Some of it is happening already, glimpses coming from his pace and patience when teams run him off the arc. Some of it will only come to pass as more teams show how they will adjust their scouting reports for Herro’s new game. The real test will be postseason games, the adjustments to the adjustments, the counters to the counters. Can Herro be the HEAT player who consistently draws two to the ball, who becomes the engine, not just a major component, of a high-powered, elite offense? “The next step, which he’s already improving, is the playmaking aspect,” Quinn says. “Whatever the defense does is wrong basically. If you’re going to put more guys on me, I’m going to get an assist or make the right play for the team, then I’m going to have my spurts where I have 15 or 20 in a quarter. That’s the next step where he can balance that ability to score and playmake for the team. To make the right play over and over and over again is what makes the great players great.” Greatness is assuredly well within the scope of Herro’s endless ambitions. He says he wants to be an All-Star – he’ll have his best chance to date playing like this – and he wants to win. Time will tell the story of whether he reaches greatness, true greatness that is remembered long after your final game, and Herro has never been as close to touching it. “He knows he’s that guy,” says Jimmy Butler. -via NBA.com / December 19, 2024