had acquired Shaquille O Neal The Mavericks were led by Dirk Nowitzki and the Heat were led by Dwyane Wade Dallas had home court advantage in the series due to a better regular season record 60 22 than Miami s 52 30 and took the first two games in the series entering Game 3 with a commanding 2 0 lead They looked set to win Game 3 until a rally by the Heat including many free throws from Wade resulted in the Mavericks losing the third game The Heat won all of its home games as the Mavericks dropped games 3 4 and 5 In a highly controversial Game 5 a 101 100 victory for the Heat Wade shot more free throws than the entire Mavericks team Mavericks owner Mark Cuban as well as Nowitzki were both fined for acts of misconduct During Game 6 the series returned to Dallas where the Mavericks fell 92 95 Jason Terry airballed a three point attempt that could have tied the game Wade picked up the ball throwing it in the air in celebration as the Heat won the NBA Championship and its first one as well Wade was named the Finals MVP In the 2010 off season Miami acquired LeBron James from the Cleveland Cavaliers and Chris Bosh from the Toronto Raptors to team up with Wade and form their own big three to rival the Celtics big three that was expected to win the championship The Heat finished 58 24 acquiring the southeast division title and the second seed in the Eastern Conference During the regular season the Mavericks swept the Heat 2 0 The Heat cruised through the Playoffs without much competition eliminating every team the Philadelphia 76ers defending Eastern Conference champions Boston Celtics and the top seeded Chicago Bulls all five games Meanwhile the Mavericks had tallied 57 25 for the third seed leaving them to face the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round The Mavericks had been defeated in the first round all but one time since the 2006 Finals including a defeat from the seventh seeded San Antonio Spurs just the previous season Because of this the Mavericks were underdogs throughout the playoffs but they were able to dispatch Portland in six games They faced the defending NBA champions Los Angeles Lakers and pulled off the impossible by sweeping them ending their bid for a three peat In the Conference Finals they defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder resulting a rematch between the two teams After taking a 2 1 lead however the Heat stumbled in the next three games They were eliminated on their own home floor after losing 95 105 during Game 6 in Miami extending LeBron s quest for a ring The loss had also brought further public humiliation for LeBron James who had been scrutinized and negatively criticized for leaving the Cavaliers to join the Heat LeBron was criticized for only averaging 17 8 points Cavaliers fans rejoiced in the Heat s loss due to the anger that was caused by LeBron s decision to join the Heat which they felt was unfair and a betrayal After that the Mavericks would never win another game against the Heat Dallas hosted the Heat for the season opener on December 25 2011 of the lockout shortened 2011 12 season that was shortened to 66 games The Heat spoiled the Mavericks championship banner raising night giving them a 105 94 blowout loss Although the Heat and the Mavericks have not met in the postseason ever since the rivalry continued as Mark Cuban publicly discussed his extreme personal dislike for the Heat He described hate was not being strong enough of a word to describe his dislike for the Heat 42 He also had a personal dislike for Wade Season by season recordList of the last five seasons completed by the Heat For the full season by season history see List of Miami Heat seasons Note GP Games played W Wins L Losses W L Winning percentage Season GP W L W L Finish Playoffs2017 18 82 44 38 537 1st Southeast Lost in First Round 1 4 76ers 2018 19 82 39 43 476 3rd Southeast Did not qualify2019 20 73 44 29 603 1st Southeast Lost in NBA Finals 2 4 Lakers 2020 21 72 40 32 556 2nd Southeast Lost in First Round 0 4 Bucks 2021 22 82 53 29 646 