Alston rejoins Wade with Heat
Rafer Alston got his wish, signing with the Miami Heat for the
remainder of the season and getting the chance to play alongside
Dwyane Wade again.
The 33-year-old point guard cleared waivers at 6 p.m.
Thursday, and the Heat announced the signing about an hour later.
Alston will be with the team when it opens a six-game road trip
Friday in Phoenix.
Alston, who started all 23 playoff games with Orlando last
season when the Magic reached the NBA finals, played with the Heat
in 2003-04 - Wade's rookie season. Alston's contract with the New
Jersey Nets was bought out Tuesday, and he made it clear right away
that Miami was atop his list of teams to join.
"I just met with him and he said he's in great shape," Heat
coach Erik Spoelstra said by telephone from Phoenix Thursday night.
"He's a worker. We're excited about it. We always felt Rafer was a
Miami Heat player. ... But more than anything, the fact that his
game fits our philosophy and that he's been with us before and buys
into it and loved his time here and wanted to be here, it made it a
great fit."
Alston, who has been an outstanding on-the-ball defender,
could play Friday against the Suns. Spoelstra hasn't made a final
decision.
Alston started 13 of New Jersey's first 15 games this season
- part of the Nets' abysmal 0-18 start. He's shooting only 34
percent this season, well below his career average of 38.5 percent,
and was averaging only 9.7 points.
A change of scenery could do him wonders.
"We are thrilled to have Skip back in a Heat uniform, as he
brings another set of skills and experience to the point guard
position," Heat president Pat Riley said in a statement. "From his
time in Miami, we know both his game and him as a person, and we
had a great experience with him in the past. We are very happy to
have Skip back in the Heat family."
The signing comes at a crucial point of Miami's season. No
team played fewer road games in the season's first 72 days than
Miami, which is 11-10 at home, but just 6-6 on the road and sitting
in fifth place in the East.
The Heat are about to start making up for all those early
home dates.
On Friday, they begin a stretch where 20 of their next 27
games will be on the road, no homestand of longer than two games
until the first week of March.
"We just have to continue to grow as a team and continue to
learn from our mistakes," Wade said.
Adding another veteran won't hurt in that regard.
The Heat had only two point guards on the roster after
trading Chris Quinn on Tuesday to New Jersey - a deal the Nets made
almost at the same time they were buying out Alston's contract.
Alston helped Miami close the 2003-04 season with 17 wins in
its final 21 games, getting the Heat the No. 4 seed in the Eastern
Conference that year, and becoming a close friend and adviser to
Wade along the way.
"Veteran guys are so important in this league," Wade said.
"They've done it for so long and Skip became a leader. He's a
general on the floor, really helps to lead his team."
Spoelstra said it won't take Alston long to get up to speed,
especially since Miami's defensive system is "similar enough" to
what he knew with the Heat.
Miami now has an unusual situation at the point, with three
players at the position who have all started at least 11 games this
season. Carlos Arroyo took over Miami's starting job in
mid-December from Mario Chalmers, who started every game last year
as a rookie for the Heat.
"It's definitely a positive for us at one of the most
important positions on the floor," Spoelstra said. "Now we have
great depth and all three of them are very professional. Does that
mean it's going to be easy? No, probably not for whomever is going
to be the third guard. But I think everybody's heart is in the
right place. We'll see how it plays out."