In what was a painful 2024-25 campaign for the Miami Heat both on and off the court, they were finally put out of their misery on Monday night. For just the third time in franchise history, Miami was swept out of the postseason. This time by the top seed Cleveland Cavaliers.
It was an offensive masterclass for the Cavs, who displayed exactly why they have been the best team in the East Conference all season long. They outscored Miami 262-170 combined in Games 3 and 4, as they handed the Heat their eighth consecutive home playoff loss after the perfect 4-0 series sweep.
Cleveland won this series by 122 points: The most lopsided series in NBA playoff history.
— Tim Reynolds (@ByTimReynolds) April 29, 2025
The Heat were clearly out of their league. They looked exactly like what they truly are during this first round collapse— a below average 10th seed that somehow managed to make the NBA postseason.
Cleveland dismantled them on both ends of the floor. And the results showed it.
Tyler Herro’s struggles in the previous game carried into the Game 4 season finale. The first-year All-Star scored just four points on 1 of 10 shooting. He was a complete no-show, but the Heat didn’t get that much more out of anyone else either, with an embarrassing final score of 138-83 in the loss.
Considering the last time Miami won a home game in the postseason came in the 2023 Eastern Conference finals, the goal for this front office will likely shift to how they can get back to that stage.
The last time the Miami Heat won a playoff game at home dates back to almost two full years ago, on May 21, 2023.
Jimmy Butler is gone. He isn’t around to make a mediocre roster suddenly look like a contender come April anymore.
However, they still have structure.
Coach Erik Spoelstra, although he had a rough year of his own, still remains arguably the greatest coach in the association. They have an All-Star caliber base to build around with Bam Adebayo and Herro and both are still under contract. Davion Mitchell’s re-signing will be a priority, and Kel'el Ware has the tools and potential to be a long-term starter.
Virtually everybody else on the roster, though, should be wondering about their future. There just isn’t enough talent. And there should be plenty of uncomfortable conversations held behind the scenes in the coming months.
At the same time, it could be much easier for a lot of the guys on the squad to play a more valuable role if there was another superstar in the picture. There will be plenty of disgruntled stars that shake free, with a trade market headlined by Kevin Durant and perhaps Giannis Antetokounmpo to come.
But that’s where the first major question will arise. Are the Heat willing to develop through the draft and with undrafted finds over the next few years in a soft rebuild? Or will Pat Riley put all his chips down to pursue one last title run in his final years?
As long as Riley is still involved, expect the latter.
For an organization that stresses championships and culture, being a play-in team that annually gets bounced out of the first round isn’t enough. This season was clouded by peeling off a Butler-drama band-aid, but the struggle just to reach mediocrity in a wide-open Eastern Conference shouldn’t last.
Re-tool and come back stronger. The Heat have work to do.