1st Southeast Lost in Conference Finals 3 4 Celtics Home arenasDuration ArenaNovember 5 1988 December 28 1999 Miami ArenaJanuary 2 2000 present Kaseya CenterRadio and televisionMain article List of Miami Heat broadcasters The Heat s flagship radio stations are WAXY 790 AM in English 43 with Mike Inglis former Heat coach Ron Rothstein and former WNBA player Ruth Riley calling games and WQBA 1140 AM in Spanish with Jose Paneda and Joe Pujala on the call 44 The Heat games are televised primarily by Bally Sports Sun with Eric Reid and John Crotty Reid has been part of the Heat s broadcasting team since the beginning of the franchise first serving as a color analyst and later becoming the lead play by play voice starting in the 1991 92 season For the first four years of the franchise there were radio television simulcasts of locally broadcast games before the franchise eventually created separate broadcast teams WBFS TV channel 33 was the original over the air flagship station for Heat games with its first stint concluding at the end of the 1998 99 season after 11 seasons WAMI TV channel 69 took over the following season however WBFS along with now sister station WFOR channel 4 returned as the Heat s primary over the air home in 2000 01 this time lasting until the 2003 04 season On the cable side Heat games were televised on then SportsChannel Florida now Bally Sports Florida before moving to then Sunshine Network later Sun Sports and Fox Sports Sun now Bally Sports Sun starting in the 1992 93 season Since 2004 05 Sun Sports have served as the exclusive regional carrier of Heat games throughout the team s designated broadcast territory which includes the metropolitan areas of Miami Fort Lauderdale West Palm Beach Fort Pierce Port St Lucie and Fort Myers Naples On a national scale games are occasionally televised by TNT ESPN or ABC From 1988 to 1993 the Heat were on WQAM WINZ previously aired games from 1993 to 1996 and WIOD did from 1996 to 2008 PlayersFor the complete list of Miami Heat players see Miami Heat all time roster For the players drafted by the Miami Heat see Miami Heat draft history Current roster Miami Heat rostervte Players CoachesPos No Name Height Weight DOB YYYY MM DD FromF C 13 Adebayo Bam 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 255 lb 116 kg 1997 07 18 KentuckyF 22 Butler Jimmy 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 230 lb 104 kg 1989 09 14 MarquetteF 8 Cain Jamal TW 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m 191 lb 87 kg 1999 03 20 OaklandF 40 Haslem Udonis 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 235 lb 107 kg 1980 06 09 FloridaG 14 Herro Tyler 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 195 lb 88 kg 2000 01 20 KentuckyF 24 Highsmith Haywood 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 220 lb 100 kg 1996 12 09 WheelingF 5 Jovic Nikola 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 205 lb 93 kg 2003 06 09 SerbiaF 42 Love Kevin 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 251 lb 114 kg 1988 09 07 UCLAG 7 Lowry Kyle 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 196 lb 89 kg 1986 03 25 VillanovaF 16 Martin Caleb 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 205 lb 93 kg 1995 09 28 NevadaG 4 Oladipo Victor 6 ft 3 in 1 91 m 213 lb 97 kg 1992 05 04 IndianaF 55 Robinson Duncan 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 215 lb 98 kg 1994 04 22 MichiganF C 25 Robinson Orlando TW 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 235 lb 107 kg 2000 07 10 Fresno StateG F 31 Strus Max 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 215 lb 98 kg 1996 03 28 DePaulG 2 Vincent Gabe 6 ft 3 in 1 91 m 200 lb 91 kg 1996 06 14 UC Santa BarbaraC 77 Yurtseven Omer 7 ft 0 in 2 13 m 275 lb 125 kg 1998 06 19 GeorgetownC 44 Zeller Cody 7 ft 0 in 2 13 m 240 lb 109 kg 1992 10 05 Indiana Head coachErik SpoelstraAssistant coach es Malik Allen Caron Butler Anthony Carter Octavio De La Grana Eric Glass Chris QuinnLegend C Team captain DP Unsigned draft pick FA Free agent S