MIAMI (AP) -So far this summer, the Miami Heat have been scorned by Lamar Odom, been unable to add any veterans through free agency or trades, and listened to NBA scoring champion Dwyane Wade make a public request for some roster upgrades before deciding if his future will be in South Florida.
Somehow, Heat president Pat Riley doesn’t sound overly concerned.
Although the Heat made a serious and ultimately failed pitch to lure Odom away from re-signing with the reigning champion Los Angeles Lakers, the thesis for turning Miami back into an NBA championship contender hasn’t changed.
And if that means waiting for tons of salary cap space to open a year from now, then that’s what the Heat will do.
“I sort of characterize it this way: We set the table and everything is on the table,” Riley said on a conference call. “We’re just waiting for the waiter to come with the menu. I think that’s as simple as it’s going to be.”
There are some appetizers still out there, however.
tion with free agent point guard Jamaal Tinsley, and that nothing has been ruled out regarding a possible pursuit of Allen Iverson. If the Heat offered a contract to either player, Riley said, it wouldn’t be for more than one year – ensuring that Miami keeps its maximum available cap space for the much-ballyhooed summer of 2010, which could be a free agent bonanza.
Miami’s master plan reads something like this: Sign Wade to a new contract, find another top-level star to play alongside him, and then consider making moves like ones that many title contenders around the league did this summer – moving past the luxury tax threshold to add the pieces of a potentially championship-winning puzzle.
Trades have been discussed as well; by now, it’s no secret that forward Carlos Boozer, who is close friends with Wade, wouldn’t scoff at the notion of getting traded by the Utah Jazz to Miami.
But Riley said that it’s a strong possibility that the 13 players currently under contract are the 13 players whom the Heat enter training camp with next month.
“We hope we’re a very competitive team this year,” Riley said. “I’m not going to do something foolhardy now that’s going to hurt our chances to really put a franchise player around another franchise player that we have right now. We’re going to wait and see. We’re going to be very patient with it.”
Heat forward Udonis Haslem said that’s fine with him.
Miami won 15 games two seasons ago in an injury-marred debacle of a year, then bounced back to win 43 games last season and finish with the No. 5 seed for the Eastern Conference playoffs, losing an opening-round series to Atlanta in seven games.
“To be honest with you, we went from 15 to 43 wins, and I can think of four or five games where we should have won,” Haslem said. “There’s a lot of games you look back on where you feel like you had an opportunity to win. Maybe if we win those games, we might have the opportunity to be a 50-win team. I look at it differently than everybody else. I’m excited about our team.”
So is Riley.
He said he’s talking with Wade often, has seen Jermaine O’Neal several times this summer, and raved about the progress that Miami’s young core – point guard Mario Chalmers (whom will be the starter again this coming year, Riley insisted), forward Michael Beasley and shooting guard Daequan Cook, in particular – have made this offseason.
Their development, he said, might be enough to move Miami closer to where it wants to be.
“It’s not an experimentation year,” Riley said. “It’s about finding out how versatile your players are.”
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