Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Heatles embarrassed in Boston

The depleted Heat went on tour to face the undermanned Celtics, getting smacked around and thrown to the curb. The champs mowed down coverages. Luke Kornet turned into Goliath, derailing smaller men with six blocks. And Bam Adebayo had another disappearing act.

 

Boston’s Payton Pritchard, Derrick White and Jaylen Brown did most of the damage with 14 artillery strikes. And Gang Green’s protections were as strict as a medieval lord during a famine, permitting the Heatles just nine of 25 paint shots during the first half, then shutting them down further and forcing 11 turnovers in the second.

 

Had things gone close to according to plan for the visitors, Keshad Johnson, an undrafted rookie on a two-way deal, wouldn’t have logged the first six minutes of his career in a second-half blowout.

 

Despite Boston’s superior talent, both squads were on the second night of a back-to-back, but only the hosts looked like a serious team.

 

Yet again, the self-proclaimed hardest-working, best-conditioned, most professional, unselfish, toughest, meanest, nastiest team in the NBA was softer in all of those areas than a despised rival.

 

This is just in: coach Erik Spoelstra contemplated testing temporary insanity like Pat Riley used to but couldn’t figure out which team member to sacrifice. He is waiting to go rapid-fire in the next film session.

Perhaps he shouldn’t tell the players that if the Celtics’ physical defense is going to neutralize them, he’ll save Boston the trouble and take them out himself, like vintage Riley after the Memorial Day massacre in 1985. But he should have Adebayo sit in the front row and continuously rewind his offensive lowlights for the season.

 

Adebayo, the team captain, is having his worst year as a starter. Jimmy Butler’s cape looks too large for him, like when Silvio Dante couldn’t handle the pressure of being the boss when Tony Soprano was in a coma.

 

He used to be a threat to score, but this was his ninth outing of the year, logging below 40% of his field goal attempts. He only had 12 last year in 71 games, and the season before that, it was nine times in 75 matches. Keep in mind that the Heat are nearly a quarter of the way through the year.

 

The captain’s mojo is missing like a boxer who has lost the sting behind the punch. He is taking slightly fewer shots in the restricted area and is down considerably in volume in his sweet spot- the paint non-restricted area. Accuracy has dropped by 8.8% and 12.7%.

 

Against no Kristaps Porziņģis, Monday’s game was the perfect opportunity for Adebayo to get back on track and it turned into another misused moment.

 

When asked what went wrong with the offense, he said, “We missed a lot of shots we normally make.”

 

The Heat got next to nothing from Duncan Robinson, too. He totaled five points on two of nine tries but missed all six from deep. Some of those were open-enough looks provided by Adebayo.

 

Likely because of the flight back to Miami, the team will not practice Tuesday, but it should. Don’t forget that Riley is no stranger to hopping off the charter and telling his guys to hit the hardwood. January and February are usually the “watch out” months that he’s warned about, but it behooves the Heatles to treat December the same way.

 

 

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Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Tyler Herro didn’t get enough help in Toronto as the Heat fell 116-119

The Heat failed in their comeback against the Raptors in Toronto, going 1-1 in the home and away miniseries and falling back to a .500 record (9-9).

 

Tyler Herro’s first-quarter flurry couldn’t save the Heat from being pushed to the edge of Jurassic Park in a double-digit deficit early. He had 13 points on three trays and a drive through the middle. But the defense was suspect, not guarding the arc well and losing the sniper and driver in transition. It was so bad that coach Erik Spoelstra yelled to close the lane from RJ Barrett in the open court, but nothing happened as he made a layup.

 

The second quarter started with the Heat down 24-34. The Heat tied up the game on a 14 to 2 run on nine straight points from Terry Rozier at the arc and line, plus actions from Pelle Larson and Bam Adebayo. They momentarily held the lead.

 

On the other side, center Jakob Poeltl made a putback, set up his teammate for a cut through the middle, and drew a foul on Adebayo. On top of that, the screen rolls exposed the corners.

 

At halftime, the Heat was down 60-65. The crew had 24 paint points, seven on the break, eight via second chances, 13 off turnovers and 27 from the bench.

 

The Raptors had 34 paint points, seven on the break, 11 on spare tries, three off turnovers and seven from the bench.

 

Then Butler muscled his way into the lane for two layups, scored in transition, and made two freebies. And Robinson connected on two treys.

 

But the Raptors countered with 14 of 24 field goals at close, mid and long-range to go up 11 points at the end of the period. Barrett maneuvered into the lane like a cobra cornering its prey. Scottie Barnes dished out two more dimes plus made a pull-up jumper over Haywood Highsmith at the nail. And Chris Boucher added six points.

 

Subsequently, the transition defense was hosed and the four turnovers the Heat’s offense committed didn’t help.

 

As the crew was down double digits within the last four minutes, Rozier ignited. He canned a step-back triple and dribbled through the middle for a layup. Butler scored in the open court through contact. Then Barrett and Herro traded 3-pointers, but the ladder needed to make one more to tie and failed.

 

The Heat lost 116-119. They had 46 paint points, 18 on the break, 16 via second chances, 22 off turnovers and 40 from the bench.

 

Herro had 31 points on nine of 16 attempts, with four rebounds, three assists, two steals and one turnover.

 

Butler had 17 points on six of nine attempts, with five rebounds, three assists and one steal.

