Heat will have truly lost the plot if desperation leads them to this trade

Miami needs to have an iron stomach here.
Miami Heat v Cleveland Cavaliers
Miami Heat v Cleveland Cavaliers | Jason Miller/GettyImages

The Miami Heat badly want to offload Terry Rozier. While that makes sense, if their most recent trade has taught them anything, it's that they must attach a high-end pick or young player to his contract to make it happen. 

And that's something they absolutely cannot do. 

As Ethan J. Skolnick of Five Reasons Sports notes, the Heat are "actively shopping" Rozier's expiring contract in search of “just about anything, but specifically frontcourt help.” That desperation tracks with their financial situation, and roster makeup. The Heat are extremely guard-heavy at the moment, and Rozier is on the books for up to $26-plus million.

Still, there must be limits to this desperation. Moving Rozier just for the sake of getting rid of him is a big ol’ no-no if the Heat need to sweeten the pot—which they most definitely will.

Look at what it cost the Heat to trade Haywood Smith

Haywood Highsmith is a useful three-and-D role player on the books for just $5.6 million next season. Though he’s recovering from knee surgery, his timeline for return could render him available by opening night, or shortly thereafter. 

Well, Miami needed to fork over a 2032 second-round pick just for the Brooklyn Nets to take him. That transaction, while the most confusing of the offseason, informs this one: If it cost the Heat a distant second-rounder to get off an impact, albeit injured, wing on a team-friendly expiring contract, just imagine what it’ll cost to wipe off the $26.6 million Rozier counts for in prospective trades.

Granted, Miami would not be looking to dump him without taking money back. That’s mostly because it can’t. Cap space around the league has largely dried up, and no team has a traded player exception large enough to absorb Rozier’s salary in full.

Moving Terry Rozier would cost the Heat flexibility

Even if the Heat find a taker for this deal, it will almost assuredly eat into the financial flexibility they’ve worked so hard to carve out. The lack of long-term money on their books points to a team still pining after the next superstar free agent or trade target who shakes loose. There is almost no way they ship out Rozier without adding money to their balance sheet beyond this season, and taking on someone with questionable trade value themselves.

In the event they do convert the 31-year-old guard into another expiring contract, impact player, or someone who checks both boxes, it’s because they’ve also surrendered someone like Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kel’el Ware, Kasparas Jakucionis, or a first-round pick that conveys in 2029 or later. That may preserve their financial flexibility, but it annihilates their armory of assets. 

Belly-flopping into those waters is actually worse than saddling themselves with more big-picture money. Stars are currently more likely to switch teams via trades than free agency. The Heat are going to need every possible asset at their disposal to compete in forthcoming sweepstakes for Giannis Antetokounmpo, Jaylen Brown, Jaren Jackson Jr., or anyone else they identify as a gettable target in the near or distant future. 

It’s one thing if Rozier is folded into a blockbuster acquisition as the primary salary-matching tool accompanied by Miami’s best assets. Failing that, the Heat are better off waiting for his contract to expire.