Suspended GL On assignment to G League affiliate TW Two way affiliate player Injured Roster Last transaction March 18 2023Retained draft rights The Heat hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA A drafted player either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him is allowed to sign with any non NBA teams In this case the team retains the player s draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player s contract with the non NBA team ends 45 This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams Draft Round Pick Player Pos Nationality Current team Note s RefBasketball Hall of Famers Miami Heat Hall of FamersPlayersNo Name Position Tenure Inducted20 Gary Payton G 2005 2007 201333 Alonzo Mourning C F 1995 20032005 2008 201432 Shaquille O Neal C 2004 2008 201634 Ray Allen G 2012 2014 20181 Chris Bosh F 2010 2017 202110 Tim Hardaway G 1996 2001 20223 Dwyane Wade G 2003 20162018 2019 2023CoachesName Position Tenure InductedPat Riley Head coach 1995 20032005 2008 2008FIBA Hall of Famers Miami Heat Hall of FamersPlayersNo Name Position Tenure Inducted32 Shaquille O Neal C 2004 2008 201733 Alonzo Mourning C F 1995 20032005 2008 2019Retired numbers The Heat have retired six numbers although only five of the players played for the franchise Michael Jordan was the first player to be honored despite not having played for the Heat Pat Riley retired Jordan s signature No 23 before his final game in Miami during the 2002 03 season as a tribute to his career 46 During the 2005 06 season the organization honored Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino s No 13 in respect of his contributions to the National Football League NFL s Miami Dolphins 47 However the No 13 jersey is not retired and is still available for use by the Heat players The NBA retired Bill Russell s No 6 for all its member teams on August 11 2022 48 49 Miami Heat retired numbersNo Player Position Tenure Date1 Chris Bosh F 2010 2017 March 26 2019 50 51 3 Dwyane Wade G 2003 20162018 2019 February 22 2020 52 10 Tim Hardaway G 1996 2001 October 28 2009 53 54 23 Michael Jordan G April 11 2003 55 32 Shaquille O Neal C 2004 2008 December 22 2016 56 33 Alonzo Mourning C 1995 20032005 2008 March 30 2009 57 Head coachesSee also List of Miami Heat head coaches There have been six head coaches for the Miami Heat Ron Rothstein was the franchise s first head coach serving from 1988 through 1991 he remains as assistant coach Kevin Loughery was his successor from 1991 to 1995 guiding the Heat to their first two playoff berths in 1992 and 1994 Loughery was fired 46 games into the 1994 95 season posting a 17 29 record Alvin Gentry an assistant coach who joined in 1991 was brought in to replace Loughery on an interim basis Miami went 15 21 for the final 36 games and Gentry moved to the Detroit Pistons the following season In the summer of 1995 owner Micky Arison hired Pat Riley as the head coach and team president At eleven years Riley is the longest tenured head coach in the franchise s history as well its all time leader in total wins and games coached Upon suffering a 25 57 record in the 2002 03 season Riley abruptly announced his retirement but remained as team president He elevated assistant coach Stan Van Gundy as his replacement Van Gundy is Miami s all time leader for the highest winning percentage in the regular season 605 having led Miami to a 42 40 record in his first season and a 59 23 record in his second year He spearheaded Miami s 2005 campaign where they held the top seed in the east swept their first two playoff opponents and made it to the Conference Finals An 11 10 record early into the 2005 06 season prompted Riley to come out of retirement and replace Van Gundy Shortly thereafter Riley would win his fifth and final championship as a head coach as well as Miami s first championship in 2006 Riley would retire permanently following the 15 win 2007 08 season but once again remained as team president His hand picked replacement longtime assistant Erik Spoelstra is the current Heat head