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Winderman’s view: A failure to launch and a painful Heat loss

Observations and other notes of interest from Sunday’s 122-117 loss to the Charlotte Hornets:

– The work for all those two-point shots is laudable.

– It takes effort to work inside the arc.

– It also isn’t sustainable.

– So another game where the Heat trade twos for threes.

– Arguably playing into the opposition’s hands.

– Yes, that’s what Jimmy Butler and Bam Adebayo do.

– And they do it very well.

– Wit Butler doing it again Sunday.

– But it also leads to chasing the scoreboard when the other wide is converting threes.

– As Charlotte and P.J. Washington did in Sunday’s third quarter.

– When the game turned.

– It was as if it was Tyler Herro or bust beyond the arc.

– After he entered with his own 3-point struggles.

Kyle Lowry was supposed to be offering more of that.

– Or at least some of that.

– And Max Strus’ inconsistency continues.

– With Caleb Martin continuing to shy from even launching from beyond the arc.

– Yes, Erik Spoelstra points to defense.

– And hustle.

– But the NBA is a 3-point league.

– And the Heat have fallen way beyond the curve.

– Don’t take enough.

– Don’t make enough.

– Closing 10 of 31 from beyond the arc.

– Ultimately, it wasn’t as much the overall differential as the Heat lack of launches and conversions.

– This team and this roster is built to take more, with hopes of making more.

– The Heat again were able to open with their preferred starting lineup of Adebayo, Martin, Butler, Herro and Kyle Lowry.

– With the start, Lowry moved past Luol Deng and Marvin Williams for 92nd on the NBA all-time list.

– With his start, Butler tied Shaquille O’Neal for 18th on the Heat all-time list.

Victor Oladipo and Orlando Robinson entered together as the first two Heat reserves.

– So another game where Dewayne Dedmon was bypassed in the rotation.

Gabe Vincent entered as third Heat substitute.

– And then Strus.

– That had Haywood Highsmith shuffled out of the mix.

– And Dedmon and Haslem as the others not in the rotation.

– Butler’s first steal moved him past Gerald Wallace for 95th on the NBA all-time list.

– Butler’s second defensive rebound moved him past Michael Beasley for 22nd on the Heat all-time list.

– Martin’s first steal was the 150th of his career.

– Former Heat guard Mario Chalmers was among those in Sunday’s crowd.

– As was Hornets legend Kemba Walker.