Miami Heat draft series: Rasheer Fleming, Kam Jones, Jase Richardson | Five on the Floor
Welcome to the latest episode of Five on the Floor, the Five Reason Sports Network. Thanks for joining us on your favorite podcast app on Apple Podcast or on Spotify. We do recommend Spotify over Apple podcast these days. A little bit quicker. You can use it on both platforms. And anyway, you can listen to music there, too. So, check it out uh on Spotify, Apple Podcast, or the Five Reasons Sports YouTube channel where you can get everything else that we cover. Also, check out Off the Floor. That’s on our Discord. That’s our Discord server. Two bucks per month. Link right there in the description. Click on that. It’ll take you right to it and you’ll bypass the Apple Upcharge. You pay the $299 a month. You can cancel at any time. Why do you want to be on Twitter with all the political stuff and everything else? Just go talk Heat NBA with fellow Heat fans. That’s what they are. That’s why they’re all neurotic. Uh they’re going all day long. They got a draft channel. We got a transaction channel. We’ve got uh host updates. Everything is on there. And our guy Adele, who’s going to be joining us on this podcast, he’s taking care of that draft channel for us uh while Greg and I work on that transaction channel. So you know you’re getting it directly from us and others in the five reason sports network. Meet our other hosts. You do that there as well. Also check out the great sponsors of the five reason sports network. It’s prize pick. Use the code five fiv. Play the conference finals there. We know this Pacers Nicks thing. Some of you may not want to watch it, but you may want to make some money. So use the code five. You can also play the Stanley Cup playoffs. Panthers. That was a dud of a performance last night. I watched that from the sports bar. Where? What? What was that team? That was like the Panthers from 10 years ago. Pricefix.com. Use the code fiv. I don’t know. I’d play Kachchuck over half a goal in game seven. And now today’s [Music] episode heat nation. Yeah. Mercy down the [ __ ] gang. Y on the floor. Ride for my dogs. Here’s a thing. You can check the score. Hustle hard. Couple stars. Bubble frog. [Music] Got all the stop one hand and paps. We’re here to bring the heat. Y’all can hang it up. Welcome to Five on the Floor, a daily insider show on the Miami Heat and the NBA featuring Ethan Skolnick, Greg Sander, Alex Toledo, Brady Hawk, and others from the Five Reason Sports Network. Also, make sure to subscribe to Off the Floor for the most heat anywhere. [Music] Welcome back to Five on the Floor. Here’s today’s floor plan. I’m Ethan Skol. You can follow me Ethan Joling on Five Reason Sports. I got Greg Sander. You can follow him at Greg Leander and I have the aforementioned Digital Adele. You can follow him at digital Adele. Also find him on playback where we watch the games. Uh playback.tv/frsn and on off the floor. As I mentioned, we bring in Adele for draft stuff, but Greg also has his ear to the ground. So, he finds out more of this stuff than I do this time of year. So, don’t listen to me. I can tell you that I probably watch about six college basketball games until the tournament. Not that I don’t like it. I just honestly don’t have time uh with everything else that’s going on. And so, Espolus said the same thing. he doesn’t really watch until the season’s over. Uh, and then I try to catch up as I hear names and try to figure out players that based on my 30 years of covering the Heat I think they would like. That’s kind of where I come in here. Um, and sort of when they’ve gone certain directions and how it’s worked and then of course I try to gather what information I can from behind the scenes with the heat. That’s not easy to come from this time of year. Texts are typically not returned. Um, and then you kind of get that sheepest look when you see someone at the arena like, “Oh yeah, that’s right. I never got back to him for three months.” Yeah. Okay, but it is what it is. I know it’s part of the deal. All right, so we’re going to go to Greg and we’re going to go to Dell. And we’re going to start with Greg on players we’ve heard that the Heat have interest in. Now, again, to be clear, okay, they’re going to scout a lot of players, okay? Um, and sometimes they don’t teams don’t scout the player they end up taking because they’re just trying to keep it quiet. And then there’s that stupid thing which I don’t understand. And I maybe D, let’s start here before we get to