The Miami Heat
are a professional basketball team based in Miami, Florida, United States. The team is a member of the Southeast Division in the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball Association (NBA). They play their home games at American Airlines Arena. The team is owned by Micky Arison, coached by Erik Spoelstra and are managed by Basketball Hall of Fame coach Pat Riley.
The Heat were formed in 1988 as an expansion franchise along with the Charlotte Hornets. Since then, Miami has fielded squads that have made the playoffs 13 out of the 21 seasons, captured seven division titles and won the 2006 NBA Finals against the Dallas Mavericks 4–2.
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Franchise history
The Heat were founded in 1988 during major
NBA expansion. The inaugural team lost their first 17 games and finished the season 15–67. In the
1989 NBA Draft, the Heat selected
Glen Rice with the fourth pick. He would take them to their first playoff appearances in
1992 against the
Chicago Bulls, and
1994 when they took the top-seeded Atlanta Hawks to a then-full 5 games. Miami experienced new heights during the mid 90s with the hiring of
Pat Riley, an executive and coach who had reinvigorated several franchises on his way to South Beach. He orchestrated a deal that sent Rice to the
Charlotte Hornets in exchange for center
Alonzo Mourning.
Tim Hardaway came aboard the following year and the Heat begun a streak that saw them reach the postseason a franchise record six straight times and win four divisions titles. Those years were also marked with clashes with
the Bulls and
the New York Knicks, who eliminated them three straight years.
Miami dwindled in the early 2000s, fielding sub-40 win teams and after several years of rebuilding and draft, the Heat made waves in the
2003 NBA Draft when they selected
Dwyane Wade out of
Marquette University and paired him with
Shaquille O'Neal the following season. The duo, along with a resurgent Riley and well-traveled veterans, would lead Miami to three division titles and a
NBA championship in 2006 over the
Dallas Mavericks in which Wade was named
Finals MVP. The Heat failed to defend their title and free agent signings, trades and injuries would eventually take hold of the future. O'Neal was traded in the
2007–08 NBA season, several players signed elsewhere, Riley retired and Wade underwent several surgeries during a nightmare
2007–08 season as Miami went 15–67, a dubious mark tied by the inaugural team. Only
Udonis Haslem, Dwyane Wade, and Dorell Wright remain from the championship team. Dwyane Wade had a prolific season in the 2008–2009 season, Wade scored more than 2300 points and over 500 assists. He led the team to the NBA playoffs, but the Heat lost to the
Atlanta Hawks in the first round.
The heat recently acquired Quentin Richardson on a trade with the Minnesota Timberwolves for Mark Blount.
Season-by-season records
Players
For the complete list of Miami Heat players see: Miami Heat all-time roster.
For the players drafted by the Miami Heat, see: Miami Heat draft history.
Roster
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Notable players.
- Tim Hardaway
(1996–2001) — He is the Miami Heat's all time leader in three point field goals (806) and led the Heat to some of the franchise's best seasons. Late season injuries kept Hardaway from performing at the peak of his abilities for almost all of the Heat's playoff runs and he missed most of the playoff games.
- Jamal Mashburn
(1997–2000) — Was a key member of the Heat's four consecutive Atlantic Division championship teams.
- Alonzo Mourning
(1995–2001, 2004–2007) — Mourning is the holder of several franchise records, including games (538), rebounds (4807), and blocks (1625). His 9459 points were the most in franchise history until Dwyane Wade passed him on March 14, 2009. Mourning made five all-star games as member of the team and won two Defensive Player of The Year awards (1999, 2000).
- Shaquille O'Neal
(2004–2008) — The future Hall of Famer was with the Heat from 2004–2008, leading the Heat to their first championship. Injuries kept him from nearly 123 games in the four years.
- Glen Rice
(1989–1995) — In Miami, after only averaging 13.6 points per game his rookie season, Rice averaged 20 ppg for his remaining five seasons in Miami, which also included two trips to the playoffs, but without winning a series during Rice's tenure. It was Rice who was included in a deal which brought Alonzo Mourning.
- Dwyane Wade
(2003–present) — Picked fifth overall in the 2003 NBA Draft, Wade has been an All-Star since 2005. He has led the Heat to their first NBA Championship in his third pro campaign. He was named the 2006 NBA Finals MVP as he led the Heat to a 4–2 series win over the Dallas Mavericks. He is the Heat's all-time leader in points with over 9,600 and assists with over 2,600.
