Q: Ira, Erik Spoelstra for years had spoken about the value of Haywood Highsmith and now the Heat trades him for nothing? What about building value? – Sandro.
A: Because a salary-cap/luxury-tax world often can feel like an alternate reality. Did the Heat value Haywood Highsmith? Absolutely. In fact, he well could have stood among the top eight players in the 2025-26 rotation. But the Heat also recognized they are not positioned to be paying the luxury tax and risking the repeater tax based on where they currently stand in the NBA hierarchy. So the Nets, with ample room below the salary cap, essentially paid $5.6 million (the remaining money left on the final year of Haywood’s contract) to buy a 2032 second-round pick. You also can look at the deal as a means of further opening potential playing time for the Heat’s youth movement, be it Nikola Jovic, Keshad Johnson, Jaime Jaquez Jr. or even Pelle Larsson. Yes, it was a salary dump. But teams coming off a third consecutive season in the play-in tournament have justified reason not to remain a tax team. This, in the end, was nothing more than a math equation – and salary dump.
Q: Haywood Highsmith is gone and Terry Rozier is still here? – Eric.
A: Well, that is somewhat cold. And there also is the cold reality that it is easier to offload a $5.6 million expiring salary than a $26.6 million expiring salary. If the Heat could have moved off Terry Rozier’s salary that assuredly would have been the preference as opposed to moving off Haywood Highsmith’s money. As it is, the Heat’s power rotation was somewhat limited. Without Haywood it is further limited.
Q: When will the Heat fill out their camp roster? – Nate.
A: I’m not sure the Heat will get to, or need to get to, the maximum of 21 players for camp. I would expect at some point you will see some familiar Heat G League faces be both signed and then immediately released, as a means of getting them some cash to then be funneled back to the Sioux Falls Skyforce. The key battle in camp well could be for the last of the three two-way contracts, with Vlad Goldin and Myron Gardner signed to two of them.
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