Miami Heat president Pat Riley held a press
conference Saturday in which he touched on the precarious future of star
forward Chris Bosh's career.
A recurring blood clot, which
prevented Bosh from appearing in the second half of the season and the
playoffs, has cast doubt as to whether he can play basketball anymore. Riley
addressed Bosh's outlook regarding the 2016-17 season, per the Palm Beach Post's Jason Lieser:
It’s a positive environment right now
with Chris, and I think his doctors and our doctors are constantly
communicating. I know what Chris wants. I know he wants to play. Obviously, we
would be open to that.
But this is still a very fluid
situation. On this day, there's not an answer. I wish I could give you one.
Let's just let this process move on down the road and go from there.
Lieser noted long flights and the
traveling demands that accompany an NBA schedule can be
"problematic" for Bosh. Riley addressed that element of the
situation, too:
I think all those things will come
into play and there'll be a discussion. There are many players in different
sports that do play with that condition, and they're on-and-off programs with
blood thinners and stuff. But I think when it comes down to a final protocol,
or a formula for how this has to be done, then that's what we'll deal with.
Bosh has missed the second half of
each of the past two seasons because of blood-clot issues. The Heat still managed
to advance to the second round of the postseason without him last year, but
they then proceeded to lose longtime face of the franchise Dwyane Wade to
the Chicago Bulls in free agency.
Even without Wade in the fold, Riley has built a solid
squad in Miami in the post-LeBron James era. Unfortunately, it hasn't been able
to fully realize its potential because of Bosh's medical issues.
"From a basketball standpoint,
I've been told we're sort of put on hold here," Riley said, per Lieser. "We know what Chris is capable of and...you just
never know what you could have done as a team. That's what kills me. That we
put together a good team right after (LeBron James) left, but we never had an
opportunity to see it as its full."
Bosh's ability to shoot from three-point range, create off
the dribble and function as a center in smaller lineups makes him a
prototypical big man for the modern NBA. He's played well over the past two
seasons when healthy, having averaged 20.0 points and 7.2 rebounds per game
during that span.
The Heat have an exceptional center in Hassan Whiteside,
who's an elite shot-blocker and is only beginning to unlock his potential.
Dynamic perimeter players such as floor general Goran Dragic and forward
Justise Winslow provide the Heat with plenty of athleticism and firepower as
well.
But Bosh is the X-factor who could be the difference
between Miami being an also-ran playoff team and a conference finalist.
The scrutiny regarding Riley's
inability to retain Wade this summer will only increase if the Heat don't have
a strong 2016-17 campaign. How well Miami fares will be largely tied to Bosh,
who's due more than $23.7 million in salary this coming season, per Spotrac, and has two
additional years left on his contract.
Although he's still capable of playing at a high level,
Bosh's blood-clot issues have complicated how Riley and Co. can build Miami's
roster and muddies the forecast for the Heat's collective upside.
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