Basketball Hall of Famers
Pat Riley: Inducted in 2008
Retired and honored numbers
Of the three numbers retired by the Heat, only one has actually played for the franchise, Alonzo Mourning. Pat Riley retired
Michael Jordan's signature #23 before his final game in Miami during the
2002–03 season as a tribute to his career.
[1] Miami retired Mourning's #33 during a halftime ceremony on March 30, 2009.
[2] During the
2005–06 season the organization honored
Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback
Dan Marino #13 in respect of his contributions to the
Miami Dolphins.
[3]
Honored numbers:
- #13
Dan Marino – Miami Dolphins
Retired numbers:
- '''#32 Shaq
- #33
Alonzo Mourning
Top 25 Heat Players of all time
The 20th Anniversary list compiled by the Miami Heat to celebrate the players.
[4]
- Keith Askins
- Bruce Bowen
- P. J. Brown
- Caron Butler
- Bimbo Coles
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- Sherman Douglas
- Kevin Edwards
- Brian Grant
- Tim Hardaway
- Udonis Haslem
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- Eddie Jones
- Voshon Lenard
- Grant Long
- Dan Majerle
- Jamal Mashburn
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- Alonzo Mourning
- Lamar Odom
- Shaquille O'Neal
- James Posey
- Glen Rice
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- Rony Seikaly
- Steve Smith
- Rory Sparrow
- Dwyane Wade
- Jason Williams
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Home arenas
- Miami Arena (1988–1999)
- American Airlines Arena (1999–present)
Head coaches
Uniforms
These are the Miami Heat uniforms worn since the
1999–00 season. The alternate red jersey was introduced during the
2001–02 NBA season and is the unofficial Heat road uniform during the
NBA Playoffs. They are also the only team in the NBA to have the NBA logo on the right shoulder instead of the left.also the heat have a team rule that prohibits headbands like
Utah Jazz,
Toronto Raptors,and the
Orlando Magic
Franchise Accomplishments and Awards
Franchise Leaders
Individual Awards
NBA Scoring Champion
NBA Defensive Player of the Year
- Alonzo Mourning – 1999, 2000
NBA Most Improved Player Award
- Rony Seikaly – 1990
- Isaac Austin – 1997
NBA Finals MVP
'''
NBA Coach of the Year
All-NBA First Team
- Tim Hardaway – 1997
- Alonzo Mourning – 1999
- Shaquille O'Neal – 2005, 2006
- Dwyane Wade – 2009
All-NBA Second Team
- Tim Hardaway – 1998, 1999
- Alonzo Mourning – 2000
- Dwyane Wade – 2005, 2006
All-NBA Third Team
NBA All-Defensive First Team
- Alonzo Mourning – 1999, 2000
NBA All-Defensive Second Team
- P.J. Brown – 1997, 1999
- Bruce Bowen – 2001
- Dwyane Wade – 2005, 2009
Slam Dunk Contest
- Harold Miner – 1993, 1995
Three Point Contest
- Glen Rice – 1995
- Jason Kapono – 2007
- Daequan Cook – 2009
Skills Challenge
Rookie of the Month
- Caron Butler – November 2002, January–March 2003
Player of the Month
- Glen Rice – April 1992
- Alonzo Mourning – December 1999
- Lamar Odom – March 2004
- Dwyane Wade – December 2004
- Shaquille O'Neal – March 2005
- Dwyane Wade – February 2006
- Dwyane Wade – December 2008
- Dwyane Wade – February 2009
USA Olympians
- Tim Hardaway – 2000 Sydney
- Alonzo Mourning – 2000 Sydney
- Dwyane Wade – 2004 Athens, 2008 Beijing
Radio and television
The flagship radio stations of the Miami HEAT are
WINZ (940 AM) in English, with
Mike Inglis and
John Crotty calling games, and
WQBA (1140 AM) in Spanish, with Jose Paneda and Joe Pujala on the call.
The Heat games are televised primary by
Sun Sports with
Eric Reid and
Tony Fiorentino. Previously,
WBFS-TV,
WFOR-TV, and
WAMI-TV have all aired some games. Games are occasionally televised by
TNT,
ESPN, or
ABC.
From 1988–1993, the HEAT were on
WQAM.
WINZ previously aired games from 1993–1996 and
WIOD did from 1996–2008.
References
- Heat retires first number
- Bets or not, Alonzo Mourning lets the tears flow
- Dan the Man
- http://www.nba.com/heat/history/20th_anniversary_top_25_players.html