Expectations are muted for the Miami Heat entering 2025-26 training camp in Boca Raton, now even moreso following Tyler Herro's ankle surgery that will keep the leading scorer on the sidelines.
Still, there's some reason for optimism, even as the Heat's early schedule is daunting and the last time we saw the Heat in competition, they didn't compete -- losing their final two playoff games by a combined 92 points to Cleveland.
Here are three factors to watch once camp opens:
With Herro out, Powell will likely be the Heat's primary offensive engine in the backcourt, but deployed differently than Herro is. Powell's on-court chemistry, particularly with Bam Adebayo and Davion Mitchell, will matter, since he's an assassin off the catch provided the passes are crisp.
The Heat's summer league team didn't show much, but Pelle Larsson did. Then the Heat's 2024 second round pick led Sweden to the knockout stage in EuroBasket, while Nikola Jovic was arguably Serbia's second-best player behind Nikola Jokic. If they have both improved as much as it appears, and Kel'el Ware got the message from Erik Spoelstra to improve his professionalism, those three players could really round out the rotation.
There's only one real plus to Herro's absence: it gets another defender in the starting lineup. That's Mitchell, who was re-signed for two seasons. Mitchell, with Bam Adebayo and Andrew Wiggins, could make the starting group tougher to score against. And Miami will need that as it tries to find enough buckets until Herro returns. Some of those 97-94 scores will be welcome.
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