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Bam Adebayo said the Heat were better than the play-in and now Miami must prove it the hard way for a fourth straight year.
It was just a month ago that Bam Adebayo expressed his true feelings about the Miami Heat being play-in tournament picture.“We’re better than being in the play-in,” Adebayo told reporters. “Yeah, I don’t wanna be in this sh*t no more.” Now unfortunately, the reality has caught up to him.
After a 121-95 loss to the Toronto Raptors on Tuesday night, the Miami Heat are officially locked into the NBA Play-In Tournament for a fourth straight season. For a team that openly believed it had outgrown that stage, this outcome lands as both a competitive failure and a reality check.
A Familiar Ending for Miami, But a Different Tone
Miami’s loss eliminated any chance of finishing inside the Eastern Conference’s top six. Because of this, they no longer have a safety net and forces the Heat into a win-or-go-home path just to reach the postseason.
This isn’t new territory. Miami has built a reputation for surviving the play-in. The group reached the playoffs through this route in each of the last three seasons, including a stunning run to the 2023 NBA Finals. But this year feels different.
Start with the numbers. Miami went just 13-20 against the East’s other postseason-bound teams. That’s not a contender’s profile. It’s a warning sign. Against meaningful competition, the Heat consistently came up short. After the blowout loss to the Raptors, head coach Eric Spoelstra didn’t sugarcoat his outlook on the season.
“We’re disappointed, for sure, that we weren’t able to bring another level of competitive spirit to this,” Spoelstra said. “That’s what’s disappointing.”
When paired with Adebayo’s public frustration, it shows the interesting conflict the Heat face. On one end there was a sense of belief that this team could be different from years past. But now they face the reality they they just as good as they thought they were.
Why This Play-In Feels More Dangerous
The Heat’s previous play-in runs came with momentum or identity. This roster enters the bracket searching for both. Miami currently sits in the No. 10 spot. That means two road wins just to reach the playoffs. It’s the hardest possible path. Worse, they don’t control their own destiny. Teams like the Philadelphia 76ers, Orlando Magic, and Charlotte Hornets hold the edge in the standings, and tiebreakers complicate Miami’s climb. Even if the Heat win out, they’ll need help.
There’s also a deeper issue. Miami went 0-3 against Toronto and 0-5 against Orlando. Those aren’t random losses. They show a pattern against teams they needed to beat. It also reveals a given edge to those teams if they were to meet either of them in one of the elimination games.
The Reality Adebayo, Miami Can’t Ignore
The play-in tournament is still a relatively new concept, yet Miami has already become one of its most frequent participants. Four appearances in such a short window points to something larger than bad luck. It points to stagnation.
Yes, the Heat have proven they can survive this format. History says they’ll compete. But the gap between surviving and contending has never felt wider. That’s the real problem. Adebayo didn’t just call out the play-in. He called out the standard. And right now, Miami isn’t meeting it. The nightmare isn’t just that they’re back in the play-in. It’s that this is starting to look like exactly where they belong.
Jalon Dixon Jalon Dixon is a multi-platform sports journalist and content creator specializing in NBA and WNBA coverage. He blends writing, podcasting, and video analysis to deliver accessible, in-depth perspectives on basketball and beyond. More about Jalon Dixon
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