 

Adebayo logged 13 points on 38.4% shooting, with 20 rebounds, seven assists, one steal and five turnovers.

 

The Raptors put up 68 paint points, 11 on the break, 13 via second chances, 18 off turnovers and 23 from the bench.

 

Barrett had 37 points on 75% accuracy, with seven rebounds, five assists, one block and four turnovers.

 

Barnes put up 23 points on nine of 17 attempts, with 10 rebounds, nine assists and four giveaways.

 

And Poeltl logged 17 digits on six of 12 looks, with 11 rebounds, three assists, two steals, one block and one turnover.

 

After the game, Spoelstra said, “In this league, you get what you deserve.”


Observations:

 

1. Barnes cut up the Heat with his playmaking in transition and the half court. Four of his feeds were to Barrett, two to Boucher, one to Poeltl, Davion Mitchell and Jamison Battle.

2. Adebayo and Butler didn’t provide enough on offense. Butler was walking with a limp at the end of the fourth quarter. After the game, he said he’s not sure if he’ll be able to play versus the Celtics on Monday.

 

3. The defense was obliterated. The Heat conceded 20 points more than they allow for the season in the square (48). They got caught ball-watching, and we’re not good enough at defending the dribble.

 

4. Rozier continues to be productive off the bench, but one of his shots in the fourth quarter, a triple in transition when the Heat had the numbers, failed, and it was a dumb attempt.

 

5. Robinson missed all five shots in the fourth quarter. Two of three 3-point attempts were pressured and one was an open miss.

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4 Nations Face-Off: Which Panthers Are In Contention For Roster Spots

There’s something about international sports that gets people excited. 

 

National pride certainly plays a part in it. Whether it’s a few days or a few weeks, sports fans temporarily put aside their normal rivalries; New York and Boston tolerate each other, Montrealers and Torontonians root for the same team — it’s a fun time when the national colors come on. 

 

Unfortunately for hockey fans, they’ve waited too long to see their favorite players on a best-on-best stage, international stage.

 

After Canada won their second-straight Gold Medal at Sochi 2014, the NHL did not send its players to the next two Winter Olympics — opting to skip out on  PyeongChang in 2018, then pulling out of the Beijing games in 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

 

Consensus around the league hasn’t changed for years; the players want to represent their countries in best-on-best tournaments. 

 

The 4 Nations Face-Off — which is set to take place in Montreal and Boston from Feb 12-20 — will be the first best-on-best tournament in the senior men’s game since the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. 

 

International hockey is coming back and the best players in the world will be suited up for it. 

 

Who will be there? Who can be?

 

All teams must have their full rosters submitted by Dec. 2; the selections will be made public on Dec. 4.

 

Last June, all of the participating countries had to name six players who were guaranteed roster spots for the 4 Nations Face-Off. 

 

The Florida Panthers have three players who were named to a 4 Nations roster last summer and there will certainly be a few more once the official teams are announced.

 

Here’s the Panthers who will be there (barring injury) and those who could see their name called.

 

TEAM USA 

Matthew Tkachuk already knows he’ll be wearing the red, white and blue, the 26-year-old forward was one of the American’s first six players selected back in June. 

 

Tkachuck will almost certainly be the lone Panther skater representing Team USA at the 4 Nations, however he won’t be the only Panther there.

 

Florida’s GM Bill Zito will be part of the American’s management staff and Head Equipment Manager Teddy Richards will be there as the equipment manager. 


Team Finland 

Last season, Aleksander Barkov became the first Finnish captain in NHL history to win the Stanley Cup. The 29-year-old Panthers’ leader is arguably the best Finnish player in the league right now; he was obviously one of the first six Finns selected for the 4 Nations tournament.

Barkov has represented his country a few times already at a best-on-best stage. He won a bronze medal at the 2014 Sochi Olympics and also played at the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. 

 

As the only active Finnish captain in the NHL, Barkov very well could be wearing the “C” this February for Finland.

 

We already know Barkov has his spot secured for the 4 Nations, but it’s likely he’ll be joined by a few more Panther Finns in February.

 

Anton Lundell, Eetu Luostarinen, and Niko Mikkola are the other three Finnish players on the Panthers roster. Looking at numerous roster predictions, the consensus around the media world is that all three of them are projected to make the team.

 

Lundell and Luostarinen have solidified themselves as legit top-9 NHLers over the past few seasons, with the duo playing an immense role in the Panthers winning the 2024 Stanley Cup. 

 

“That’s my goal, that would be a huge honor to play for Team Finland,” Lundell told me in early November. “You don’t think about it but it’s a big goal for me as well. I’m just trying to play as good as I can to show the coach there that I want to be on the team. Hopefully I’ll make it, but right now I stay in the moment and try to play as good as I can.”

 

Last season, Mikkola established himself as a mainstay on the Panthers blueline, eating plenty of minutes at 5-on-5 and on the penalty kill. There’s only 10 active Finnish defenseman in the NHL this season and Florida’s 6’6 stalwart blueliner should easily find himself in that lineup.

 

If my prediction of Luostarinen, Lundell and Mikkola making the team comes to fruition, the Panthers will have four players on Team Finland at the 4 Nations. 

 

Team Sweden

People in South Florida have heavily rated defenseman Gustav Forsling for years at this point, but his national coming out party came during the Panthers’ run to the Stanley Cup Final last season.

 

After winning the Cup as Florida’s No. 1 defenseman, the 28-year-old put the hockey world on notice — including those picking the Swedish national team.