coach a position he has held since 2008 At 38 he was the youngest head coach in the league at the time as well as the first Filipino American head coach in league history Spoelstra led the team to four consecutive appearances in the NBA Finals culminating in back to back championships in 2012 and 2013 Franchise accomplishments and awardsFranchise leaders Bold denotes still active with team Italic denotes still active but not with team Points scored regular season as of the end of the 2020 21 season 58 Dwyane Wade 21 556 Alonzo Mourning 9 459 Glen Rice 9 248 LeBron James 7 919 Chris Bosh 6 914 Rony Seikaly 6 742 Udonis Haslem 6 559 Goran Dragic 6 348 Tim Hardaway 6 335 Eddie Jones 6 194 Grant Long 5 473 Mario Chalmers 4 641 Bam Adebayo 4 617 Hassan Whiteside 4 554 Kevin Edwards 4 362 Bimbo Coles 4 031 Shaquille O Neal 4 010 Jimmy Butler 3 492 Brian Grant 3 433 Josh Richardson 3 134 Other statistics regular season as of the end of the 2019 20 season 58 Most minutes playedPlayer MinutesDwyane Wade 32 912Udonis Haslem 21 648Alonzo Mourning 17 700Glen Rice 17 059Grant Long 14 859Most reboundsPlayer ReboundsUdonis Haslem 5 780Alonzo Mourning 4 807Rony Seikaly 4 544Dwyane Wade 4 482Hassan Whiteside 3 870Most assistsPlayer AssistsDwyane Wade 5 009Tim Hardaway 2 867Mario Chalmers 2 004LeBron James 1 980Bimbo Coles 1 961Most stealsPlayer StealsDwyane Wade 1 433Mario Chalmers 791Grant Long 666Glen Rice 572Kevin Edwards 560Most blocksPlayer BlocksAlonzo Mourning 1 625Dwyane Wade 812Hassan Whiteside 783Rony Seikaly 610Joel Anthony 456 Individual awards NBA Most Valuable Player LeBron James 2012 2013NBA Finals MVP Dwyane Wade 2006 LeBron James 2012 2013NBA Scoring Champion Dwyane Wade 2009NBA Defensive Player of the Year Alonzo Mourning 1999 2000NBA Most Improved Player Award Rony Seikaly 1990 Isaac Austin 1997NBA Sixth Man of the Year Tyler Herro 2022Best NBA Player ESPY Award Dwyane Wade 2006 LeBron James 2012 2013NBA Coach of the Year Pat Riley 1997NBA Executive of the Year Pat Riley 2011J Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award P J Brown 1997 Alonzo Mourning 2002Twyman Stokes Teammate of the Year Award Shane Battier 2014NBA Community Assist Award Dwyane Wade 2013All NBA First Team Tim Hardaway 1997 Alonzo Mourning 1999 Shaquille O Neal 2005 2006 Dwyane Wade 2009 2010 LeBron James 2011 2014All NBA Second Team Tim Hardaway 1998 1999 Alonzo Mourning 2000 Dwyane Wade 2005 2006 2011All NBA Third Team Dwyane Wade 2007 2012 2013 Jimmy Butler 2020 2021NBA All Defensive First Team Alonzo Mourning 1999 2000 LeBron James 2011 2013NBA All Defensive Second Team P J Brown 1997 1999 Bruce Bowen 2001 Dwyane Wade 2005 2009 2010 LeBron James 2014 Hassan Whiteside 2016 Bam Adebayo 2020 2021 2022 Jimmy Butler 2021NBA All Rookie First Team Sherman Douglas 1990 Steve Smith 1992 Caron Butler 2003 Dwyane Wade 2004 Michael Beasley 2009 Kendrick Nunn 2020NBA All Rookie Second Team Kevin Edwards 1989 Glen Rice 1990 Willie Burton 1991 Udonis Haslem 2004 Mario Chalmers 2009 Justise Winslow 2016 Tyler Herro 2020Season long NBA Community Assist Award Dwyane Wade 2013 NBA All Star Weekend NBA All Star selections Dwyane Wade 2005 2016 2019 Chris Bosh 2011 2016 Alonzo Mourning 1996 1997 2000 2002 LeBron James 2011 2014 Shaquille O Neal 2005 2007 Tim Hardaway 1997 1998 Anthony Mason 2001 Goran Dragic 2018 Jimmy Butler 2020 2022 Bam Adebayo 2020NBA All Star Game head coaches Stan Van Gundy 2005 Erik Spoelstra 2013 2022NBA All Star Game MVP Dwyane Wade 2010NBA All Star Skills Challenge Champion Dwyane Wade 2006 2007 Bam Adebayo 2020NBA All Star Three point Shootout Champion Glen Rice 1995 Jason Kapono 2007 Daequan Cook 2009 James Jones 2011NBA All Star Slam Dunk Contest Champion Harold Miner 1993 1995 Derrick Jones Jr 2020NBA All Star Shooting Stars Contest Champion Chris Bosh 2013 2015References NBA com Stats Miami Heat seasons Stats NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved December 2 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link History Team by Team PDF 2010 20 Official NBA Guide