It was in the first half where LaVine truly broke the game open. He poured in 29 points before the break, single-handedly outscoring large chunks of the Heat roster. When a scorer gets into that kind of rhythm—where pull-up jumpers feel like layups—there isn’t a defensive scheme in the world that can stop it. The Heat tried to throw different looks at him, but LaVine was operating on a different frequency.
The Second Quarter Run That Changed Everything
Basketball is a game of runs, but some runs are louder than others. Early in the second quarter, it looked like we were in for a dogfight. Miami’s Simone Fontecchio knocked down a triple to give the Heat a narrow 35-34 lead. The home crowd woke up. It felt like the momentum was shifting.
That lead lasted about as long as a snowflake in the Miami sun.
That 35-34 advantage turned out to be the Heat’s final lead of the night. The Kings responded with a ferocity we haven’t seen consistently this season. Sacramento closed the half on a blistering 23-7 run, transforming a tight contest into a blowout. They walked into the locker room up 72-55.
It wasn’t just the offense, either. The Kings clamped down, holding Miami to just 24 points in the second quarter while dropping 38 themselves. That sequence was the ballgame right there. You could see the body language of the Heat players deflate as Sacramento kept piling it on.
Kings Get Contributions Up and Down the Roster
While LaVine will steal the headlines (and rightfully so), the box score shows a complete team effort from Sacramento. This wasn’t a one-man show; it was an ensemble cast executing a script perfectly.
Keegan Murray was his usual steady self, chipping in 16 points and spacing the floor. DeMar DeRozan, playing in a building where he’s had plenty of battles over the years, added a calm 13 points, 6 rebounds, and 6 assists.
Then there was the bench energy. Nique Clifford came out of nowhere to provide a spark, dropping 15 points on near-perfect 7-of-8 shooting. And let’s not ignore the veteran savvy of Russell Westbrook. Russ did what Russ does—he was everywhere. He finished with a double-double (12 points, 10 assists), pushing the pace and finding open shooters. When your bench and role players are clicking like that, hitting over 52% from the field as a team, you become incredibly difficult to beat.
Heat Hampered by Injuries and Inconsistency
To be fair to the folks in Miami, this wasn’t the Heat at full strength. Missing Tyler Herro is a massive blow to their offensive ecosystem. Herro sat out with a toe contusion (and let’s hope that MRI comes back clean), leaving a void in scoring that Miami struggled to fill. They were also missing defensive grit in Davion Mitchell and depth in Pelle Larsson.
Jaime Jaquez Jr. did his best to carry the load, putting up a valiant 27 points, 6 rebounds, and 6 assists off the bench. Simone Fontecchio added 20, and Norman Powell tried to keep things interesting with 18 points. But you can’t trade 2-pointers for 3-pointers when the other team is shooting over 42% from deep. The Heat got within 15 in the fourth quarter, but it was fool’s gold. They never truly threatened to flip the script.
What This Win Means for the Kings
For Sacramento, this is a “sigh of relief” win. Winning in the NBA is hard. Winning on the road is harder. Winning in a city where you historically lose 83% of the time? That’s massive.
The Kings led by as many as 28 points, cruising to their largest margin of victory ever in Miami. It wasn’t a buzzer-beater; it was a beatdown. Now, the challenge is consistency. Can they bottle this offensive fluidity and defensive intensity and take it to Indiana on Monday?
If LaVine keeps playing like this, the Kings aren’t just going to be breaking losing streaks—they’re going to be starting winning ones.