Friday, November 22, 2024
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NBA Preview: Miami Heat at Golden State Warriors

Klay Thompson will get an opportunity to rebound from a rare embarrassing moment when the Golden State Warriors entertain the Miami Heat in San Francisco on Thursday night.

Irritated by a poor shooting night, and like many teammates, a disparity in foul calls, Thompson came away the loser in a verbal encounter with Phoenix Suns star Devin Booker in the third quarter of the Warriors’ road game on Tuesday.

Thompson and Booker were nailed with technical fouls for their up-close-and-personal spat. Things appeared to be cooling down before Thompson didn’t like something he heard from Mikal Bridges and rejoined an otherwise tame midcourt fray, drawing a second — and ejection-prompting — “T.”

The Suns went on to win the game handily, 134-105, after which Golden State standout Stephen Curry was surprisingly upbeat despite being held under 30 points for the first time this season.

Taking the court on the second night of a back-to-back, the Heat might have a hard time recognizing Thompson. They haven’t gone head-to-head with him since February 2019, when he poured in 36 points after having had 29 against them 17 days earlier.

Thompson, Curry and Draymond Green all sat out the last time the Warriors saw the Heat, and surprisingly it didn’t matter. Golden State completed a two-game, season-series sweep in Miami last March with a 118-104 win led by Jordan Poole’s 30 points.

The Warriors outscored the Heat 42-13 off the bench that night. But Damion Lee, Gary Payton II and Nemanja Bjelica — Golden State’s key reserves that night — are no longer around, with the Warriors having gone with a younger second unit that has routinely left games in worse shape than it entered.

In fact, Golden State’s James Wiseman (minus-54), Poole (minus-52) and Jonathan Kuminga (minus-42) all rank among the NBA’s bottom 11 in plus/minus.

What kind of depth the Heat show up with in San Francisco depends upon how coach Erik Spoelstra responds to his team’s first road back-to-back of the season. Miami didn’t have to burn its starters in a 119-98 shellacking of the host Portland Trail Blazers on Wednesday night to open a four-day, three-game trip.

The Heat played their top nine healthy guys on both ends of a home back-to-back last week and were able to bounce back from a loss to the Boston Celtics with a win over the Toronto Raptors the next night.

Like the Warriors, the Heat were involved in a fracas with the Raptors last week, one that saw Caleb Martin not only ejected from the game but also suspended for a rematch with Toronto two nights later, which Miami lost.

Unlike Thompson, who made no comment after his incident, Martin apologized.

Martin returned to start and score 16 points in the win at Portland.

Fantasy Guru - Baseball

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