Miami Heat: Eastern Conference Supremacy, But For How Long?

Duncan Robinson #55 and Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat defend a shot by Kelly Oubre Jr. #12 of the Charlotte Hornets (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
Duncan Robinson #55 and Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat defend a shot by Kelly Oubre Jr. #12 of the Charlotte Hornets (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) /
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Kyle Lowry #7 of the Miami Heat in action against the Brooklyn Nets(Photo by Jim McIsaac/2021 Jim McIsaac) /

For conversational purposes, how many of the Miami Heat’s next games can they win before they have the threat of losing one? Well and in a very talented league like the NBA, any team can lose on any night, however, the Heat also just aren’t any team.

They, too, still can lose though, but they shouldn’t and won’t let their guard down as easily as some others might. Looking directly to their next contest, a matchup against the Boston Celtics in Miami and with all due respect (perhaps?), the Miami Heat should and will win that contest.

Must Read. They Have So Much Room For Improvement… It’s Scary. light

With them being a better team, for one and the drama going on in Boston right now, they shouldn’t be hard to topple.

The Miami Heat’s road immediately gets tougher though, welcoming in the Utah Jazz, before heading out west to face the Nuggets, the Lakers, the Clippers, the Jazz again at their place, and a cherry on top by facing Oklahoma City in OKC before being able to come back home for a November 17th contest against the Pelicans.

The Miami Heat certainly have a tall task ahead of them to win out, but let’s say they go 5-2, at worst (while they could go 6-1), that puts them at 11-3. You could do the same exercise for the two and three teams in the conference right now, the Bulls and the 76ers.