
"The way head coach Erik Spoelstra sees it, Herro should be a hand-in-glove fit for this motion-based offense and up the production even further. "That's easy to figure out," Spoelstra told reporters of Herro's fit. "He's doing well. And his skill level, I mean, come on, he's one of the most skilled guys in the league. It's going to fit, it's going to add. We miss him dearly.""
"Miami's offense has emphasized two things: pace and movement. While doing so, it has de-emphasized pick-and-rolls and a lot of the tasks typically assigned to ball-dominant backcourt players. This could, at least in theory, help Herro. So long as these quick-strike passes and perpetual movement can hold the defense's attention, Herro's scoring chances should be cleaner than last season-when he torched opponents to the tune of a career-high 23.9 points on 47.2/37.5/87.8 shooting."
Miami has started the season without All-Star guard Tyler Herro while showing significant offensive improvement. Head coach Erik Spoelstra expects Herro to integrate smoothly into the Heat's motion-based offense and to boost production once he returns from left ankle surgery. The offense emphasizes pace, movement, quick-strike passes and de-emphasizes pick-and-rolls and heavy ball-dominant backcourt duties. That approach should create cleaner scoring chances for Herro, who averaged a career-high 23.9 points on efficient shooting last season. Norman Powell and Bam Adebayo have supplied scoring in Herro's absence, but Herro's presence could restore perimeter firepower and similar scoring volume.
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