these players. I I have never gotten this, okay? And a lot of things I don’t get. You can see from the gray hair in my beard. Wh what what is a promise about? I I I don’t I’ve never understood the idea when they see on draft day, well, he had a promise to go at this spot from this team. Why would a team a promise something they can’t guarantee because they don’t know if the player is going to slip to them? Why would they even telegraph that? Why would they let that leak? I mean, I it doesn’t seem It’s kind of like when my daughter promises to make her bed and clean the room. Like I know that’s not going to happen so I’ll just give her ice cream. Like I I don’t I don’t get like what Tell me what is a why do they why do teams promise? I don’t get it. I could tell you what I think and what I’ve gathered not just from like the Miami like the Miami Heat point of view but like an NBA NFL they do the same thing. They have these conversations during interviews and they promise so to speak players and stuff like that. Um, a lot of it’s smoke and mirrors as well. Like you’ll put things out there so teams think you’re going to do one thing, maybe you’re going to follow through with it, maybe you’re not. Um, I know also a lot of players with the NIL, like whether they want to go back to college or stay in the draft. If they don’t have any kind of intel that they’re going to go at a certain spot, they’ll end up going back to college. So, just like anything else in life, I think it’s multiaceted, nuanced, and not straightforward as just this is why this happens. I I got a theory. I think that um sometimes teams may promise a player to act to basically convince them to shut down workouts so that they they’re not seen and evaluated and talked to from other teams. And that may make teams shy away because they don’t get to have that up close personal, you know, kind of time with the player. So maybe that’s the vested interest in trying to get them like say, “Hey, we promise we’ll pick you here. So if you’re happy at that spot, stop working out for other people.” Like that’s the only reason why I think maybe that becomes a thing. But otherwise, I do kind of think especially in today’s age, it’s a little ridiculous. Everyone sees everyone and I feel like um if you want to get in touch with a player, uh you can. So what does a promise really mean? And then a lot of times we’ll hear the player on draft night say, “Well, yeah, I talked to this person and they told me they were going to take me and all this kind of stuff, but again, you can’t you can’t guarantee any of that. It’s so it just seems a little bit silly to me.” All right. Uh we’ve talked about the Heat where the Heat are 20th pick in the draft. Of course, that’s Golden State’s pick. We do not need to belabor the fact that they could have had Cooper Flag because they couldn’t have had Cooper flag. We’ve talked about this. Uh they would have had to have win a even if they still had the pick that Dallas used, they would have had to have won a coin flip against Chicago. There’s no chance in bleep that that would have happened. the Heat don’t win coin flips uh typically. I’m just saying. And then even if that had happened, it just too many possibilities. Okay, so I get it. 1.8% chance, which actually was less than that because they would have had to win the coin flip before that. Uh but anyway, if we just we want to make that an indictment of their philosophy, then I guess you can do it if it gets you clicks. Okay, so they have the 20th pick in the draft. Um, and uh, again, Adele, you and I have talked about a lot of different directions that they can go depending on the kind of player they’re looking for. And also if they’re trading for someone like Kevin Durant. Now, I just want to mention one other thing. You everybody really should check out the episode I did with Kevin Durant a week a Durant, that I would have got more downloads about Kevin Durant a week ago with with Gerald Borgay. He might do it actually. He might if I called him out on Twitter for something, he would do it. uh that Gerald Borgay uh who covers the Suns uh did with us because very informative about like where Durant is in his career that his defense is not as bad as it may have looked last year that uh is some of the things his offensive metrics and also about you know what the Suns are actually looking for and whether or not the Heat could meet it or Houston would would beat it and all the rest of that. So you should listen to that episode. We’re also going to have