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Heat linked to future Hall of Famer in rumors, but can Miami even land a superstar anymore?
Miami Heat president Pat Riley. Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

Heat linked to future Hall of Famer in rumors, but can Miami even land a superstar anymore?

The Miami Heat have always had swagger, but lately that confidence is being tested. With recent rumors linking the Heat to Kevin Durant — joined by a long list of stars they’ve almost acquired — it raises a bigger question: Do the Heat still have what it takes to actually land a true superstar?

Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald reported that Durant “will forever be a Heat possibility if he makes it to free agency.” The Heat reportedly had a chance in June during Phoenix’s trade talks, but they couldn’t agree internally on what sort of package to offer. Key players in the organization disagreed about which young assets to include.

The Heat lack aggressiveness in the market

The truth is, they haven’t pulled it off since Jimmy Butler arrived in 2019. That deal changed everything — Butler became the face of Heat Culture and dragged the team to two NBA Finals appearances. Since then, though, every supposed “next star” has slipped through Pat Riley’s fingers. They chased Damian Lillard for months, only to watch him land in Milwaukee. James Harden? Houston never bit. Bradley Beal? He went to Phoenix. Even with Durant, this is the second time Miami has sniffed around and backed off when the price got too high.

When the Big Three formed in 2010, the league looked different. Miami had cap space, influence and Riley’s famous ability to close in the room. LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh wanted to control their own destinies, and Miami became the perfect canvas. Now, with harsher cap rules and multiple aprons choking team flexibility, the Heat can’t just clear the books and pitch a star on sunshine and South Beach anymore.

Maybe that’s the biggest issue: They’ve been risk-averse. The Durant talks this summer reportedly stalled because the Heat front office couldn’t agree on which young players to sacrifice. Tyler Herro has been dangled in trade rumors for years, but he’s still here. Nikola Jovic is intriguing but unproven. Jaime Jaquez Jr. looks like a real piece, but he’s not untouchable. Those players are nice, but they’re not the kind of centerpiece who gets a rival GM to say yes when the offer is for Durant, Lillard or Beal.

No other star to entice free agents

Butler was Miami’s last true swing, and it worked — but now he’s in Golden State. For half a decade, Miami’s pitch to stars was “come join Jimmy and we’ll grind our way to June.” Without him, it’s Bam Adebayo and a bunch of role players. Adebayo is great, but he’s not the closer who makes a superstar say, “I want to be there.” That’s not to knock the Heat’s culture — it still has weight around the league — but culture alone isn’t enough to land a big fish anymore.

Could Durant eventually choose Miami on his own, maybe in 2026 free agency? That’s the one path where Riley doesn’t have to gut the roster or outbid everyone else. But banking on a 38-year-old Durant choosing Miami next year isn’t exactly the kind of plan that inspires confidence.

So, can the Heat land a superstar anymore? Of course, in theory. It’s Miami. Players still love the weather, the city and the respect that comes with being part of that organization. But if the last five years have taught us anything, it’s this: Don’t believe the rumors until a star is holding up the jersey. Until that day, Miami is more smoke than fire.

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