Heat Notes: Herro, Jovic, Robinson, Rozier

The Heat are 2-0 since Tyler Herro made his season debut following his recovery from ankle surgery. However, the team’s back-to-back 106-point showings in those two games were well below what the high-scoring Miami offense had been accustomed to this fall, writes Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald.

After scoring a league-leading 124.9 points per game and playing at a league-fastest pace of 106.38 possessions per 48 minutes through their first 17 contests, the Heat had two of their lowest-scoring and slowest-paced games in those victories over Dallas and Milwaukee. Herro is aware of that drop-off despite the success in the win column, and is trying to find the balance between playing his game and adjusting to the new offensive ecosystem.

I want to score 150, as well,” Herro said. “That looked like a lot of fun on the bench. So I’m trying to make it work. I’m not here to take over the offense or do anything. I told all the guys to just continue to play the same way, and I’ll find my spots and fit in as I can.”

Head coach Erik Spoelstra said the scoring dip was unrelated to Herro’s return.

It’s not because Tyler is coming back,” Spoelstra said. “It’s because teams will try to scheme against what we’re trying to do. Teams will try to slow us down, and we just need to be better at what we do.”

Miami scored 135 points on Saturday, but allowed 138 in a close loss to Detroit.

We have more from the Heat:

  • With Miami finally back at full strength for the first time on Wednesday’s game, someone was bound to lose their spot in the rotation, and that turned out to be Nikola Jovic, Chiang writes in the same article. “I’m good,” Jovic said. “It’s something that happens, you know, I guess every season now. I’ll be back. I’ll get back on the court again. I’ll get a chance and I’ll show that I can play again. And then the circle comes around.” The fourth-year forward played 10 minutes in the following game, scoring two points on three shots. Even though he signed a four-year extension this summer, Jovic’s role and minutes continue to fluctuate. His playing time dropped from 22.6 MPG over his first 11 games to 15.0 MPG over his last four outings.
  • Duncan Robinson played against the Heat for the first time in his career on Saturday and scored 18 points with five assists and five rebounds. Coming into the game, he knew it would be strange, but still felt that things had worked out for the best, according to Chiang. “I had been in every trade rumor under the sun throughout my time, and it never happened,” Robinson said. “And I started to sort of live in this reality or this world where, maybe not reality, where I was just always going to be there… I think undoubtedly this is probably the best thing and the right thing, maybe arguably for both organizations — myself and the Heat. It doesn’t mean that I’m not grateful for my time there. But I’m really excited and thrilled for where I’m at now, and excited to be a part of this young and hungry Pistons team.
  • Terry Rozier has fulfilled one of his legal obligations in his ongoing legal troubles, as the IRS confirmed in late October the satisfaction of an $8.2MM tax lien, writes Daniel Libit for Sportico. Rozier’s lawyer, Jim Trusty, stated at the time that Rozier only actually owed $9,000 on the lien and that he’d already paid it off and was just waiting for the IRS to remove it.
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