 

Forsling was named as one of Sweden’s first six players selected for the 4 Nations, making him one of three Panthers skaters (Tkachuk, USA, Barkov, Finland) to have their spot secured for the tournament ne​​xt year.

 

This won’t be the first time Forsling represents Sweden, as he played in two World uniors — captaining the Swedish team in 2016 — also make an appearance at the 2015-16 Euro Hockey Tour. However, he’s never played for his country at a major, senior men’s tournament. 

 

The 4 Nations Face-Off is not a IIHF sanctioned event, but it is reserved strictly for players who have a 2024-25 NHL contract and are on an NHL roster, so it’s undoubtedly best-on best. A big reason for this tournament is to prepare for the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics — where the NHL will be sending its players, 

“That’s the ultimate goal I feel like, the Olympics would be a very cool experience if I would make the team there too,” Forsling said in June after making Team Sweden. “That’s kind of what we’re playing for, to get to the Olympics.”

 

Team Canada

Canada is the only country that did not have a Panther in its initial six roster selections. That being said, the Stanley Cup champions have a few legit options that could make the Canadian roster.

 

According to TSN hockey insider Pierre LeBrun, the Canadians made its final roster decisions on Nov 30, with a few “difficult” decisions as the roster came down to the last few players.

 

Nothing is guaranteed, but Sam Reinhart being selected to make Team Canada wouldn’t have been one of those difficult choices. The North Vancouver, BC native had 57 goals last season — second most in the NHL. 

 

Reinhart has been anything but a regressor this season. The 28-year-old leads the NHL with 18 goals in 25 games and is top five in points (34).

 

Him making the Canadian roster is all but in writing, the real question is how many of his Panthers teammates will join him.

 

On the other hand, his teammates — forwards Carter Verheaghe and Sam Bennett — very likely could’ve been involved in those last few cuts. 

 

I had both of them as bubble players to make the Canadian roster. While they undoubtedly deserve to be there — especially considering their respective playoff resumes — Canada has far and away the deepest forward pool to choose from.

Verhaeghe has been Florida’s most consistent goal scorer — regular and postseason — since he arrived in 2020-21. But Canada is already filled to the brim with elite goal scorers, with the likes of Nathan MacKinnon, Brayden Point, Connor McDavid already on the team.

 

Bennett’s play last postseason, followed by his fantastic start to this campaign very well should have raised eyes amongst the Canadian brass. 12 goals, 23 points in 24 games has Bennett top 15 in league scoring a quarter of a way to the season, yet his value to Team Canada relies within his heavy, 200-foot game — which would be important for tournament play.

If I had to guess which of the two would more likely be on Canada, I lean towards Bennett, mostly because he is one of the most physical skilled players in the league and hasn’t slowed down since the season began.

 

There’s one more Panther who hasn’t been getting a ton of media attention in 4 Nation mocks, but may have an outside shot to make the Canadian roster.

 

It’s Aaron Ekblad. 

 

The Windsor, ON. native is no stranger to international hockey. He played for Team North America at the World Cup of Hockey and represented Canada at the World Championships in 2015 and 2018.

 

Two years ago, Ekblad was a favorite to make the 2022 Olympic team before the NHL opted out.

 

On a personal level, the part of Ekblad’s game that jumped out to fans was how offensive minded he was, while still being the best defender on the Panthers. 

 

Following a few injuries, the now 28-year-old pivoted his game — for the better of his club — focusing more on being a shutdown defenseman and it paid off for the Panthers as they won the Stanley Cup with Ekblad on their top pair. 

 

“How we appreciate defensemen has changed over the years and it’s skewed to points now,” Panthers head coach Paul Maurice said earlier this week. “Aaron came in as that player — he was quite a point producer for a while — but he’s been a big part of the change in style of play.”

 

Ekblad has been a top pair defenseman on a team that had back-to-back Stanley Cup Final appearances. He’s not flashy like some of the other potential blueline candidates, but there’s one thing Ekblad has shown over the past few years — he can play at a high-level when the lights are the brightest. 

 

“He’s a spectacular defender, he and Gus [Forsling] are fantastic players,” Maurice added. “I appreciate that for him because there’s a sacrifice that goes with it. A player is up for a contract, these guys all now get paid on points and there’s a sacrifice for him, to our team, to put the defense first and he’s done that.”

The Panthers will be well represented at the 4 Nations Face-Off in February. Whether there’s three players, six, or more, the defending Stanley Cup champions will see their guys ready to go for gold on an international stage.

Mateo’s Hoop Diary: The Heat handled the Raptors in Miami in the fourth Emirates Cup match of the season

The Heat overpowered the lowly Toronto Raptors in the fourth Emirates Cup match of the year, improving to a 9-8 record. Bam Adebayo recorded his eighth career triple-double, and the crew also set their season high in 3-point makes (21) after poor marksmanship in the first half.

 

The first quarter was a defensive battle. The hosts held the Raptors to 21 points and forced seven turnovers by pressuring passes and stripping the ball handler. They also deployed a 2-2-1 press and tight man-to-man coverage.

 

On offense, Tyler Herro and Jimmy Butler were the only ones with multiple baskets, while the rest of the team made three of 15.

