
MIAMI — It is time for the Miami Heat to consider dealing Bam Adebayo.
No, this is not about the naysayers more concerned about Adebayo’s contract or muted scoring impact. He has earned his fair share and he has offered ample offense in support of his accomplished defense.
In fact, at the moment it is less about Adebayo than about his team.
At the moment, they are not worthy.
What has made Adebayo one of the most unique contributors in the Heat’s 37 seasons, what has earned him each of his two maximum contract extensions, has been the ability to play in support, be it masking the defensive shortcomings of others or operating as a deferential fulcrum on offense.
Alongside Goran Dragic and Jimmy Butler, it worked. NBA Finals in 2020.
Alongside Kyle Lowry and Butler, it worked. NBA Finals in 2023.
But when there isn’t enough to support, so much of Adebayo’s skillset becomes muted.
A year ago in Paris, Adebayo was the teammate of choice for Team USA on the way to Olympic gold. He complemented so many — who in turn complimented him — that many of those medalists have shared desire of wanting to play alongside again.
But now, with the Heat, there not only is not nearly enough alongside, there also is a different timeline than for a player selected in the first round in 2017.
As the Heat have struggled on the personnel market to recover from the forced exit of Butler, much recently has been made of Next Gen Heat.
Turning 28 in just over a week, Adebayo hardly is aging out. His latest extension hasn’t even kicked in.
But the players at the core at the Heat’s development program are lagging in regard to an Adebayo win-now timeline. Coach Erik Spoelstra spoke during his season wrap-up of prospects who still need to mature into playoff contributors, arguably still years away. Tyler Herro is 25, Jaime Jaquez Jr. is 24, Nikola Jovic is 22, Kel’el Ware is 21, Kasparas Jakucionis is 19. For all but Herro, still lessons to be learned.
And there is nothing wrong with a youth movement, even with as long as it has been since those words were part of the Heat vernacular.
But Adebayo not only will be earning $37 million this coming season, but then the jump to $51 million the following season. And it’s not as if most of the aforementioned kid stuff with the Heat is a year away. Ware, Jovic and Jaquez hardly looked that way in the playoffs. Jakucionis has yet to put on an NBA uniform for real.
Again, this is not about Adebayo’s hard-earned and well-deserved money.
It’s just about when it is being spent … amid a youth movement.
When it comes to player comps, at least in terms of complementary big men, the closest might be Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green.
Unlike with Adebayo, there rarely have been questions about dollars spent on Green, with his everything-but-scoring completeness, as he now, too, stands to move soon enough into the $50 million club.
The difference is the only dips in competitiveness for Golden State during Green’s tenure have been due to injuries of others. Not a retreat for youth to catch up, where the Heat appear headed.
Otherwise, it has been all-in for Golden State, as shown by this past season’s Warriors move for Butler. No gap years considered with a healthy Stephen Curry alongside, with Green therefore able to do what he does best with a team able to benefit by what he does best.
But the Heat do not have a Curry, do not have an All-NBA A-list talent to support, nor do they still have the annual hope of Playoff Jimmy for Adebayo to complement.
On a contender, Bam Adebayo also has proven to be invaluable.
At the moment, the 2025-26 Miami Heat look the farthest thing from contender, with questions about the timing of a turnaround with a roster suddenly skewing young, younger and youngest.
If the Heat move off Herro, the last vestige of consistent scoring would be gone from a team desperate for scoring, in a league where offense arguably never has been more important. That, alone, should make him a keeper, any extension not to kick in for two more seasons, more aligned with a Heat rebuild.
If the Heat move off Bam Adebayo, the defense will absorb a crushing blow, but that will come at a time when NBA offense has trumped NBA defense.
Bam Adebayo on a contender is a sight to behold.
Bam Adebayo during a gap year or even during a — dare we say it? — rebuild would be a unique skill set laid to waste.
Moving on from Adebayo certainly would be a jolt to the status quo. But it also could shake up the status woe.
IN THE LANE
MOVING ON: With Duncan Robinson dealt to the Detroit Pistons for Simone Fontecchio, it allowed for greater candor from Heat executive/ESPN analyst Udonis Haslem regarding Robinson. That included Haslem addressing the elephant in the room, namely the defensive struggles that often made it costly for the Heat to have Robinson on the court despite his prolific 3-point shooting. “I mean, I’m happy for Duncan,” Haslem said on NBA Today of Robinson landing with the Pistons. “He’s a guy who’s ignitable, but the thing he’s going to do for them mostly is open up Cade Cunningham and the other guys. The way defenses react when Duncan steps on the basketball court, they face guard him, and they don’t help-side defend.” That’s when Haslem, though, turned to the defense. “I never understood why an offensive shooter couldn’t play defense on another shooter,” Haslem said. “He’s literally doing the same thing you do, but shooters can’t guard shooters. … Defense is something Dunc gotta work on, and he knows that.”
THE OTHER SIDE: As for the other side of the trade equation, it remains to be seen if Fontecchio was a contract of convenience for the Heat or could turn into something more under Erik Spoelstra. As the Detroit News noted in the wake of the trade, Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff said this past season of the Italian shooting specialist, “He understands how to play the game at a high level. He understands the dynamic of who the shot creators are and the plays that are being run for who. He still finds a way to impact winning. He crashes the offensive glass a ton, gets a lot of loose balls, plays defense, and then obviously the bonus is when that shot’s going down.” Potentially remaining to be seen is whether Fontecchio can be as patient if not utilized for games on end, as was the case this past season with Alec Burks.
RARE EXCEPTION: In a candid discussion with LeBron James and Steve Nash on the Mind of the Game podcast, Kevin Durant cited Davion Mitchell as the rare undersized guard still able to thrive as a starting-level player in today’s NBA. Durant cited the dogged defense of the 6-foot Heat guard as his reasoning. “You can’t get picked on defense,” Durant said of smaller guards being phased out of NBA rotations. “That’s the thing. Because we play such a pick-on game that they will really, literally, if you can’t guard, they will bring you up every play. And if you’re six-foot, six-one, and you’re not a bulldog like a Davion Mitchell, Jrue Holiday on the defensive side, or you’re not an offensive flat-out savant like Kyrie (Irving), where you can score on dudes seven feet easily in an iso, I just can’t see it.”
COACH HONORED: Heat shooting coach Rob Fodor recently was honored by Hillsdale College with an award for Outstanding Achievement in Professional Athletics. Fodor, from the school’s Class of ’84, just completed eighth season overall with the Heat and his fifth as shooting coach/player development coach. He is the only full-time shooting coach in the franchise’s 37 seasons. Fodor’s resume includes time spent coaching and teaching shooting in Norway, Germany, Spain, Singapore and Slovenia.
NUMBER
17. Teams that have triggered a hard cap for the coming season, including the Heat, due to acquiring a player (Simone Fontecchio) in their sign-and-trade agreement in the deal for Duncan Robinson. The Heat will be hard capped at the second apron of the luxury tax, which should afford more than enough personnel flexibility going forward over the next 12 months.
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