Miami beats Cavs in OT with 'Quinn-or-lose' play
Heat avenge last term's playoff sweep to Cleveland with thrilling late winner
MIAMI — The play is called "CQ". It's not the most imaginative name; those are simply the initials of Miami Heat assistant coach Chris Quinn, who drew up a play about four years ago that head coach Erik Spoelstra has been waiting to use.
That wait ended Monday.
Spoelstra called the play and let Quinn run the huddle in the final time-out of the game with four-tenths of a second left in overtime, drawing up how Norman Powell would create a distraction and Davion Mitchell would set a screen while Jaime Jaquez Jr would just hang out in the corner as Nikola Jovic would throw a lob inbounds pass and Andrew Wiggins, if all went according to plan, would have a dunk at the rim.
"Perfect," Jaquez Jr said.
Everything went as it should. Final score: Miami 140, Cleveland 138, capping one of the wilder games in this wild start to the NBA season.
"I'm just embracing the unknown, embracing the confidence guys are gaining in what we're doing," Spoelstra said. "It always helps when you get some W's out of it, but guys understand our identity to defend, and now can create some things for us offensively. Guys are growing right before our eyes."
Cleveland took 120 shots in the game, the most ever by a Heat opponent and the most by any team in the NBA since Jan 2, 2023.The Cavaliers took 65 3-pointers, also the most ever by a Miami opponent and the third-highest total in NBA history — Houston took 70 on Jan 16, 2019 and took 68 three nights later for spots No 1 and 2 on that list.
And it wasn't enough.
"That's a chess game. Chess match. You've got to give them credit," said Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell, who made a crazy 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left in overtime — almost an afterthought because of what the Heat did next. "They made an excellent read, an excellent call and you learn from these things. This is great this happened now. This is something that, you get to a situation later in the year and say, 'OK, we understand where we can adjust.' We watch the film and go from there."
There were numbers Cleveland didn't like, such as the 21-4 discrepancy in free-throw attempts in the third quarter — which coach Kenny Atkinson pointed out to the officiating crew and earned an ejection in the process.
"When the disparity is that great, you've got to stick up for your guys," Atkinson said.
Spoelstra had a different disparity in mind coming into the game: a 55-point one that was on the scoreboard the last time the Heat and Cavaliers played.
Game 4, Eastern Conference first-round in Miami. Cleveland embarrassed the Heat, winning 138-83 to sweep what was the most lopsided playoff series in NBA history. The Cavaliers scored exactly 138 points again on Monday — and the Heat found a way to win anyway.
That series led Spoelstra to change almost everything about the way Miami plays. The offense is unrecognizable compared to what it was. The pace is super-fast compared to past years.
The goal is to attack on every possession, either getting to the rim or getting a 3-pointer in the air.
Cleveland forced the Heat to reassess everything.
So far, that seems like a good thing for Miami.
"The new offense, it's night and day," Wiggins said.
"We're out there, playing with a lot of joy, playing fast. Everyone's out there in great rhythm, so it's been a great start of the year."
Pistons run hits seven
Cade Cunningham's triple double, Daniss Jenkins' three-pointer at the buzzer and Javonte Green's overtime dunk lifted Detroit past Washington 137-135 on Monday, stretching the Pistons' win streak to seven games.
In an unexpected thriller, the NBA's second-best team barely outlasted a Wizards side that fell to an NBA-worst 1-10 with their ninth consecutive loss.
"We knew how big this game was for us," Jenkins said. "We were not going to let anything stop us from getting this W."
Cunningham made 14-of-45 shots and 16-of-18 free throws for a career-high 46 points and added 12 rebounds, 11 assists, five steals and two blocked shots as Detroit improved to 9-2.
"He's the one who is going to lead this team whatever we do," Detroit's Jalen Duren said of Cunningham. "And to see him fight through and be the great player he is gave us the confidence."
Jenkins came off the bench to put up a career-high 24 points and eight rebounds, while Duren added 19 points and 14 rebounds for the Pistons.
Another tension-packed contest came in Orlando, where Desmond Bane's three-pointer at the final buzzer gave the host Magic a 115-112 home victory over Portland.
Paolo Banchero led the Magic with 28 points, while Bane added 22, missing all five of his three-point shots before hitting the winner.
Wemby sparks Spurs
Victor Wembanyama delivered a dominant performance with 38 points, 12 rebounds, five blocked shots and five assists to lead the San Antonio Spurs in a 121-117 triumph at Chicago.
The Frenchman was 11-of-19 from the floor, including six-of-nine from three-point range, and 10-of-10 from the free throw line.
Luka Doncic had a game-high 38 points with seven assists and six rebounds to lead the Los Angeles Lakers in a 121-111 victory over Charlotte.
Austin Reaves added 24 points and Japan's Rui Hachimura contributed 21 for the Lakers.
Czech reserve guard Vit Krejci scored a career-high 28 points, hitting nine-of-13 shots from the floor — eight-of-10 from three-point range — to lead the Atlanta Hawks to a 105-102 win over the host Los Angeles Clippers.
James Harden matched a club record with his seventh triple double for the Clippers with 35 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds, but the team's losing streak extended to five games.
Agencies
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