 

Subsequently, the Raptors’ defense contested perimeter shots promptly for the start of the second quarter, and their attack amassed 40 digits. Jakob Poeltl didn’t miss on four tries from six feet to the cup and closer. R.J. Barrett scored by spinning his way to the cup, slicing twice through the middle and making a wing triple. Scottie Barnes added seven points from short and long-range, plus he made two freebies.

 

On the other side, the offense found itself after missing five shots in a row, three-and-a-half minutes in. Eight Heatles registered the next 12 of 17 field goals. On top of that, Herro, Butler, Duncan Robinson and Kevin Love made five straight shots past the midway mark of the period.

 

At halftime, the Heat was behind 58-61. They had 26 paint points, three on the break, six via second chances, 13 off turnovers and 17 from the bench.

 

The Raptors had 32 paint points, four in the open court, seven on extra tries, 12 off turnovers and 10 from the reserves.

 

 Then the hosts matched their second-quarter output with 38 points in the third quarter. Herro added two triples and used Adebayo’s handoff to dribble into the lane for a floater with contact. Adebayo scored five points and dished three dimes, including the connection with Butler on the prettiest play of the night- a contested outlet pass that the latter gently made off the glass. Butler did damage from the line and close range. And the rest of the squad added six of eight shots.

 

At one point, the defense slipped up during the period, giving up five consecutive Raptor baskets to Barrett, Ochai Agbaji, Barnes, and Davion Mitchell. Yet, it was mostly strict, permitting the visitors 38% accuracy.

 

The fourth quarter started with the Heat ahead 96-84. But the defensive intensity waned, allowing drives through the center and an uncontested triple. On offense, the 3-point shooting- seven of 15 makes- bailed out the hosts.

 

The Heat won 121-111. The team had 36 paint points, 14 on the break, 12 via second chances, 27 off turnovers and 42 from the bench.

 

Butler had 26 points on eight of 14 attempts, with two rebounds, six assists and two steals.

 

Herro put up 23 points on 44% shooting, with three rebounds, four assists, one steal and one giveaway.

 

And Adebayo logged 14 points on six of 16 tries, with 10 rebounds, 10 assists, three steals and one turnover.

 

The Raptors had 62 paint points, eight in the open court, 11 via second chances, 14 off turnovers and 19 from the reserves.

 

Poeltl recorded 24 points, making 10 of 11 shots, with 10 rebounds, one assist and two turnovers.

 

Barrett had 25 points on 10 of 18 attempts, with six rebounds, seven assists and six turnovers.

 

And Barnes had 24 points on 53.3% shooting, with 10 rebounds, 10 assists, one steal, one block and five giveaways.

 

Observations:

 

1. Jaime Jaquez Jr. had his strongest game of the season, making six of nine shots. He made two catch-and-shoot threes, broke into the lane for multiple layups in the half-court, and scored in transition.

 

In the locker room, Butler said, “I like when he’s aggressive. I like when he’s playing with so much confidence that he can celebrate.”

 

2. Adebayo also had his top playmaking night of the season, logging a 10 in assist-to-turnover ratio. His highest mark in the category before this game was five, set on Nov. 26 in the loss versus the Milwaukee Bucks.

 

Against the Raptors, five of his dimes came via handoff and five were regular passes.

 

3. The Heat logged 13 of 23 baskets in the restricted area, shooting 8.9 points below the league average.

 

4. The Heat took good care of the ball and had their season low in turnovers (8).

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Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel is 1-15 in the past 16 games against teams with winning records.

Pressure Point: Dolphins’ latest debacle more about incompetence than cold weather

Unlike Thanksgiving leftovers, the Miami Dolphins’ 30-17 drubbing at Green Bay is as tough to swallow the day after as it was Thursday night before a national audience.

Because it was so predictable. And oh, so, familiar.

The longstanding narrative that the Dolphins can’t win in cold weather was reinforced. But it’s not so much about the temperature as it is about the time of year.

The Dolphins have been failing miserably under similar circumstances for years: in impactful games against top teams, on the road, late in the season, when typically it is cold.

Tua Tagovailoa hasn’t been able to shake the stigma of lack of big-game success. But even with the best quarterback they’ve ever had, the Dolphins couldn’t win these type of games.

Dan Marino was 8-17 against Jim Kelly and the Bills, including 0-3 in playoffs.

You’d think a serious football franchise would rise to the occasion, occasionally. But this high-stakes ineptitude has literally spanned decades, before the uniforms they wore Thursday night were considered throwbacks.

Dolphins manhandled by Packers

And it’s not always about being on the road in the cold. They lost the 2023 regular-season finale at home in ideal weather to the Bills with the AFC East title on the line. That earned them a trip to freezing Kansas City and another non-competitive first-round exit from the playoffs.

Sure, it was a tough assignment Thursday at frigid Lambeau Field off a short week. And it didn’t help that the first time the Dolphins got their hands on the ball they dropped it — muffed punt by Malik Washington that gifted the first touchdown a few plays later.

But this game was lost at the point of attack. The Packers simply mauled Miami.

The Dolphins couldn’t block and they couldn’t tackle. That will leave you on the wrong end of 30-17 every time.

The running game went nowhere — a mere 39 yards, average of 2.8 yards per carry — which has been a problem even in recent wins at home against bottom-feeding Raiders and Patriots. The backs had trouble just getting to the line of scrimmage.

Meanwhile, Dolphins defenders were getting carried by Packers running backs and receivers like sacks of mail, if they didn’t whiff on tackle attempts altogether.

