Heat playing for keeps amid Powell’s success? |Ira Winderman

Heat playing for keeps amid Powell’s success? |Ira Winderman


Sunday, the NBA’s final midseason stage will be the stage of Norman Powell.

It has been an 11-year climb to this moment, this first NBA All-Star berth, and, yet, the timing arguably couldn’t be more fitting.

The venue: The Intuit Dome, as in the home of the Los Angeles Clippers.

The host team: Those Los Angeles Clippers, as in the team that discarded Powell in July in search of something better.

And that, as much as anything, is what so resonates about this opportunity for the 32-year-old Miami Heat shooting guard, that something better was there the entire time.

For the Clippers, the decision to move off of Powell was for the apparent upgrade of Bradley Beal and John Collins, neither of whom have been upgraded.

And even at the start, it was going No. 46 in the 2015 NBA draft, behind the likes of Rakeem Christmas, Juan Pablo Vaulet and Olivier Hanlan (but, hey, at least one pick ahead of Artūras Gudaitis).

“I think it’s just one of the milestones that puts the stamp on all the work that I’ve put into this game, my career,” Powell said of making it to this All-Star mountaintop. “And then just how I’ve always seen myself and saw myself in this league, being a player that is at that level of making our All-Star games, All-Star appearances. That’s what I’ve always wanted as a kid. So the fact that for me, I always thought I could be at this level, given the opportunity.

“But it was always about earning that opportunity in the roles. I wasn’t a top pick, a second-rounder, role player, everybody put me in that box. But I’ve always thought if I was given the opportunity, I could be the guy that, on these teams that I’ve played for, I could be that for them and be a go-to guy every single night, a guy that can really help win at a high level. So I think it’s just a stamp on how I see myself in that, yeah, I am at this level and I can be at this level every single year, given the opportunity.”

Understand, such a featured role was not necessarily the expectation when Powell was acquired at the nominal cost of the contracts of Kevin Love and Kyle Anderson.

At the time, the thought was of a one-two punch of Powell and 2025 Heat All-Star Tyler Herro. In fact, with those two splitting the offense, it could even have opened the Heat runway for a return All-Star appearance for Bam Adebayo.

Instead, due to injuries, the sum total of Herro’s work this season has been 11 games.

Suddenly, for arguably the first time, after playing behind Kawhi Leonard in Toronto, Damian Lillard in Portland and James Harden with the Clippers, Powell has become a leading man.

And for all that has gone sideways amid what stands as a 29-27 season for the Heat, it would look far more dire without Powell’s emergence.

“It’s been a lot of fun,” Powell said of sitting atop opposing scouting reports. “Honestly, when I think about it, this is something that I’ve always wanted – being a focal point, being top of the scouting report.

“I remember when I was Toronto as a rookie, second-year player, talking to Delon Wright, talking to Fred (VanVleet), and we’re talking about how we’re going to make an impact in the league and what we wanted to do and where we saw ourselves. And we used to talk about being in this position and knowing what that’s like: Having the pressure, having the media, having the fans looking forward to your production and helping the team win. And the great things that come with that and the bad things that come with that. Taking on the responsibility when the team is losing, things aren’t going well or you don’t perform at the level you want to. And then cherishing the moments of triumphing and going on these winning streaks and beating the No. 1 and things like that and taking that responsibility as well.”

And, now, he is that.

“So it’s been fun for me,” Powell continued. “It hasn’t been perfect. But just learning how to be more vulnerable with myself and how I can get better, how I can improve and show up for the team when they need me to show up, be the punching bag and be coachable.

“We have a young team. So I’m the oldest on the team, the most experienced on the team, so providing the right way to be a professional and be able to be coached and being able to adjust and get everyone’s mindset on getting the best out of themselves and what they want out of their career.”

Typically such a moment comes with reward beyond All-Star adulation.

But these are not typical Heat times, with the Heat positioned for a fourth consecutive trip to the play-in round.

In the months following Herro’s All-Star breakthrough, the Heat bypassed that extension window.

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