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Jimmy Butler's Candid 'Heat Culture' Message Before Warriors Play in Miami
© David Gonzales-Imagn Images

On Tuesday night, the Golden State Warriors will travel to South Beach to take on the Miami Heat. It will be Jimmy Butler's first game against his old team since demanding a trade earlier this season. He spent parts of six seasons with Miami and led them to two NBA Finals appearances, although he is trying to downplay the significance of his return to Florida.

The Warriors are 16-4 with Butler on the roster and look the part of title contenders. The Heat, meanwhile, just snapped a ten-game losing streak, the longest of Erik Spoelstra's career.

Butler's time with the Heat appeared to be the NBA's perfect marriage, as Butler embodied the world-famous "Heat Culture," although he recently offered a candid opinion about Miami's basketball culture.

The Heat have labeled themselves as the “hardest working, best conditioned, most professional, unselfish, toughest, meanest, nastiest team in the NBA.” Their track record of seven Finals appearances in the 21st century points to their claim being true, but Butler recently downplayed it.

"I’m not saying it in a bad way, but I think it’s a little bit, like, overused talking about the ‘Heat Culture,'" said Butler in an interview with The Athletic. "It is a great organization. But I think a large part of that culture is you get guys that buy into a (winning mindset). You get some guys that buy in, you get some really good players and you get the opportunity to talk about ‘Heat Culture’ a little bit more. I’m not saying it to talk down or anything, but I think whenever you have really good players you can name it whatever you want to name it.”

The Heat, Warriors, San Antonio Spurs, Memphis Grizzlies, and Boston Celtics are a few examples of teams with long-standing cultures that have defined their historical success, and Butler seems to fit in better with the Warriors than he did with the Heat in his final two seasons there.

However, it's impossible to deny that Butler will be best-remembered for his six seasons with the Heat, which made him one of the league's biggest stars. 

This article first appeared on Athlon Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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