Matt Hannifan on in the next couple of days because he went through like on off the plate went through like 20 different variations of trades that could work. So, we’ll do we’ll do that specifically. But again, with Durant, without Durant, two different directions they might go. We don’t know that right now. So, Greg, give me some players that they’ve looked at. Let’s have Adele go through them. So, um I’ll preface this all by saying it’s still early. the playoffs are still happening and there’s some teams that are aren’t even really fully engaged in the draft process. So, um it’s still early. Uh but I shamelessly and I and just so everyone knows and it can maybe incentivize you to check out off the floor and join us there. I put that I I put this information there first. So now we bring it to the pod the podcast audience and there I said that uh I tend to around this time and I learned this and this is kind of a cool uh thing that Twitter opened the door for. Uh I I start shameless shamelessly asking around to agents to scouts uh for information and um I actually shamelessly used to ask Ethan for information way way back uh you know long ago. So those start those conversations along with my own contacts uh you start to compile and compare notes. And the one thing that comes up and I’m glad you mentioned it already is that a lot of people are kind of convinced in certain circles that this could end up a trade piece um particularly in a Durant situation. They think if a Durant deal were to materialize it would likely include this year’s pick. So, that’s something I think we should take away from, you know, asking around. Uh, and and the other part of it though, when we talk about players, there’s three guys whose names come up most, and I don’t know if they’re going to be there 20, but I don’t think that the mock drafts that are out there today are really uh it’s just it’s too early to really be that accurate. So, the names that I’ve heard are um and Adele will tell us tell us more about these players because truthfully, Ethan, I’m kind of like you. I plug in a lot in the tournament. If the Canes are good, I’ll really watch and I like to watch elite prospects. So, I’ll check in on a Cooper flag, that kind of thing. But the three names associated with the Heat, Chase Richardson from Michigan State, that’s Jason Richardson’s son, Rashier Fleming out of St. Joe’s, and Cam Jones out of Marquette, who they interviewed at the combine, and I heard that they did come away impressed with talking with him. Uh, so those are the three names. It’s super early. more names will come, but I think those are good uh starting points for us when we talk about pick 20. All right, so let’s get to these three players uh individually. We’re going to do that after the break, though. So, we want to mention a great sponsor, the five reasons, and then uh network and also a five on the floor and then we will have Adele defend the house here. Uh make sure that the Heat don’t let any bad picks get in. And now it’s time for our defending the house segment sponsored by our friends over at the Real Estate Shop. You can find them at real estatehopfl.com. That’s with two P’s and an E. Real estatefl.com or at the Fort Lauderdale Realtor on Instagram. This is Javier Glaciius and Amanda Martin. They help buyers and sellers in real estate. They’re nimble and protective of their clients. They service the entire Tri County area. That’s Miami date, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. With a proven onmarket strategy, the real estate shop sellers earn the most money in the shortest time frame because Amanda and Javier have a deep understanding of the local market. So check them out. Again, it’s @thefortale realtor on Instagram, real estatefl.com, or give them a call at 954-2689812. And now, who defended the house? [Music] And we’re back. Okay. So, let’s start from the very beginning here because we’ve talked about all three of these players um previously. Uh let’s do Cam Jones last because I know you have very definitive views on him. Let’s go to the other two. All right. Let’s start with Chase Richardson out of Michigan State, the son of Jason Richardson. Uh, one of the things that came up whenever I’ve evaluated Jace Richardson, I probably watched 12 of their games during the season, not including the tournament, um, is that he looked small. He was listed at 6’3. He came in at just at 6 foot, uh, without shoes on at the combine. So, he’s a little bit shorter than I expected him to be. And one