Inside The Heat

Miami Heat Predicted To Land Former MVP In Blockbuster Offseason Trade

Nov 6, 2024; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Miami Heat forward Jimmy Butler (22) drives against Phoenix Suns forward Kevin Durant (35) during the second half at Footprint Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images
Nov 6, 2024; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Miami Heat forward Jimmy Butler (22) drives against Phoenix Suns forward Kevin Durant (35) during the second half at Footprint Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

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The Miami Heat rumors are heating up as the offseason approaches.

Earlier this season, Phoenix Suns star Kevin Durant was reportedly involved in trade talks at the deadline. However, he declined to get traded mid-season for the second time in three seasons. According to ESPN's Shams Charania, Durant has preferred trade destinations if those talks continue this offseason. Those teams include the Golden State Warriors, Minnesota Timberwolves, New York Knicks, Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs and the Miami Heat.

A new trade idea from Fadeaway World proposes the Heat acquire the 2014 MVP in a blockbuster deal:

Miami Heat receive: F Kevin Durant

Phoenix Suns receive: G Terry Rozier, F Andrew Wiggins, C Kel'el Ware, 2025 First-Round Pick (via GSW), 2029 First-Round Pick (MIA), 2031 First-Round Pick (MIA)

"This deal brings the Miami Heat a Jimmy Butler replacement but at a higher level and at a greater cost," the article wrote. "Losing three rotational players, especially when one has a high ceiling like Ware, is not easy to stomach. But when it gives Pat Riley the chance to end frustrations around him not committing to acquiring a star, he might seriously consider breaking the bank for a modern great."

Ware is the biggest piece in this trade not named Durant. The Rookie of the Year candidate has broken out this season. He could be an integral piece for this Heat franchise in the coming years but the opportunity to get an all-time great may be too good to pass up. Rozier is having a rough season but his contract is tradable. A change of scenery may be necessary for the 10-year veteran.

Durant paired with Tyler Herro and Bam Adebayo could wreak havoc in the Eastern Conference. Durant, 36, is under contract through next season before he hits unrestricted free agency.

FORMER HEAT COACH VAN GUNDY ON MORANT

The Miami Heat's six-game win streak was snapped Thursday night after a heartbreaking loss to the Memphis Grizzlies.

Ja Morant hit a buzzer-beating mid-range shot to hand the Heat their first loss since Mar. 21. However, even with this loss, the Heat secured a spot in the Play-In Tournament after a Bucks win.

During Thursday's game, former Heat coach and TNT sportscaster Stan Van Gundy criticized Morant's on-court behavior.

"Ja Morant [is] spending way too much of the night crying, talking about blaming his teammates, blaming the referees," Van Gundy said. "He simply needs to do a better job taking care of the ball and needs to be a lot more efficient."

Van Gundy was an assistant coach under Pat Riley from 1995 to 2003. He was promoted after Riley stepped away from the team. Under Van Gundy's reign from 2003 to 2005, the Heat had a 112-73 record along with playoff appearances in each season. He resigned 21 games into the 2005-06 season, leading to Riley's coaching return and a Miami Heat championship.

Morant is no stranger to controversy. This season, he has been under NBA review for multiple warnings over his finger gun gestures on the court. Morant has also been suspended twice after promoting violence on social media.

The Grizzlies fired coach Taylor Jenkins last week even with their standing in the Western Conference. Many believe Morant could be available in trade talks this summer with the growing dysfunction in Memphis. The Heat could be a team interested in acquiring the 2019 No. 2 overall pick.

HEAT HAVE TOUGH OFFSEASON AHEAD

The Miami Heat's disappointing regular season concludes next week.

The team holds the No. 9 seed in the Eastern Conference. That is good for a Play-In tournament appearance. However, the Heat were in the NBA Finals just two seasons ago. The Heat need to win out the remainder to finish with a .500 record. The last time the team finished below .500 was the 2018-19 season.

Moving Jimmy Butler to the Golden State Warriors at the trade deadline threw a wrench in the franchise's plans for the future. Bleacher Report believes the Heat have a somewhat difficult future ahead.

"Bam Adebayo, Tyler Herro and rookie center Kel'el Ware give the Miami Heat a solid baseline off which to work moving forward," the article wrote. "But their draft-pick obligations demand chasing immediate highs, and they don't exactly have the assets or in-house upside to pull it off."

Over the past few seasons, Herro was floated in trade rumors, especially when the Heat were in the mix for All-Star guard Damian Lillard. This season, Herro has broken out, earning an All-Star nod. He is viewed as a building block for the future along with Adebayo and Ware.

"Point being: Miami doesn't have the freedom to rebuild, is light on tradeable firsts even after scooping up Golden State's for this year, and cannot carve out meaningful cap space until at least 2026," the article continued. "The Heat have limited capacity to shake things up, and the odds of dramatic internal improvement rest predominantly with Ware or Jaime Jaquez Jr. (to a lesser extent these days)."

The Heat have some money to work with this offseason after moving off Butler's contract. However, the 2026 offseason is crucial for the franchise as Terry Rozier and Duncan Robinson's expensive contracts expire.

Sean Jordan is a contributor to Miami Heat On Sports Illustrated. He can be reached at sjorda06@syr.edu.

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