Terrible tackling doomed Dolphins

The Dolphins had an ungodly 20 missed tackles. Twenty! That is unacceptable at any level of football.

Not sure how you blame that on the cold.

Nor the five sacks allowed, including on fourth-and-goal at the Green Bay 1 in the fourth quarter. They were also flagged for holding on that play, so it was doomed either way.

The Dolphins, playing to maintain slim playoff chances, showed no desperation or resolve. Their heads weren’t in the game either, evidenced by 10 penalties assessed for 75 yards.

The so-called second-half comeback bid was a mirage, the padded stat totals meaningless. Teams like the Dolphins don’t come back from 24-3 at halftime after being manhandled and embarrassed for 30 minutes on national TV by a top-tier opponent.

Dolphins’ playoff hopes all but dead

Likewise, spare us the flimsy mathematical possibilities that the 5-7 Dolphins could still make the playoffs if they win their final five games … and a cow jumps over the moon.

That would require winning two cold-weather games, albeit against the middling Jets and Browns. They also must play at Houston against the AFC South-leading Texans.

Here’s a glaring stat: the Dolphins are 0-4 this season against teams currently in playoff position and have been outscored by 58 points in those games.

That is a lot of 30-17 results, or thereabouts. But it’s nothing new. Last season the Dolphins were 1-6 against teams that went to the playoffs.

The Mike McDaniel era is simply continuing the serial incompetence that has spanned coaching staffs, front-office regimes and ownership since the last century.

Dolphins keep repeating mistakes

There was hope that the team profile would change when Bill Parcells was brought in to run the football operation after the 1-15 2007 season. Instead, Parcells gave us Tony Sparano, who was best known for punting and kicking field goals.

What they needed was Tony Soprano. Less of mister nice guy and more of a strong-armed approach.

That hasn’t changed. The final word on the latest frigid fiasco was linebacker Jordyn Brooks saying late Thursday, “I thought we were soft. Simple as that, I thought we were soft today. I don’t know if guys were too cold. … I don’t know what it was. I feel like the elements played a part in how we played as a group, and that was the result that we got.”

It is a result Dolfans know all too well. With no reason to expect improvement any time soon.

This franchise misses on too many draft picks, then has to overspend on free agents to try to make up for it. That keeps them tight on the salary cap and unable to invest in the depth of talent needed to succeed.

What you get is a 30-17 comeuppance, time and again.

Craig Davis has covered South Florida sports and teams, including the Dolphins, for four decades. Follow him on the site formerly known as Twitter @CraigDavisRuns.

‘I’m sure that I’ll soak it in a little bit’: Ekman-Larsson, Lorentz, Stolarz Receive Stanley Cup Rings in Return to Florida

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Memories of Florida’s 2024 Stanley Cup win flooded back on Wednesday morning at the Baptist Health IcePlex with the return of three Cup champions. 

 

With the Toronto Maple Leafs in town for their Wednesday night matchup against the Panthers, Anthony Stolarz, Steven Lorentz, and Oliver Ekman-Larsson reunited with their former teammates — while also receiving their Stanley Cup rings. 

 

The remaining Panthers all received their rings the night before the season began. Rather than mailing over rings to the players who are no longer on the team, the organization decided to wait until they could receive them in person. 

 

“It means a lot for all of us to get the chance to just hug everybody and say a few words,” Ekman-Larsson said. “It kind of went by quick — Game 7 — we partied for a week and then had to make a decision on what’s next. To get this chance to see and talk to everybody, that made it better in a lot of ways.”

 

On Wednesday, all the remaining members of the Panthers’ Cup team stayed back after their morning skate to welcome back their former teammates and present them with the rings. 

 

“We got to see everybody, coaches, staff and the guys,” Lorentz said. “Billy (Zito) gave us a little presentation, it was really nice. All the guys stuck around… the boys were all lined up and said hi to use three. It’s just a little thing but that goes a long way. It says a lot about their character.”

 

When the teams hit the ice for tonight’s game, it will be the first time any player from last season’s Cup team returns to Amerant Bank Arena in an opposing team’s jersey.

 

 It’ll also be the first time they played in Sunrise since Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final.

 

“I said this morning I didn’t really think about it and then it just hits you,” Oliver Ekman-Larsson said when asked about returning to Florida. “I’m sure that I’ll soak it in a little bit and then when the puck drops, hopefully I’ll be dialled in.”

 

The Panthers are in the middle of a rough slump — losing its last four games and dropping six of the last seven.​​ The mood has been anything but joyous over the past two weeks in South Florida, however the return of a few former champions lightened the mood just a bit on Wednesday

 

“These guys roll in and you get all this flood of memories because all three of them had just huge impacts on what we did,” said Panthers head coach Paul Maurice. “You have these great memories that you don’t live in everyday and then you get this awesome reminder.” 

 

“You get these nice little reminders of a very special time in your life,” he added. 

 

Anthony Stolarz is projected to start in goal tonight for the Leafs against his former team and former goalie partner, Sergei Bobrovsky. 

 

“He was unbelievable for us, he was playing his heart out,” Panthers forward Carter Verhaeghe said of Stolarz. “He’s been awesome this year too (for Toronto). He definitely just needed a little bit of a chance and I guess he got that.” 

