Heat May Have Found The Exact Guard This Giannis Build Needs

Can emerging talents Ryan Conwell and Jahmir Young provide the guard depth the Miami Heat so desperately need?

The Miami Heat may have found a pair of answers to a problem that’s been hanging over their summer: guard depth.

In Las Vegas Summer League, Ryan Conwell and Jahmir Young each opened with 19 points, and both made a case that they can fit the kind of roster Miami is trying to build around Giannis Antetokounmpo. The Heat are still short on pieces, but with limited financial flexibility, they came into the summer needing help wherever they could find it.

That’s where this gets interesting. Miami has built a reputation for turning overlooked guards into real NBA players, and Conwell and Young looked like the latest names trying to join that list. Both are undrafted, both have already shown they can compete, and both bring traits the Heat need from the backcourt if this version of the roster is going to work.

The fit is pretty straightforward. Miami needs guards who can shoot, move without the ball and buy in defensively.

Conwell checked those boxes with a smooth, confident scoring game. He’s dangerous as a movement shooter, can run off screens for threes, and doesn’t need the ball stuck in his hands to make an impact.

If defenses collapse to protect the rim against Giannis, Conwell has the kind of shot-making that can punish them.

Young brings a different flavor, but the appeal is just as clear. He’s more of a dribbler, a shifty creator who can work the middle of the floor, get downhill with a bursty first step and still keep defenders honest with his jumper. He can create his own look on the perimeter, and he also showed he can cut into space for open shots when the defense loses track of him.

Neither player is just there for offense, either. Both competed on the defensive end, and that matters. Their size brings some limitations, but Conwell’s strong frame helps him hold up, while Young’s wingspan and athleticism give him a chance to make plays on that side of the floor.

If this feels familiar to Heat fans, it should. Miami has been doing this for years.

The track record stretches back to the post-LeBron period, when Hassan Whiteside went from overseas journeyman to All-Defense stalwart and the team developed Josh Richardson and Tyler Johnson into legitimate rotation players. Once Jimmy Butler arrived - in exchange for Richardson - the machine kicked into another gear.

Since then, the list of success stories has kept growing: Duncan Robinson, Max Strus, Gabe Vincent, Kendrick Nunn and Haywood Highsmith. Those are all undrafted players who helped fuel Finals runs this decade, and many of them spent multiple Summer Leagues in Miami before becoming what they became. At this point, it’s part of the organization’s identity.

Young’s path with the Heat already has a little extra detail attached to it. Miami brought him in on a two-way contract this season before signing him to a standard deal to secure his rights. The team currently has four open roster spots and all three two-way slots available, so there’s a real possibility both Young and Conwell end up on the roster.

For Miami, that’s the beauty of it. If two players flash like this, the Heat don’t need both to hit. They just need one.

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Herro said he had been bracing for a move all summer, which made the eventual trade less of a shock than a confirmation of what he already sensed was coming. Even with the change in uniform, the backdrop around his exit still lingers, especially after the summer basketball incident involving former teammate Bam Adebayo added another layer to an already messy ending. [Read more 🡒]