Haslem to have surgery on torn left foot ligament
By TIM REYNOLDS
AP Sports Writer
MIAMI (AP) -- Udonis Haslem and the Miami Heat spent parts of two days reviewing many scenarios, hoping there was a way to avoid surgery.
There wasn't.
And Miami's toughest player is out indefinitely -- possibly many months.
The Heat said Haslem will have surgery Tuesday to repair a badly torn
ligament in his left foot, an injury that came Saturday night against
Memphis on a play that looked almost harmless at first. Instead, it'll
go down as a significant blow to the Heat, who entered Monday ranked
19th in rebounding in the 30-team NBA, and now will be without their
best player in that department.
"We lose a warrior," coach Erik Spoelstra said.
In the short term, the Heat plan to give more minutes to Juwan Howard
at the spot backing up starting power forward Chris Bosh. LeBron James
and James Jones will be used at that position as well in certain
situations, Spoelstra said.
"There's no replacement for UD. We all know that," James said.
The Heat will not know how long Haslem will be out until after the
surgery. Spoelstra declined to speculate on a best-case scenario.
Aided by two massive crutches, Haslem made his way to the Heat bench
just moments before tip-off of Miami's home game Monday against the
Indiana Pacers. He got a hug and two smacks on the back from James, a
fist-bump from Dwyane Wade and said hello to a few courtside
ticket-holders.
"His toughness, not
disrespecting anybody on the team, is going to be tough to replace,"
point guard Carlos Arroyo said. "He's such a tough guy and what he
brings is something special every night. But we have the guys to do it.
We understand it's going to take everybody to continue to work on those
details that he provides for us. Rebounding, loose balls, charges. We
just have to step up."
Haslem is considered by teammates to be not only Miami's grittiest guy, but the primary locker-room leader as well.
The Heat have said for years that Haslem's work off-the-court and in
the locker room is one of the reasons why he's so valued, and Spoelstra
said he expects the co-captain to keep that leadership role during his
absence.
"That was the first thing I
mentioned to him yesterday when he was getting his tests," Spoelstra
said Monday. "I said, 'You've been through a lot already in your life.
You will get through this. And secondly, your role as team captain and
leader won't change.' We will still need that leadership and his voice
behind the scenes."
It's been a trying few
months for Haslem, who thought he was going to leave his hometown
during the offseason and sign elsewhere because the Heat, at first,
simply could not afford to keep him. Then James, Bosh and Wade all
agreed to take less money in their Heat deals, which helped Miami offer
Haslem $20 million for five years.
Days after Haslem accepted the new Miami deal, his mother died of cancer.
And now comes another blow.
"He's down," said Mike Miller, another injured Heat forward and one of Haslem's closest friends.
Wade missed almost the entire preseason with a strained hamstring and
now has a sprained left wrist, but was back in the starting lineup
Monday night. James has been dealing with a shin problem for a couple
weeks, and Miller hasn't played yet this season and isn't expected back
until after Christmas because of a broken thumb and ligament damage.
Miller signed with Miami so he and Haslem could play together. For the
next few weeks, at least, they'll be sitting together in suits on the
Heat bench.
"You never want to lose a guy
like him," Miller said. "Heart and soul of this team. So it's going to
be tough for a while. We'll hold it down until he gets back."
Haslem's 8.2 rebounds per game are tops among all NBA reserves;
entering Monday, San Antonio's Antonio McDyess was second on that list
with 6.6 per game. Haslem also has four double-doubles already this
season, more than any other two NBA reserves coming into Monday's play
combined.
"If we want to make a collective
change in our rebounding and controlling that paint area ...
individually guys have to make a change," Spoelstra said pregame
Monday. "We have to have some career-high rebounding numbers as we move
forward from each individual."
Clearly,
replacing Haslem will be difficult. Miami's reserves were outscored
40-4 and the Heat were outrebounded 48-39 in Monday's 93-77 loss to
Indiana.
If Miami looks outside its roster
for help, the choice could be free-agent center Erick Dampier, who
worked out for the Heat over the summer.
The Heat were prepared for the worst with Haslem after he needed to be
carried off by center Jamaal Magloire and trainer Jay Sabol on Saturday
night.
Magloire said Haslem didn't say anything as he was getting taken from the floor.
"It was strange," Magloire said.
Haslem was playing body-to-body defense against Memphis' Zach Randolph
on the left side of the lane, trying to draw a charge. No foul was
called after the two collided, but that wasn't what did the damage to
Haslem. After Haslem fell backward to the court, he immediately pointed
to, then grabbed, the inside of his left foot.
"I knew it. I knew something was bad," Miller said. "It's crazy, too. I
rewound it about nine times to try to see what happened. Freak
accident."