Mateo’s Hoop Diary: No Giannis, no problem for the Bucks getting a clutch time win versus the Heat in Miami

The Heat failed to complete a 22-point comeback against the Milwaukee Bucks minus their All-Star freak, Giannis Antetokounmpo. His absence was no issue because Damian Lillard wasted coverages, and the rest of the Bucks converted 41% of their hoisted treys, as Erik Spoelstra was outcoached by Laurence Fishburne

 

First, Lillard led the stampede, draining four 3-pointers and a five-foot shot in the opening quarter. Through seven-and-a-half minutes, he had 17 points as the Heat had 13.

 

On the other side, close-range attempts were bricked, and the threes weren’t falling.

 

Within a few minutes into the second quarter, the Bucks ran up a 15-point lead. The Heat’s offense wasn’t the problem in this frame, as it took 15 free throws and made nine of 16 shots. The protections were lit up further by eight 3-pointers supplied by Lillard, Brook Lopez plus four other Bucks. 

 

At halftime, the Heat was down 51-65. The crew had 22 paint points, one on the break, two via second chances, eight off turnovers and 13 from the bench.

 

The Bucks had 10 paint points, nine on the break, none on extra tries, 12 off turnovers and 20 from the reserves. 

 

Out of intermission, the visitors raised the lead to 22 points within a few minutes into the period. Next, the Heat’s defense intensified by 20°, permitting the Bucks 33% of attempted treys in the third quarter. 

 

Jimmy Butler ate into the deficit with three fastbreak buckets and three freebies. And Bam Adebayo, Tyler Herro and Duncan Robinson connected on four 3-pointers in nine attempts to cut the score to 85-80 in favor of the visitors. 

 

In the fourth quarter, the defense was strict, too, allowing 27.3% of Milwaukee’s shots to drop. Lillard missed both his tries in eight minutes and Gary Trent Jr. was shut down as well. Yet, the guests added a cushion of five digits at the line.

 

On the other side, Terry Rozier erupted for 13 points with no misses on a drive-by and four deep jumpers.

 

But when the Heat was down 103-106 with a second left, Rozier took too long to fire after the inbound because he took a dribble.

 

The Heat lost 103-106, dropping them to 1-2 in Emirates Cup play and 7-8 for the regular season. The team had 46 paint points, 13 on the break, nine via second chances, 17 off turnovers and 33 from the bench. 

 

The Bucks had 18 paint points, nine in the open court, five on extra tries, 16 off turnovers and 31 from the reserves. 

 

Observations:

 

1. Despite Lillard’s first-half rampage, an opportunity to bolster the record was lost. Playing down to the level of competition is reminiscent of last year’s squad.

 

2. Butler had one of his better performances of the season. Yet, Herro and Adebayo didn’t do enough around him- the former missed too many deep shots, and the latter didn’t throw his weight around enough in the paint in Giannis’ absence, finishing with four free throw attempts.

 

3. The Heat were outrebounded by three, yet we were careful with the ball, only committing eight giveaways.

 

4. Lillard had 25 points at intermission and 37 at the conclusion. Eight of 10 field goals were 3-pointers. 

 

5. Spoelstra ran out of patience with the understudy, Jaime Jaquez Jr., and played him 12 minutes because he was a liability on both sides.

6. The Heat missed seven free throws- Butler bricked two. Robinson, Adebayo, Herro, Rozier, and Pelle Larson missed one. Ball players don’t look professional failing on free throws.

For more info on the Heat, subscribe to Off The Floor.

Dolphins Dominate New England: Key Takeaways from the 34-15 Victory

The Miami Dolphins showcased a complete team effort Sunday, dismantling the New England Patriots 34-15 in front of a roaring home crowd. Here’s a closer look at the standout performances and pivotal moments that defined the game.


Tagovailoa’s Commanding Presence

Tua Tagovailoa was in full control, mixing precision passing with smart decisions. His ability to spread the ball to multiple targets kept the Patriots’ defense on its heels all game. From pinpoint throws to De’Von Achane and Jaylen Waddle to managing the tempo, Tagovailoa reminded everyone why he’s the heart of this offense. His stat line—29 completions on 40 attempts for 317 yards and 4 touchdowns—speaks volumes about his leadership under center.


Achane Shines as a Versatile Threat

The Dolphins’ ground game wasn’t anything to write home about, but De’Von Achane proved his value as a dual-threat weapon. His first touchdown catch was a highlight-worthy moment, showcasing agility and field vision. Later, he exploited a coverage breakdown to secure his second score.


Jaylen Waddle: A Season-Defining Performance

Jaylen Waddle put together his most electric outing of the season, slicing through New England’s secondary with ease. His ability to gain separation and turn short passes into big gains echoed the explosiveness Miami fans grew accustomed to last year. Tight end Jonnu Smith added to the offensive fireworks, bulldozing through defenders for a gritty touchdown.


Offensive Line Holds Strong

Miami’s offensive line gave Tagovailoa the clean pocket he needed to excel. While run blocking remains inconsistent, the protection in passing situations was stellar. With time to operate, Tagovailoa made the Patriots pay.


Defensive Line Dictates the Game

Miami’s defensive front took control early, forcing the Patriots to play catch-up. Zach Sieler led the charge, nearly recovering a fumble before redeeming himself with a strip-sack that set up a key scoring drive. The dominance up front ensured New England could never find its rhythm.


