Heat’s Tyler Herro claims Celtics shut him down in Game 3 by ‘holding me, jersey’
Herro was unable to build off his superb Game 2 performance on Saturday night.
Herro has had an up and down series up until this point where he was held in check in Game 1, but excelled in Game 2 where he scored 24 points and recorded 14 assists. He came back down to earth in Game 3 where the Celtics brought a ton of intensity on the defensive end and as said by Herro after the game, they here “holding” on to him and his jersey, but understands “it’s competition.”
“They’re doing a lot of different things off the ball, just holding me, holding my jersey, doing a bunch of stuff,” Herro said. “But at the end of day, it’s competition. It’s going to make me better, it’s going to make the team better. I’m here for it. I’m excited to be here. Let’s go. Let’s keep going.”
Herro goes into detail of what Boston did against him
Herro would finish with 15 points off of only making five shots out of his 16 attempts and from the three-point line, he made three out of nine attempts. He would cite the Celtics for taking the Heat “out of our offense” especially in the first half where that side of the ball was a slog as they shot poorly and committed mistakes.
“I thought they picked up the pressure, tried to speed us up, take us out of our offense, extend our catches,” Herro said of the Celtics’ defense on the star guard Saturday night. “I thought they did a good job of that, especially in that first half. We were moving too fast and not taking our time. It wasn’t the same offensive outlook that we had in the second game in the series.”
Tyler Herro talks about what the Celtics did in Game 3 to him and the rest of the team.
“I thought they picked up the pressure…” #HeatCulture pic.twitter.com/O2WQnPj8Fg
— Zachary Weinberger (@ZachWeinberger) April 28, 2024
How the Celtics halted Herro’s play-making ability
Even when the scoring might not be efficient for Herro, his play making has been an underrated development this season for the 24-year old guard. However, he was only held to two assists Saturday night as the University of Kentucky product explained what the Celtics did on that front that got them uncomfortable.
“I mean, they’re still protecting the paint it felt like. They did a couple of different adjustments,” Herro said. “When Jrue [Holiday] wasn’t guarding me, just randomly coming over and picking up the ball, make the ball get out of my hands, but we have a bunch of guys on this team that can continue to hurt them from from three or driving. It feel like we need to watch the film where we can figure out a way to generate those three-point looks with the defense that they’re playing.”
On the season overall, Herro has been averaging 20.8 points, 5.3 rebounds, and 4.5 assists per game while shooting 44.1 percent from the field. He has been used as the main offensive creator for the Heat due to the injuries of not only their best player in Jimmy Butler, but also Terry Rozier who is set to miss his 10th straight game Monday.
Spoelstra assesses how the Celtics maintained Herro and the Heat
As said before, he excelled in that role in Game 2 as he was great in every aspect, but his streakiness came back and hurt Miami, despite Herro not being the only reason why they lost the game. Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra spoke about how the Celtics stopped Herro in his tracks and hindered his play-making opportunities.
“They stayed at home a little bit more on the shooters but it also depends like if we execute executed with a little bit more intention, if it ever loosened up, we won’t know that answer necessarily,” Spoelstra said. “Once they started bullying us and biting us and getting us out of any kind of trigger or action that there was, it was easy to flatten this out at that point. Nobody was open. We were left the end of possession with just going one on one or dribbling through against all their size.”
If there has been a constant trend throughout this series, victories have gone to the teams with the better start and Game 3 proved that once again. In Game 1, the Celtics started on a 14-0 run and never looked back, then Game 2 saw the Heat catch fire from three-point range draining eight leading to 23 in the whole game which is a playoff record.
Honestly he could do this all the time if he just takes what the defense gives him. This whole Heat team is way better than people realize. And the only things they did different from this game and the last was take open shots with confidence and switch the matchups with Tatum and Jovic. And everybody rebounded very well. This is way more sustainable then when Jimmy would have to average 30 to beat a team in the playoffs and it shows the truth growth of this team. This team is better than last year’s team and I will not stop saying that.
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