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Dave Hyde: No title, no shame, no regrets, nothing but thanks to Heat for this great run

Denver wins title, but Heat had the kind of playoff run that wins hearts

Miami Heat forward Caleb Martin (16) tries to shoot while defended by Denver Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon, right, during the first half of Game 5 of basketball's NBA Finals on, Monday. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Miami Heat forward Caleb Martin (16) tries to shoot while defended by Denver Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon, right, during the first half of Game 5 of basketball’s NBA Finals on, Monday. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
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It wasn’t until Jimmy Butler made the play he shouldn’t, the one pass he couldn’t, that you sensed the end was finally coming for the Miami Heat. You’d sensed it so many times before this spring you wanted to discard it even then Monday night.

Their end first seemed certain after that play-in loss to Atlanta way back in early April, then again in getting the draw against top-seed Milwaukee. The tortuous was surely not just the end of their season but one to hauntingly hover over South Florida sports like Banquo’s ghost for eternity.

So, even when Butler drove the lane Monday night with the Heat trailing a point, even when he stopped and threw the ball into the arms of Denver’s Kentavious Caldwell-Pope with 24.7 seconds left, the first thought was how they would manage to escape this one.

Then the thudding reality hit again: Denver was too much. Denver kept turning the Heat in ways no team did, right down to that bad Butler pass turning into two free throws, then two more after an errant Butler 3-point attempt

Denver was the class of this series. But what a time the Heat had. What a two-month run. Team president Pat Riley regrets expressing the line so many years ago of how there’s only, “Winning or misery,” and this playoff stretch of the Heat tells why.

Give us this misery every time. Give us a team like this, overcoming odds and better-on-paper teams along the way, even if on the final night they’re the ones walking off the court emotionally and physically spent while confetti fell around them.

“We would have liked to be able to climb the mountaintop and be able to get that final win,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “But I think this is a team that a lot of people can relate to if you ever felt that you were dismissed or felt that you were made to feel less than. We had a lot of people in our locker room that probably have had that, and there’s probably a lot of people out there, you know, that have felt that at some time or another.”

This was a Team of Spoelstras, of undrafted players who worked their way up from the bottom, just like their coach did from the video room to the top of his craft. Caleb Martin? Duncan Robinson? Gabe Vincent? Max Strus? Was there a better lesson for what hard work and playing together can do?

The exhaustive, obsessive work of Spoelstra into the smallest details transferred into competitive excellence to his team, too. They weren’t an overly talented team as far as athleticism and measurable skills, as was said every series. But did any team compete harder? And isn’t that a talent, too?

Nothing defined who they were better than a 15-second sequence with just over five minutes left Monday that began with Gabe Vincent missing a 3-point shot. Max Strus dove for the long rebound, but Denver’s Caldwell-Pope grabbed it. The ball was knocked loose a few seconds later, and Bam Adebayo dove to the floor after it. Then Kyle Lowry did. Caldwell-Pope got it again.

He dribbled a few harried times before his pass was intercepted by Vincent. How many teams get the kind of effort, possession after possession? And on defense? It was the offense that was the problem this final series.

Butler was the one star on the team, even if he wasn’t a big enough star most nights since Maybe that bothered him. Maybe it was something else. Maybe we’ll never know.

All you know is the Heat didn’t get the title they chased like a rabid dog. Sure, that matters. Itap professional sports. But what also matters is they were great protagonists in a classic, at times confounding, run through the NBA spring.

Series after series had great drama and greater performances flash by us. Against Milwaukee, Butler scored 52 and 45 points in games while being covered by Jrue Holiday, who was named the league’s top defender last week by a players’ poll from The Athletic.

The New York Knicks series was capped by Spoelstra giving a post-series salute to his boss, Pat Riley, who was tormented by those Knicks of the ’90s

“This close out game was a nod to our president,’’ Spoelstra said minutes after finishing off the Knicks in five games.

The next act against Boston was a Shakespearian drama unto itself. There was the rising action of the Heat taking a 3-0 lead and the falling action of dropping the next three, including a gut-wrenching Game 6 that could have gone down in the annals as one of South Florida sports’ worst losses.

It instead became a calling card of just who the Heat is. That dramatic Game 7 was an opus of organizational work.

So the Heat was back to the final series for the second time in four years. They didn’t win again. And, again, that matters. But the dream didn’t die as much as their run finally came to an end.

Spoelstra sat afterward and talked of how, “this team handled setbacks and adversity, you know, to develop a collective grit and perseverance. I mentioned this before that hopefully these are lessons that will transcend this beautiful game; that hopefully these are lessons that we can pass along to our children; that even though it is sport, that you can learn lessons of life from this game; that you can persevere; that you can handle what people may view as mini-failures along the way and become stronger from it and to be able to overcome things and find beautiful things on the other side of that.

“Now, obviously, we didn’t get the final win, but sometimes thatap true in sport and also in life — that you don’t always get what you want. But there’s no regret from our side. Everybody, staff, player alike in the locker room put themselves out there and put themselves into the team, whatever was best for the team. And the tough pill to swallow is it just wasn’t good enough. We ran up against a team that was just better than us in this series.”

Thatap the essence of sports. Or it least it should be. Often its hard to find amid the bells and whistles around the games. Sometimes a playoff run like this reminds you what itap all about, even without winning it all.

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