Linebackers Bring the Heat

Rookie Chop Robinson continues to impress, recording another sack and providing consistent pressure. Anthony Walker and Jordyn Brooks were all over the field, combining for key tackles and a fumble recovery. Even with Walker leaving the game due to injury, his replacement, Tyrel Dodson, stepped up with a highlight-reel interception late in the fourth quarter.


Secondary Silences New England

The Patriots’ passing attack was virtually nonexistent, thanks to Miami’s disciplined secondary. Jalen Ramsey added a sack to his résumé, while Storm Duck filled in admirably for Kendall Fuller. The Dolphins’ defensive backs made a quiet day feel like a masterclass in suffocating coverage.


Coaching Brilliance

Head coach Mike McDaniel orchestrated a balanced attack, blending explosive plays with methodical drives. He reintroduced the deep ball, reigniting the offense’s identity while keeping the Patriots guessing. On defense, Anthony Weaver’s unit looked prepared for every wrinkle New England threw their way.


A Team Hitting Its Stride

This was more than just another win for Miami; it was a statement. With three straight victories and the offense firing on all cylinders, the Dolphins are building momentum heading into a pivotal Thanksgiving showdown in Green Bay. For a team that has been criticized for its struggles in cold-weather games, Thursday offers the perfect chance to flip the narrative.

The Dolphins left Hard Rock Stadium looking like contenders. Now, they’ll need to prove it on a chilly night in Wisconsin.

******
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Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Jimmy Butler delivers the Heat a win in a late thriller versus the Mavericks

The Heat won its second game in a row with its new starting lineup, putting down the Wild Horses, minus Luka Dončić.

 

Tyler Herro, Duncan Robinson, Jimmy Butler, Haywood Highsmith and Bam Adebayo had the Heat down 15-18 at the first substitution, nearly six minutes into the first quarter. Their biggest early mistakes were allowing consecutive interior breakdowns to Klay Thompson and Quentin Grimes for scores; then Derek Lively recovered two Dallas misses, hooking one back in and feeding Kyrie Irving at the arc with the other.

 

Yet, Highsmith defended Irving well, denying him at the rim and tracking his dribble from the perimeter to the paint to force another miss. On top of that, the Heat started deploying the zone at the end of the first quarter.

 

And Adebayo was the source of the offense, putting up nine points at long and short distances.

 

In frame two, Irving scored eight points, dribbling to his sweet spot for a jumper, making a second chance hook and nailing a trey.

 

But Herro and Butler feasted for the Heat. The former scored using the double screen to get free at close range and then blew by Irving for a layup. The latter produced at the line, in transition and on a baseline jumper.

 

Defensively, the Heat kept incorporating zone with man-to-man coverage.

 

At halftime, the hosts were up 56-51. The crew had 26 paint points, one on the break, two via second chances, 14 off turnovers and 18 from the bench.

 

The Mavericks had 30 interior points, none in the open court, nine on extra tries, five off turnovers and nine from the reserves.

 

Then Thompson gashed the hosts for seven points in the first few minutes of the third quarter. Naji Marshall and Lively combined for seven of eight baskets, too. Yet the Heat’s defense keyed in on Irving, preventing zero makes in three tries from deep.

 

For the Heat, Butler added eight points from the line and on drives into the lane. And Pelle Larson provided four baskets with no misses from deep and short range.

 

The Heat entered the fourth quarter ahead 89-84, but its small cushion quickly evaporated.

 

The protections failed to stop Irving from getting to the paint and splashing treys. Subsequently, P.J. Washington’s putback dunk extended Dallas’ lead to three points.

 

Next, Butler retook the advantage on a left-side reverse layup. But Irving snatched it back with a jumper over Butler.

 

Afterward, Herro took a dumb seven-foot shot, getting denied by Spencer Dinwiddie, and Larson had to foul Irving to send him to the line. Yet, Irving made one.

 

As Robinson checked in the ball on the sideline, Butler cut toward the basket, caught the rock and dunked through contact to tie.

 

In overtime, the Heat held the Mavericks to two of 10 field goals. Moves from Alec Burks, Adebayo and Butler sealed the win.

 

The Heat won 123-118. The team had 62 paint points, four on the break, 18 via second chances, 17 off turnovers and 45 from the bench.

 

Butler had 33 points on 11 of 17 attempts, with nine rebounds, six assists, one steal, two blocks and three turnovers.

 

Adebayo scored 20 points on 40% accuracy, with 11 rebounds, five assists and two turnovers.

 

Herro put up 18 digits on eight of 25 attempts, with 10 rebounds, five assists, one steal and one giveaway.

 

And Larson had 14 points, making six of eight shots, with five rebounds and one assist.

 

The Mavericks had 66 interior points, six in the open court, 24 on extra tries, 15 off turnovers and 37 from the reserves.

 

After the game, Butler affectionately said, “I hate to say it. Duncan made an incredible pass,” referring to the connection that forced overtime.

 

At the postgame presser, Spoelstra said, “It seemed like it was a foul,” regarding Butler’s basket to tie the game.

 

Observations:

1. Adebayo had a sharp first quarter but didn’t score again until early in the third frame. Three of his eight field goals were 3-pointers from the right corner and up top. Additionally, he had a season-high in 3-point attempts (6).

 

2. Highsmith disrupted Dallas’ actions but played only 19 minutes because he wasn’t feeling well. He was doing a fine job of defusing Irving.

 

3. Butler missed five free throws. Furthermore, it was his second straight game scoring at least 30 points. The last time he did that was in 2023-24, between Nov. 30 and Dec. 2.