PDF NBA Properties Inc October 17 2019 Retrieved November 16 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link CHANGE CLOTHES 30 Years of HEAT HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved August 15 2019 Out with the orange in with the new In the 1999 2000 season Miami underwent a wardrobe update The new jerseys featured striped panels on both sides updated numerals a shift from orange to a bold yellow and a wishbone collar to bring the HEAT into the new millennium Along with our new uniforms came tweaked wordmarks and logos complete with the same updated red and gold to replace the previous red and orange The uniforms arrived just in time for Y2K but without the fear of losing everything in a computer crisis NBA LockerVision Miami Heat Association Edition Story Guide LockerVision NBA com NBA Properties Inc Retrieved January 25 2022 The Miami Heat s Association Edition uniform offers a sleek and professional interpretation of the team s fiery namesake with a red black and gold color scheme layered atop a traditional home white silhouette a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Miami Heat Reproduction and Usage Guideline Sheet NBA Properties Inc Retrieved August 10 2016 MIAMI HEAT AND ULTIMATE SOFTWARE ANNOUNCE JERSEY PATCH PARTNERSHIP HEAT com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC September 21 2017 Retrieved December 17 2017 HEAT Announce Front Office Promotions HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC September 28 2013 Retrieved July 8 2016 The Definitive Ranking of the Miami Heat s Alternate Jerseys HEAT Select Dwyane Wade with the 5th Pick in NBA Draft HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC June 27 2003 Archived from the original on July 4 2003 Retrieved November 5 2018 DuPree David July 14 2004 It s Official Shaq traded to Heat for three players draft pick USA Today Retrieved June 21 2013 HEAT Acquire Antoine Walker Jason Williams amp James Posey HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC August 3 2005 Archived from the original on August 5 2005 Retrieved November 5 2018 Heat coach Van Gundy resigns replaced by Riley ESPN com December 12 2005 Retrieved October 21 2021 Bensch Bob June 21 2006 Wade Leads Heat Past Mavericks to Win First NBA Title Update1 Bloomberg Retrieved June 21 2013 Nutbrown Charlie July 8 2010 LeBron James joins the Miami Heat The Guardian Retrieved February 22 2020 Broussard Chris July 7 2010 Source Bosh to join Wade Heat www ESPN com ESPN Retrieved February 22 2020 Lee Michael June 22 2012 NBA Finals 2012 LeBron James Miami Heat rout Oklahoma City Thunder to win championship The Washington Post Retrieved February 22 2020 LeBron James wins Finals MVP ESPN com June 21 2012 Retrieved February 21 2020 Wallace Michael July 11 2012 Ray Allen Rashard Lewis join Heat www ESPN com ESPN Retrieved February 22 2020 Game by game review Miami Heat s win streak NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC March 14 2013 Retrieved November 5 2018 Peralta Eyder June 21 2013 LeBron James leads Heat to back to back NBA Titles www npr org NPR Retrieved February 22 2020 LeBron James named Finals MVP www ESPN com ESPN June 21 2013 Retrieved February 22 2020 Heat sweeps Bobcats www tampabay com Tampa Bay Times April 29 2014 Retrieved February 22 2020 LeBron James Lee Jenkins July 11 2014 LeBron James announces return to Cleveland Cavaliers Sports Illustrated Retrieved May 20 2015 Bleacher Report BleacherReport May 20 2015 NBA Draft order for lottery teams after the NBADraftLottery Tweet via Twitter Wallace Michael July 13 2016 Riley left with another challenge after letting Wade walk ESPN com Retrieved December 8 2018 Reynolds Tim Pat Riley raves about Dwyane Wade but avoids all contract talk NBA com The Associated Press Retrieved December 8 2018 Wade Dwyane Homecoming Dwyane Wade Retrieved July 8 2016 Miami HEAT Statement On Chris Bosh NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC September 23 2016 Retrieved September 27 2016 Reynolds Tim September 23 2016 Bosh fails