thing you would have to do with Jace is if he’s going to be six foot tall and be your lead, he’d have to be your lead facilitator. You’d have to trust that that he’s going to be able to be your lead facilitator. But he’s more of a scorer in college. He showed some facilitating chops. He’s able to, you know, to get assist and run your offense and fit in a system. But if he’s 6′ 178 pounds, he’s going to have to be like a lead guard. He’s gonna he’s not going to be your scoring shooting guard type wing type. Um, but I do like him. I like his game. He’s a very good three-point shooter. So, he can play off ball. He doesn’t have to be the only guy on ball. He’s got a good handle. He can snake the P&R. He can make reads. So, there’s a lot of potential there. I like him a lot. It’s just the size concern is definitely something you have to factor in when you’re worried about drafting him. All right. So, let’s look at let’s look at some of their history uh with small guards, but I have one question before this because this this would come up. Isaiah Stevens was undrafted uh but a player that you really like, right? Yes. His primary skill set is passing. He did not get an opportunity this year. It’s different skill set than Jace Richardson, but the question was, is he even big enough to play in the NBA? And he never got that opportunity. And I’m just wondering like it seems like Jayce Richardson has obviously much more of a scoring skill set, maybe more talented overall. Uh but I I guess my question would be why would the Heat use their 20th pick in the draft on a small guard when they have a small guard who they wouldn’t play? Jay Switcherson has a higher upside. He has a higher athletic profile than uh Isaiah Stevens. Isaiah Stevens is an elite facilitator. elite facilitator. Uh, however, his jump shot needed a lot of work. What kept him out of, in my opinion, the rotation or even getting uh any type of spot minutes and call up minutes was the fact that he couldn’t shoot. Um, and that’s not really an indictment on his overall game. It’s just when you’re at that size, you have to be able to be an elite facilitator and be able to shoot. You have to be able to do both of those things. Uh, he’s strong enough defensively. Isaiah Stevens was a fighter and Jace Richardson’s the same way. He’s very sturdy. He’s very crafty. Has quick hands. He has a 66 wingspan. So, he’s got long arms. Uh, this is one thing I wanted to bring up before we brought it up in the other podcast episode, the prototype for the next great heat guard. Uh, that episode wingspan is more important than height. Like Steph Curry is an outlier in terms of wingspan cuz his is only 6’3 and he’s only, you know, 6’2 6’3 himself. Um, but most of the elite guards have a a wingspan that’s like over 67. Jace Richardson’s right there. It’s very close. 66 wingspan. Uh, 8.2 in standing reach. His hands are pretty big. Uh, eight, you know, 9 and 1 half inch hand size. So, he’d be able to make it work. He’s good at finishing in the lane because of that athleticism that he has. and he has excellent body control. So, he’s just a different type of player than Isaiah Stevens. Isaiah Stevens relies more on floaters, for example, when he goes to the basket um more than he does, you know, Jace Richardson’s got more body control, up and unders, able to finish strong at the basket because he’s more athletic. All right, so Greg, to that Go ahead. Go ahead. Continue. My my big question on this uh is can Jace Richardson and Tyler Herro play in the same back court? And can you get away with that? And if the answer is no, like Ethan said, I think that a small guard here is probably I I don’t know that it’s the move unless he’s really that talented of a player. And um you know maybe you you do pick an all-star at 20 and and he’s that kind of engine of an offense type but boy I mean to be six foot I I didn’t hear that nugget until now. Uh Adele um that I mean that’s tough that we we’ve talked about them not really loving to stack the roster with dimminionative point guards. We’ll call him. Um uh and he’s not necessarily a point guard, but he’s dimminionative in today’s basketball for sure. So that it’s a little I I’m I think some of these other names may be uh and Jace could go earlier, too, but I think some of these other names may be more likely or make more sense. We’ll see. I have to agree. Go ahead. Well, I have to agree with Greg because you can’t go into that back court if you keep Tyler Hero and you have him with DaVon Mitchell, Isaiah