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As the Miami Heat Evolved, So Did Udonis Haslem

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Udonis Haslem is a rarity in today’s N.B.A.

In an era when players change teams more than ever, he has been a Miami Heat lifer, a member of the team since his rookie season in 2003-04. Star players almost never stay with one franchise so long, and for role players, it is unheard-of. To top it off, Haslem went undrafted and is a Miami native.

Haslem, who has established himself as a tough defender over his 17 seasons, has by far the longest tenure on one team among active players. The closest is Stephen Curry, who has been with the Golden State Warriors since 2009. The only players who have had longer careers with one team, and no other, are Dirk Nowitzki (21 seasons, Dallas Mavericks), Kobe Bryant (20, Los Angeles Lakers), Tim Duncan (19, San Antonio Spurs), John Stockton (19, Utah Jazz) and Reggie Miller (18, Indiana Pacers).

And Haslem, now 40, isn’t necessarily done yet. He said recently that he had not decided if this season would be his last.

The Heat were founded in 1988 and have made the finals six times, including this season against the Los Angeles Lakers, who hold a series lead of two games to none.

Haslem has been part of each run and is going for his fourth championship. What makes his journey even more unusual is that the six trips to the finals have come in three distinct eras for the franchise, featuring rosters constructed with separate approaches by Pat Riley, the team president, who was also its coach.

Some role players get to be part of several runs to the N.B.A. finals, because their team’s roster is stable. But Riley made multiple roster turnovers, all while keeping the Heat relatively competitive. There have been two constants through the three eras: One is Riley’s penchant for acquiring cheap, overlooked talent; the other is Haslem. In some ways, he is a relic, as an undersized big man whose rebounding, defense and ability to hit midrange jumpers made him valuable to multiple championship contenders.

Here is a look at the three eras of Miami basketball that Haslem has helped carry to the finals, initially as a starter and now essentially in the role of an assistant coach.

2005-06: N.B.A. Champions

It ended up being just two. Miami’s Big Three went to the finals in all four of their seasons together. The Mavericks upset them the first time, then the Heat won back-to-back championships against the Oklahoma City Thunder and the San Antonio Spurs. In their last run, they lost to the vengeful Spurs. And then James left for Cleveland, bringing the powerhouse to an end.

This year’s Miami team is a departure from the previous iterations with championship aspirations, in that it is more reliant on inexperienced players. But like those teams, this version is full of players who have been overlooked.

Tyler Herro, the 20-year-old dynamic rookie guard, has been one of the team’s best scorers off the bench. Duncan Robinson (second year) and Kendrick Nunn (rookie) are key contributors who, like Haslem, went undrafted and were later signed by the Heat. Neither Bam Adebayo, an athletic big man who made the All-Star team this season (his third), nor Herro was drafted in the top 10.

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Sahred From Source link Sports

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