 

4. Herro (10), Adebayo (11) and Kevin Love (11) had double-digit rebounds and Butler had nine. The Heat’s 57 rebounds is the second-best mark of the season.

For more info on the Heat, subscribe to Off The Floor.

 

Tua Tagovailoa said the Dolphins are "excited to go to Green Bay and show everybody in prime time what we can do.”

Pressure Point: Dolphins back in playoff race, must now win ‘big-boy games’

It was Feel Good Sunday for the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium.

Perfect weather and a near-perfect performance (for three quarters) by the home team in a thorough pasting of the Patriots, their long-time nemesis.

The giddy 34-15 romp even had team owner Steve Ross doing the celebratory Waddle waddle after Tua Tagovailoa threw his fourth touchdown pass of the game in the third quarter to Jaylen Waddle.

Most important, the Dolphins’ third consecutive win put Miami, now 5-6, one spot out of the final wild card in the AFC — 7-5 Denver holds it.

Enjoy the moment, Dolfans, like a second helping of Thanksgiving turkey. But beware of the tryptophan.

The Dolphins can’t afford to snooze Thursday night in a holiday prime-time matchup with the Packers in Green Bay.

Beating up on the weakling Raiders and Patriots back-to-back at home in the sunshine was entertaining and necessary to dig out of a deep early season hole.

The telling test will be how a Dolphins team that has gained some momentum can meet the bigger challenges of the stretch run.

Or as the CBS announcers put it: “You’ve got to win the big-boy games.”

Packers present big test for Dolphins

There will be two of those on the road in the next three weeks, at Green Bay and Dec. 15 at AFC South-leading Houston, sandwiched around a home game against the struggling Jets.

Miami then hosts the San Francisco 49ers, who remain in the big-boy category despite struggles of their own.

This is the point that so many Dolphins seasons have gone off the rails. Look no further than last season when they led the Buffalo Bills by three games in the AFC East with five to play and coughed it all up.

The downfall began with blowing a two-touchdown lead in the final three minutes against the Titans in a Monday night collapse. Season-ending losses to the Ravens and Bills pushed the Dolphins from hosting a playoff game to having to play the Chiefs in frigid Kansas City. The result was a predictable one-sided loss to extend the drought without a playoff win since the 2000 season.

“I think we’re heading in the right direction,” said Waddle. “We’ve got big games coming up the end of the year, so it’s important that we start playing our best ball heading into this last stretch of the season.”

Waddle played his best game of the season Sunday with eight receptions for 144 yards and the 29-yard touchdown from Tua.

Tua, offense thrives against Patriots

The offense has been increasingly efficient in Tagovailoa’s four games since returning from his latest concussion. In improving to 7-0 in his career against the Patriots, he completed 29 of 40 for 317 yards and a rating of 128.9.

He again made good use of tight end Jonnu Smith, who had nine catches for 87 yards and the first touchdown of the day. De’Von Achane caught the other two TDs on screens out of the backfield. Tyreek Hill had five receptions for 48 yards.

“The guys are feeling good,” Tagovailoa said. “Everything feels better when you win.”

In the past two games, Tua has thrown for 605 yards, seven touchdowns, no interceptions and a 128.5 passer rating.

Again, that is against two of the downtrodden teams in the league.

But as Tagovailoa pointed out, “Getting into rhythm of stacking wins up, I definitely think that is a big morale booster.”

The continued struggles to run the ball is concerning, though. They rushed for only 65 yards while averaging a mere 2.7 a carry against the Patriots.

Chop Robinson puts rush in Dolphins defense

Throwing likely will be more difficult at Lambeau Field, where the forecast for Thursday night calls for temperatures dropped to near 20 degrees. Little chance of snow, though, with winds moderate.

Could be worse. But there is a 100-percent chance of a hostile atmosphere. It is certain to be plenty loud.

“We’re still below the .500 threshold and it’s a long way to where we want to get to,” Tagovailoa said. “But this next one is going to be big for us and we’re excited to go to Green Bay and show everybody in prime time what we can do.”

They will be coming off another strong showing by the defense. Rookie Chop Robinson is becoming a force on the pass rush. He had 1 ½ sacks and three hits on quarterback Drake Maye.

The Dolphins sacked Maye four times, including a strip-sack by Zach Sieler that was recovered by Jordyn Brooks to set up Miami’s final touchdown.

The defense suffered a blow when linebacker Anthony Walker Jr. left with a hamstring injury in the first half. But newly acquired veteran Tyrel Dodson not only filled the void, he had a one-handed interception.

Dolphins aim for rare strong stretch run

Could it be that these Dolphins actually flip the script recent history and finish stronger than they started?

Insight on that question should come in about four days. Miami, trailing Denver by two games in the wild-card chase, can’t afford to fall farther behind.

“The Packers aren’t going to care about our three-game win streak. The Packers are going to try to make us seem like a team that can’t win in the cold and can’t beat a good team,” Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said.

That is an apt statement of the Dolphins’ profile for close to a quarter-century.

It is valid until they prove otherwise.

McDaniel went on to say, “Like life, it’s not about avoiding adversity. It’s about flourishing in it. You really can’t hide. You find out who believes in what we’re doing and who believes in each other.”

Craig Davis has covered South Florida sports and teams, including the Dolphins, for four decades. Follow him on the site formerly known as Twitter @CraigDavisRuns.