Stevens, and Jace Richardson. Oh my god. 64 and under team. Yeah. I felt like it’d have one of them at the four. I Yeah. And I I don’t I don’t know though that that’s the direction. I mean, look, they had they had an elite six-foot point guard who made the Hall of Fame. I looking back at Tim Hardway, I’m always kind of thinking, how did he do that? Because it was one thing in Golden State when you know crossover and all the rest of that stuff and he had playing I mean that he played like a yeah he played like a a running back in in Miami knuckle ball jumper he didn’t even have a clean jumper like if you if you looked at Timmy’s game once he got to Miami how is he effective like he you talk about like Jimmy getting the most out of his ability but hardway after the knee injuries like I don’t know how they got out of him what they did honestly I always give him immense credit uh for that. He’s just tough. He was just tough. He was uh he he he that Chicago point guard thing. Anyway, um okay, let’s get to Rashir Fleming. Now, Rasher Fleming is a dynamic wing talent, man. When you look at his measurables and he’s only 20 years old, he’s 69, 232 pounds. He’s got a 76 wingspan, nine nine inch standing reach. His hands are big, nine and a half inch hands. Uh the guy’s over 40% from three. Point of attack, defensive ability, finishing at the rim, he’s able to put rim pressure for you. He can slash. Uh his basketball IQ is a little worrisome to me. His handle’s a little worrisome to me. Uh because on defense, he jumps at everything, dude. Pump fakes, ball fakes. Uh he can get out of position for you. But point of attack, he’s strong. So that’s good. There’s always going to be some minuses when you’re picking at 20. But if you talk about a guy that they could get their hands on and spoke and maximize, huge upgrade over Haywood Highmith, um that’s a dynamic wing talent to add to the organization. Okay. Now, before Greg jumps in here though, like I it doesn’t sound to me like he’s going to be there. Am I Am I wrong on that? Like it sounds to me like he’s going to sneak into the top 15. I’m kind of with you on that. And Jace Richardson could go earlier, too. Like I’m I’m trying to find there was a mock draft here um in the New York Times that I think that they posted through the Athletic and they’ve got Rasheed Fleming at 27. So I guess it’s possible, but like there’s like if you look at some of the other more notable mock drafts out there, there’s a lot of people that have him going um higher than 20. What do you think though? He’ll go into So So this is a player they’re gonna have if they want him, they’re gonna have to move up for him. I I don’t they won’t do that. Most likely I I I don’t see them doing that. They they don’t have the second round uh we’re going to have to start a whole conversation again, but they don’t have the second round equity to be able to just throw a pick to move up a few spots. Uh nor do they have the contract that would make sense for a team to necessarily do that. So I I like him as a player. I in terms of what I’ve seen, I watched, you know, I saw him play twice maybe, but I watched some YouTube stuff on him. He does look like the kind of athletic profile that they need and that again Spo would be able to maximize. I just don’t think he’s going to be there. And then I think we’re start to hear that well even if they had if they kept their pick they would be 15th and then they could have taken him there. And we know where that’s going on draft night. Okay. Um now the most controversial one. Um Cam Jones who’s from Marquette. So let’s just start there. Uh the Heat have a prediliction for two schools under Pat Riley. It’s Kentucky and Marquette. Uh he said he wasn’t taking any more Duke players. Uh regardless of of what Nick might want um after the Justice thing, has he? I don’t No, he hasn’t. Right. He hasn’t. Um no. and and and and then the years that he didn’t take the Kentucky player, the years that he fans are screaming about, although Tyler turned out pretty good for his draft spot. Uh but we got into Maxi, we got into Quickly, we got into some of the others who were available at those spots. I mean, they didn’t have a shot at Shay, right? So, we we don’t have to. But basically, the entire league is Kentucky guards now. So, essentially, you can say that about every team. If they just taken a Kentucky guard first, you probably Booker, of course, we know. Uh that would have that would have gone fine. I I actually resurrected Malik Monk’s career single-handedly, if