Ira Winderman: Tyler Herro deserves his Heat flowers, even if to be planted elsewhere
MIAMI — To be fair, the desperation to see a team upgrade can be decidedly unfair.
A current case in point is Tyler Herro, a quality scorer and former All-Star who largely has done just about anything and everything asked by the Miami Heat these past seven seasons, from playing on the ball, to playing off the ball, to adjusting, and readjusting, his shot profile.
Yes, the injuries and time lost also stand as factors in the equation. But when he plays, he plays hard. And for all the questions about defense, it’s not as if he stands alone in that regard, with the likes of James Harden, DeMar DeRozan, Jamal Murray and Donovan Mitchell, among others, still receiving their flowers for largely one-way contributions.
So if there is to be a Herro trade this offseason, if he has played his final Heat game, then consider that final moment.
April 14. Spectrum Center. Play-in round opener vs. Charlotte Hornets.
Herro is subbed in with 26 seconds left in overtime and the Heat down 125-120.
The play-by-play from there:
23.5: Herro 23-foot turnaround fadeaway 3-point shot. Hornets 125-123.
8.7: LaMelo Ball three-shot foul foul, Herro three free throws, Heat 126-125.
If Ball doesn’t score on a driving layup to close the scoring with 4.8 seconds to play to give Charlotte the 127-126 victory, Herro’s six points in 14.8 seconds would have been the stuff of Heat lore.
Such has been the story of Herro’s Heat tenure.
— Dynamic rookie contributor in the Heat’s run to the 2020 NBA Finals (where if not for injuries in that series to Bam Adebayo and Goran Dragic, possibly a ring as a rookie).
— NBA Sixth Man of the Year in 2022.
— Heat scoring leader in 2024-25.
— NBA All-Star 2025.
— Sixth-fastest NBA player to 1,000 career 3-pointers, in his 368th game in January.
Yes, the injuries and absences often have clouded the overall contributions, but the contribution has been real and deserves recognition if this, indeed, is the endgame.
Taken at No. 13 in 2019 out of Kentucky, a re-draft of that year’s first round would have Herro going no worse than fourth, and that’s only if there were to be, beyond No. 1 pick Zion Williamson, grudging respect for Ja Morant, R.J Barrett and Darius Garland. Of the first 13 players in that draft, only Williamson, Morant and Herro ended this past season on their drafted teams.
And yet there never truly seemed to be a complete embrace, not with Erik Spoelstra a defense-first coach, not with the Heat hard up against the cap when Herro stood up for contract renewal.
In the end, the four-year, $120 million extension Herro signed in October 2022, the one that will pay $33 million next season, proved to be, at worst (from a team perspective) market value. (Garland, for example, is due $42.2 million this coming season.)
Then came this past October, when the Heat deferred extension talks with Herro until this summer, as in a window now just 10 days away. Considering there were only 33 appearances this past season, such Heat prudence hardly could be viewed as insulting.
The reality is that at February’s trade deadline, Herro was the most marketable chip the Heat could put into play for Giannis Antetokounmpo, so the Heat put him in play, just as they have done at the moment.
Just as he was in play for Harden at one point, and Kevin Durant and Damian Lillard at others. All the while, the Heat’s reassurances were that he only has been put in play for Hall of Famers.
Each time, that made business sense for the Heat. And each time, Herro bounced back, continued to do what he does best, standing as an elite offensive talent.
But now it feels different, as if the card has been played too often, the Heat consistently looking over his shoulder to see if someone better could be in the room.
And that’s fair, too, considering the Heat have been in the play-in round the past four years, just missed the playoffs for the first time in seven seasons.
But that shouldn’t detract, with perspective in order.
Among the most beloved players over the Heat’s 38 seasons was Goran Dragic, universally embraced for his Heat contributions. Fair enough.
Goran Dragic: 391 Heat career regular-season games, 16.2 points per game, 5.2 assists per game, 3.6 rebounds per game, on shooting splits of .457 from the field, .365 on 3-pointers, .786 from the line.
