Miami ready to turn up heat in bid for championship

TORONTO, (Reuters) – The Miami Heat completed their  regular season with a confident 97-79 win over the Toronto  Raptors on Wednesday, the star-studded lineup now able to shift  their focus to a tilt at the NBA championship.

Chris Bosh

Having already locked up the second seed in the East and a  first round matchup with the Philadelphia 76ers, the Heat rested  All-Star trio LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh for the  regular season finale and still ran out comfortable winners.

After enduring a campaign of unrelenting scrutiny, the Heat  now face a completely new set of questions. The spotlight  becoming brighter and the attention more intense.

The Heat have had 82 games to learn to play together and  their first round series against the energetic 76ers should  reveal if those lessons have sunk in.

“I think we have squeezed everything you possibly could out  of the regular season and I think it has prepared us for the  post-season,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra told reporters. “What  I’ve been talking about the last few weeks are habits.

“If you haven’t developed habits over the five months of the  regular season and been building up resiliency and the resolve  to get you through tough time; you’re not going to try to do it  in a day and a half.”

From the day in July when ‘King James’ jilted the Cleveland  Cavaliers announcing he was taking his talents to South Beach to  form an NBA super team with Bosh and Wade, Miami has been  planning a championship parade.

A regular season record of 58-24 was the first step towards  their objective but now the climb becomes steeper with four  testing best-of-seven series needing to be navigated to the  summit.

“Our objective is winning, you can see it by our actions and  the Big Three’s actions,” Heat centre Jamaal Magloire told  reporters.

“We’re ready, we’re looking forward to playing Philadelphia,  we’ve played hard the whole season… we’ve given ourselves an  opportunity to go all the way.”

HOT AND COLD

The Heat finished with the NBA’s third best record but at  various points of a shockingly inconsistent season looked more  like a disaster in the making than a dynasty.

After a modest 8-7 start to the campaign, the Heat appeared  to be developing into the juggernaut many had feared, winning  21-of-22 contests from late November to early January.

In March, the Heat cooled again losing five straight,  including four at home, their frustrations bringing James and  company to tears in the locker room.

But when Miami’s Big Three are clicking, they are a  frightening force.

That power was on full display in March, when James, Wade  and Bosh each recorded 30 points, 10 rebounds in a 125-119 win  over the Houston Rockets.

It marked the first time in 50 years that three players on  the same team had a least 30 points and 10 rebounds.

While James, twice the NBA’s most valuable player, has  received little MVP buzz this season, he still finished second  in league scoring while Wade was fourth and Bosh produced some  of his best work down the home stretch.

But blending three of the NBA’s top talents together with a  roster cobbled from other team’s cast-offs has proven tricky.

Such chemistry has at times been elusive but Spoelstra was  confident his team has discovered a winning formula.

“197 days ago we started this journey and it feels like  yesterday,” Spoelstra said.

“We’ve been through a lot already in five months and we feel  what  we experienced through the regular season, what habits we  developed, will prepare us for what we will be facing when the  second season starts.”