The Miami Heat’s offseason has been waiting on LeBron James, and now there’s a clear name sitting in the backup plan.
Stefan Bondy of the New York Post reported that league sources view the Heat as “the team to watch” for free agent point guard Russell Westbrook. But there’s a major condition attached: Westbrook would be in play for Miami only if the team misses out on James.
That detail says plenty about where the Heat are right now. Everything is being lined up around James, not in parallel with him.
If he chooses Miami, the roster math changes. If he goes somewhere else, the front office can pivot fast, and Westbrook suddenly looks like one of the top veteran options on the board.
The report also fits the broader picture around James’ market. Cleveland, Miami and Philadelphia are being treated as the presumed favorites, which matches what other insiders have said in recent days. Marc Stein said on a Bleacher Report live stream that his reporting points to those same three teams, while ESPN’s Shams Charania has also included Golden State and Minnesota among the clubs still in contact with Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul.
For Miami, Westbrook makes sense on the basketball side. The guard group has been thinned out after the Giannis Antetokounmpo blockbuster sent Tyler Herro and Kasparas Jakucionis to Milwaukee, and Norman Powell already left in free agency. That leaves Davion Mitchell as the starting point guard and newly signed Tim Hardaway Jr. as the wing shooter, with not much proven ball-handling behind them.
Westbrook, despite all the volatility that has followed him late in his career, was productive in Sacramento last season. He put up 15.2 points, 5.4 rebounds and 6.7 assists per game in 64 appearances while shooting 42.7 percent from the field and 33.8 percent from 3-point range. For a player entering his 19th season, those numbers still carry real value.
The contract side matters too. Westbrook played last season on a one-year deal worth roughly $3.6 million, and Miami is operating below a hard cap at the first apron after using part of its midlevel exception on Hardaway. That means any additions were always likely to come at or near the veteran’s minimum, which is exactly the tier Westbrook has lived on for three straight seasons.
There’s also a long, unfinished history between Westbrook and the Heat. In 2019, Oklahoma City general manager Sam Presti worked on a trade that would have sent Westbrook to Miami, which was reported as his preferred destination before he ended up in Houston in the Chris Paul deal.
Then in 2023, the Heat did background work on him ahead of a possible Utah buyout and reportedly got feedback that made them hesitate. Miami moved in another direction, and Westbrook landed with the Los Angeles Clippers.
This time, the setup is different. Westbrook is no longer a max player, and Miami is no longer searching for a co-star for Jimmy Butler. The Heat now have their superstar in Antetokounmpo, and Westbrook has already shown he can handle a reduced role, first in Denver and then in Sacramento.
There’s even a connection to James himself. Westbrook spent parts of two seasons with him on the Los Angeles Lakers, though this report makes clear the two are being viewed as alternatives, not teammates.
For now, though, none of it moves until James does. His agent was around Summer League on Friday and told ESPN during the Heat’s win over the Bucks that the process is being taken “very seriously” and that James has earned the right to make his decision on his own timeline.
That leaves Miami in a holding pattern, waiting on the biggest domino left in the offseason. If James picks the Heat, Westbrook disappears from the conversation. If James signs elsewhere, the door opens for a pairing that has hovered around existence since 2019.
In Other News...
Udonis Haslem Finally Said What Heat Fans Wanted To Hear
The Summer League dustup involving Bam Adebayo and Tyler Herro kept echoing long after the moment itself, mostly because it reopened an old conversation about how teammates handle conflict and who gets to speak on it. When Draymond Green weighed in, his criticism landed squarely on Udonis Haslem, the longtime Heat veteran who spent years around both players and has never been shy about defending the culture in Miami.
Haslem answered in a way Heat fans know well, with the kind of edge that made him such a fixture in the first place. His message pushed back on Green while also nodding toward Jimmy Butler, another familiar name in this whole cross-team conversation, and it served as a reminder that even in retirement, Haslem still sounds like someone who takes Miami's side personally. [Read more 🡒]
Heat Fans Wont Love How Kel'el Ware Looked Back On Miami
Kel'el Wares first season in Miami gave the Heat enough to dream on, even if the fit never looked fully settled. He flashed enough to set career highs in several categories, the kind of production that suggested a young big man was starting to find his footing while still working through the demands of Erik Spoelstras system and expectations.
Still, the way Ware looked back on his time with the Heat made it clear the reset mattered to him. He spoke about the appeal of a younger locker room and the chance for more opportunity, which is the sort of sentiment Miami fans usually hear only after a player has already started mentally moving on. For a team that has spent years valuing development as much as results, it is another reminder that not every promising season ends with a clean fit. [Read more 🡒]
Udonis Haslem Got Pulled Into Another Heat Culture Firestorm
A social media flare-up involving Tyler Herro and Bam Adebayo spilled into a much bigger conversation about Heat culture, with the dust-up tracing back to direct messages between Herro and a fan. What started as an online argument between two former Miami teammates quickly drew outside attention, turning a personal exchange into another public referendum on how the franchise handles its own.
Udonis Haslem was pulled right into the middle of it when Draymond Green weighed in, and Haslem later answered on social media to defend the standard he spent so many years helping define in Miami. For the Heat, it was another reminder that even after Haslems playing days, his name still gets attached to every debate about toughness, loyalty and where the line is drawn inside the organization. [Read more 🡒]