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Tyler Herro: 394 Heat career regular-season games, 19.5 points per game, 4.1 assists per game, 5.0 rebounds per game, on shooting splits of .450 from the field, .382 on 3-pointers, .878 from the line.
And you know what? Dragic was hunted as much defensively as Herro.
Dragic has been cheered on every Kaseya Center return since.
Herro, should it come to that, has earned as much, as well.
Because for all the players Spoelstra over the years has referenced as “ignitable,” the truest measure of that might have been those final 26 seconds two months ago in Charlotte, the six points in 14.8 seconds.
IN THE LANE
RESPECT IN PLACE: Amid the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade conjecture has been the perception of Tyler Herro as a diminished asset. Former Bucks coach Doc Rivers pushed back against the notion during a recent appearance on Bill Simmons’ podcast. Of Herro being offered in Antetokounmpo trade bids, Rivers said, “You would’ve traded your closer because Tyler Herro is a closer. Say what you want about him, but he’s a straight-up closer.” But Rivers said the Heat also could regroup enough to satisfy Antetokounmpo. “My guess is that’s where he’s trusting their front office that they have the ability to add more pieces,” Rivers said. “Those are the talks that we’re not in.”
NATIONAL HONOR: Heat guard Kasparas Jakucionis said during his appearance this past week at the Heat’s youth camp that his first-ever action with the Lithuanian national team next month figures to be his summer highlight. “Especially Lithuania is like the biggest deal because basketball is a second religion for us,” he said. “Everybody is watching basketball and the national team is the biggest opportunity, biggest deal that you can get.” Jakucionis also will be hosting a youth camp in his home country for the first time. “I’m doing the first one there,” he revealed, “So I’ll meet the Lithuanians. So it will be awesome.” Jakucionis is expected to join the Heat for the Las Vegas NBA Summer league, after missing the California Classic summer league due to that commitment to his national team.
SPEAKING OF: Speaking of Jakucionis, or more to the point his college, with the lottery status of Keaton Wagler, Illinois is projected to have a one-and-done guard selected in the first round for a third consecutive year on Tuesday night, with Wagler following Jakucionis, who went No. 20 last year, and Terrance Shannon Jr., who went No. 27 in 2024. ESPN analyst Jay Bilas said credit is due Illinois coach Brad Underwood. “One of the fun things to watch about Brad,” Bilas said, “has been how he’s evolved and changed things as the game has changed. Not just the game on the floor but the environment around the game. He’s been in lockstep, if not ahead of it.” Prior to Shannon, the previous player drafted out of Illinois at any position was former Heat center Meyers Leonard, who went No. 11 to the Portland Trail Blazers in 2012.
PAYTON’S PLACES: Hall of Fame guard Gary Payton, who won the 2006 NBA championship with the Heat, had a particularly eventful week for a player who has been out of the league since ending his NBA career with the Heat in 2007. First, on Thursday, he had a street named in his honor in his native Oakland, Calif., “Gary Payton Way.” Then, on Friday, he delivered a Juneteenth video message at all four World Cup venues with games that day, including the USA-Australia game in Seattle, where he spent the bulk of his career starring for the SuperSonics. In a video clip filmed at Seattle’s Northwest African American Museum, Payton’s taped message said, “This day means freedom, Black liberation, joy, jubilation and celebration. Today we are definitely celebrating. This matchday gives us a chance to educate the world. Recognize players that paved the way for myself and many others and inspire the next generation.”
NUMBER
2. Consecutive years the Heat will be executing a draft pick that initially belonged to the Golden State Warriors. Last year, it was the No. 20 selection acquired in the Jimmy Butler trade that was utilized on Kasparas Jakucionis. On Wednesday night, it will be the No. 41 slot of the Warriors in the second round, a pick that was passed through the Atlanta Hawks, Oklahoma City Thunder and New York Knicks before winding up with the Hornets. Charlotte then was forced by the NBA to forward it to the Heat as compensation for not informing the Heat about the Terry Rozier gambling investigation before the Heat acquired the guard in January 2024.