you recall. because he was he was not very good for a large portion of his career. And I actually tweeted from the arena, he’s the one Kentucky guard that didn’t pan out and he scored 34 against the Heat that night and has been an effective player and uh and has gotten a new contract since. So there you go. Um okay, Adele Cam Jones though, Marquette, they’ve had they’ve had Dwayne worked out okay. They traded for Jimmy, they had Jay Crowder, right? Right. like and there’s an archetype of a Marquette player that is also tough. That program regardless of who I know was there, now he’s not, but that the program has a certain, you know, toughness to it. It’s Milwaukee. It’s just like they you know, it’s kind of they they’ll guard. Okay. They’ll guard. They will. Um but but you you have you have an issue with Cam Jones for them, right? I do. I mean, Cam Jones fits kind of what you’re looking for, but he came in smaller than expected. He was listed at 66. He came in at 6’3. He’s 202.4 lbs. He’ll pass the body fat test. The guy’s rocked up. He’s in shape, man. Um, but what was Dwayne’s measurables when he came out of school? So, whenever Dwayne Wade came out of school, he was 6’3, 212, but he had a 610 wingspan. Well, yeah. I mean, I know, but I’m talking about this kid. I I’m not trying to Oh, god. He’s the next Dwayne. Uh, no. We should write that. Uh, no. I’m just saying the 632 sounded about right. Was it two 210? Something along. It was It was close. Wade was stronger coming out of Marquette than than Cam Jones. Um cuz Dwayne Wade had 6% body fat at 212. He was he was strong as a Hawk, man. Yeah. Cam Jones is only 202bs. I mean, he’s he’s muscular. He’s going to have low body fat, but he’s not that strong. But that being said, he’s a low post guard. He he isn’t more of a you know perimeter facilitator. He averaged like six assists per game, but it’s not going to really translate in the NBA because he cannot beat anybody off the dribble. So during the season when I was doing my evaluation, that was one of the things I kept noting even from the prior season was his lack of lateral agility, foot speed, and burst and vertical athleticism. He’s lacking in those areas. He went to the NBA combine and looked completely outmatched even at the NBA combine. He couldn’t get past anybody off the bounce. The couple of buckets that he was able to get are going to come off ball. He did get to his wheelhouse in the mid post low block, but are you going to spend a 20th pick on a player that’s going to play out of the mid post for you and not be your lead guard facilitator? Um, and his wingspan, I mean, it’s decent. It’s 66. It’s not bad. Um, but he still came in, like I said, a little bit shorter than I imagined. And his hands are smaller than I imagined. He’s got eight and a half eight and a half inch hand size. You want to be over nine at minimum really. Uh, when you’re talking about uh, you know, elite guards that you want to bring into your organization. Um, it doesn’t scream high value for me. I just I I think the way this shakes out, you you could get him lowered. The Heat aren’t going to trade down either. I don’t necessarily think maybe they would go to the first pick of the second round if they could. Um, but I I I don’t know. I think that ultimately as workouts get going, although these are the three names that have came up initially, um I think that the pool of players that we narrow down for the Heat are going to include names we don’t know yet, uh that as they start to work out and we hear more um that probably make more sense, I guess, is where I’m going with with uh with these three names so far. Well, again, Adele, Protections can always be wrong, but it sounds to me like Cam Jones is a third guard ultimately. Yeah, absolutely. Or or a guy you bring off your bench that can have the ball in his hands and work out of the mid post for you. I mean I mean it almost sounds like you could almost create this guy out of the G- League, too. I’m not I’m not saying quite there, but it does feel like the kind of play this always to me the draft always comes down to this. Okay. And and it’s this is the same with player acquisition and if you you watch Moneyball, you know, about baseball and all this, it’s just like maximizing, you know, what you can. And it’s basically, you know, I forgot what they called it in Moneyball, but it’s basically exploiting sort of the unseen and these advantages to get uh get players at at better value than you should, right? And if you’re taking a