Thursday, December 22nd, 2011 at 1:05 pm  |  25 responses

Miami Heat’s New Offense Inspired By the Oregon Ducks


Following the devastating NBA Finals defeat to the Dallas Mavericks, Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra had a lot of time during the lockout to re-think Miami’s offensive attack, and drew inspiration from the college football powerhouse Oregon Ducks’ innovative playbook. ESPN has a terrific feature on the new Heat offense (which Pat Riley recently claimed resembles the one his “Showtime” Lakers ran in the 1980′s): “Explosive. Fast. Unpredictable. These are the words that [Chip] Kelly used to describe the principles behind his signature spread offense that he rode to the BCS National Championship Game in 2011 to Spoelstra. They’re also the same ones often used to describe a Heat team led by LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. At least, that’s what the team is supposed to be. By most accounts, the Heat underachieved both competitively and aesthetically in the Big Three’s debut season. Miami didn’t smash the record books and they played at one of the slowest paces in the NBA in 2010-11. As the one calling the shots, Spoelstra received much of the blame. But rather than deflect the responsibility, the third-year Heat coach went back to the drawing board to find a better model. So he bought a plane ticket to go see Kelly and ask him a simple, yet vexing question: How exactly do you turn a collection of world-class athletes into a merciless scoring machine? Kelly’s answer made all the sense in the world to Spoelstra. To leverage the team’s blinding athleticism, Kelly told him, one must spread the floor, turn up the pace and let it fly. Pace and space are essential. And so the mantra for the new Heat was born. Under the watch of Pat Riley, the steward of the ‘Showtime’ Lakers in the 1980s, Spoelstra set out to design his very own attack built on speed, versatility and athleticism … What happens when the Heat lose three games in a row this winter? What happens when the Chicago Bulls go on a 8-0 run down the stretch of a crucial game? What happens when Spoelstra needs to take advantage of a hole in the opposing defense with sharp X’s-and-O’s? It remains to be seen, but the potential benefits are hard to ignore, and the players seem happy with the tweaks. LeBron says he loves where the Heat’s offense is right now. Wade believes Spoelstra has done ‘a great job.’ And Bosh? He’s gushing about Spoelstra’s new groove for a different reason: You can’t really scout it. This is perhaps the greatest potential benefit of all. Everyone knows where LeBron, Wade and Bosh would be at all times last season because everyone memorized Spoelstra’s playbook. The Heat were predictable and that’s what made them beatable at times too, especially in the playoffs. Armed with a unique roster, Spoelstra is thinking outside the box and the plan seems to be working for now. With his own spin on Showtime in place, Spoelstra is hoping his moment of clarity in Oregon will lead to a moment of triumph for Miami.”

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  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    I mean I LOVE the idea. But I HATE that they are saying they got the concept from a football team. Spoelstra has never proven to be an even competent offensive mind. Using a whole different sport to be innovative? idk about that.

  • LA Huey

    I like the idea so long as they remember that defense wins chips. I don’t want them to drift to being more like the 7SOL Suns.

  • http://www.slamonline.com megatron

    chip kelly is probably the opposite of spoelstra

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Huey with Spo that is the one thing you don’t have to worry about. That team will be top 3 defensively every year they have LeBron, Wade, & Spoelstra. Spoelstra had the 09 Heat as a top 5 defense. And Michael Beasley was the second best player on the team.

  • http://skjflf.com Jukai

    NBK: Dude, be glad. He said he has EMPLOYED AN OFFENSIVE SCHEME FOR HIS TEAM TO FOLLOW. That’s better than last year’s “well we’ll learn defense first and I’ll run some offensive plays eventually!”
    I still think this team needs more pick and roll, but hey, whatever.

  • Zack

    ^^ Cosign. I remember LeBron or DWade saying last year that Spo told them if they got a stop on D they could do whatever the hell they wanted on O.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    like I said Juks, I love the idea. I hate the inspiration.

  • http://skjflf.com Jukai

    NBK: Well, if Haslem and James start to tackle opposing players, we know Spo didn’t execute it right.

  • Lew alcindor

    thats cool and all but does spo knows that oregon changed their offensive sets too?

  • T-Money

    you’re seeing it already in the pre-season. miami doesn’t look to “reset” the plays anymore and just take the first good shot available.

  • http://Slamonline.com nbk

    Lol jukai

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  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    They gotta learn how to pace themselves or their defense suffers.

  • http://skjflf.com Jukai

    Still don’t like how Howard was looking like Hakeem at times that night. I mean, just ONE decent big man is all I ask for….

  • LA Huey

    I love that they seemed to hang their hat on D last season. I love great defense. I’ll take a 150 point playoff slugfest over a 300 point shootout any day.

  • http://nbasobrietystrike.blogspot.com/ CoolWhip

    Chi-town’s defense will put down the Heat and kill Ducks, so it’s no matter

  • http://slamonline.com The Black Rick Kamla

    ….smh, I wanna root for Spoelstra but dude just aint a real basketball coach

  • http://slamonline.com datkid

    cosign nbk and juks… also I hope they run james and wade PR in crucial moments.. they REALLY didn’t do that enough.

  • the truth

    just like chicago did last year in the playoffs lol

  • http://www.leaguelineup.com/welcome.asp?url=pawtucketymca Gametimeweezy

    See I like Spoelstra as a coach but he always look like he’s on edge like Pat Riley just got done reaming him a new one.

  • Lan

    I thought something like this was obvious!

  • http://www.leaguelineup.com/welcome.asp?url=pawtucketymca Gametimeweezy

    Oh wait I get it! Run D’Antoni’s offense!?

  • Justin G.

    I’m still smh at everyone’s assertion that the guy is a bad coach after a couple years and two completely different Heat team that he’s had to deal with. As I’ve stated before, Phil Jackson didn’t win for 2 years with the Bulls and he’s the greatest coach of all time. But, this is a day and age of people needing immediate results and if you don’t get them right away you apparently don’t know what you’re doing. Just the oh so educated people of SLAM do

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfN-HzV_AOo&feature=related nbk

    He’s a bad offensive coach. You don’t have to be a genius to figure that out. Ask Eboy, he’s watched every game Spoelstra has ever coached.

  • floe

    …jerked to

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