physical not cleared for training camp NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on September 26 2016 Retrieved September 27 2016 Smith Sekou September 26 2016 Heat president Riley says Bosh s career in Miami is probably over NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved September 27 2016 a b HEAT Waive Chris Bosh NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC July 4 2017 Retrieved July 5 2017 Reports Doctor s ruling on Chris Bosh s health will help Heat s cap situation ESPN com June 3 2017 Retrieved July 5 2017 Dwyane Wade is finally returning to Miami where he belongs Sbnation com February 8 2018 Retrieved August 1 2018 NBA Board of Governors approves competitive format to restart 2019 20 season with 22 teams returning to play NBA June 4 2020 Eastern Conference Finals Miami Heat wrap up 4 2 series win to reach NBA Finals BBC Sport September 28 2020 Lakers defeat Heat in NBA Finals to capture record tying 17th title Los Angeles Times October 11 2020 Retrieved October 11 2020 HEAT ACQUIRE KYLE LOWRY Miami Heat Retrieved November 5 2021 HEAT To Unveil Vice Uniforms HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC January 23 2018 Retrieved May 31 2019 Miami Heat vs Chicago Bulls Recap Scores espn go com March 28 2013 Retrieved May 14 2015 Miami Heat win 27th straight run away from Orlando Magic Azcentral com March 25 2013 Retrieved May 14 2015 Reynolds Tim June 3 2013 Heat off to Finals beat Pacers 99 76 in Game 7 NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved November 5 2018 Dan Favale January 13 2014 Mark Cuban Hate Not Strong Enough Word to Describe Dislike of Miami Heat Bleacher Report Retrieved May 14 2015 HEAT to Begin Broadcasting Games on WAXY 790 The Ticket HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC November 6 2010 Retrieved June 16 2011 Broadcast Team Miami Heat HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved April 4 2021 Coon Larry NBA Salary Cap FAQ 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement Retrieved April 13 2014 If the player is already under contract to or signs a contract with a non NBA team the team retains the player s draft rights for one year after the player s obligation to the non NBA team ends Essentially the clock stops as long as the player plays pro ball outside the NBA Heat retires first number Sports Illustrated Time Warner Company April 11 2003 Retrieved January 30 2012 Phillips DeAndre November 7 2005 Dan the Man HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved March 29 2009 Bill Russell s No 6 jersey to be retired throughout NBA NBA com August 11 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Golliver Ben August 11 2022 NBA permanently retires Bill Russell s No 6 Washington Post Retrieved August 24 2022 Reynolds Tim July 4 2017 Miami Heat waive Chris Bosh plan to retire No 1 jersey NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Associated Press Retrieved August 1 2017 HEAT To Retire Chris Bosh s No 1 Jersey NBA com February 4 2019 Retrieved February 8 2019 Chiang Anthony February 22 2020 Heat retires Dwyane Wade s jersey in emotional halftime ceremony Wade I m just thankful Miami Herald Retrieved February 23 2020 Hardaway s Heat jersey retired ESPN October 29 2009 Retrieved January 30 2012 2014 15 Miami Heat Media Guide PDF National Basketball Association October 20 2014 Retrieved May 20 2015 ESPN com NBA Heat honor Jordan by retiring No 23 jersey a espncdn com Retrieved May 1 2020 HEAT TO RETIRE SHAQUILLE O NEAL S NO 32 HEAT com NBA Media Ventures LLC November 22 2016 Retrieved November 21 2016 Heat retire Mourning s No 33 ESPN March 31 2009 Retrieved January 30 2012 a b Miami Heat Players Basketball Reference August 15 2020 Retrieved August 15 2020 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Miami Heat Official website Portals Basketball Florida Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miami Heat amp oldid 1148330969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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