player who you might be able to replicate some of his skill set out of the G-League, then that’s not great use of a first round pick, even if he might have the mental makeup and come from the right school. So again, I’m not I’m not throwing it out. I haven’t watched him enough. I’ll watch it more. I’m just saying what you’re describing, I gladly throw in the 20th pick to Phoenix uh to go get, you know, an elite guy and sell some 35 jerseys. Right. That one’s not um who it’s available. Who wore it? Did Clarence Weatherspoon wear it? Yeah, Clarence Weatherspoon. That’s sounds right. Maybe Kevin Gamble. I think Kevin Gamble did. If if Spoon did Spoon took the shot, then Mash won’t. I actually had an argument with somebody in the front office literally this week about the MASH burn shot. That argument will never die and I’m always on the wrong side of it because I still say Mash made the right play. Nobody in the front office agrees by the way. Uh even though Mash still comes to the games. All right, so Adele, let’s let’s close this up. You I know what your preference is here. What do you think the odds are and of the Heat taking any of these three guys? I think the odds are very remote for a variety of different reasons because two of them won’t be available and one I don’t think is quite good enough. Uh, one last comment on Cam Jones is that he had his worst shooting season of his career last season. Shot 31% from three and 65% from the free throw line. So, I don’t think he’s the guy. Bad bad free throw metrics in college are a bad sign. That’s uh that’s a bad because it shows two things. One is there may be a shooting form issue that you got to address. Uh and the other is that the player may not handle pressure all that well on the road too. So I always look at that because I’m like, you know, you want you want your college shooters because remember pressure in college is a little different at the free throw line because of the one-on- ones. So you want it does show you a little bit more about a player, I think. All right. To lock in there to get the extra points and if you’re under 70% it’s a concern. I I’d be curious to see I wonder what Dwayne shot though. I’m probably going to blow up my whole argument by look because I bet you he was not a good free throw shooter in college. But of course then he also missed big free throws in the pros. Dwayne, everybody forgets this. Okay, I love you Dwayne. But like he missed a ton of late. He would always go one for two at the end of games. And in fact in Dallas, nobody wants to remember this. He went 0 for two. Yep. But they got the rebound. Oh, in 35s in Heat history. We were right. Clarence Weatherspoon, Kevin Gamble, Gary Alexander, Willie Gary, Todd Fuller, Willie Reed, and Malik Allen. Oh, you can’t get Malik’s on the staff, but the number’s available. Katie’s gonna have to pay Malik for that. Malik, we know some of the assistants living listen to this podcast. Hey guys. Uh, I don’t know if Malik does. Um, Malik, hold out. Okay, hold out. KD’s got the money, man. All he’s doing is playing video games. That’s that’s that’s all he does. All right. Thanks, Adele. We appreciate it. Uh, Greg, thank you. We’ll have more of these episodes about players that the Heat will not draft uh coming up any day now. Oh, and that episode with Hannah. Matt and I, we’re going to go through all the Durant stuff, too. See if that happens. Have a good one. Thank you for listening to the five on the floor on the five reason sports network. After all, someone needs to listen to my dad.
The Miami Heat are investigating players for their 20th pick in the draft. Ethan Skolnick and Greg Sylvander speak to Digital Adel about three they’ve been recently linked to.
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12 Comments
Good pod fellas!
Tahaad Pettiford is the guy he has insane potential! But no pick is gona change this team go get a Star
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Dink Pate
Carter Bryant
6:50 the heat would not have had to win a coin flip with chicago. they had a worse record than chico and dallas. they would have automatically had that pick
Cedric Coward
Great analysis! Fleming is the most likely selection from this group. But I doubt any of these guys will be the pick.
Soooooo this pod was a waste of time since none of these 3 sound likely?
At this point go get KD
Not to even mention Walter Clayton or pettiford is crazy
Walter Clayton would be perfect for the heat
kam jones or fleming only options if we don’t trade pick