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Dysfunction, infamous practices and six All-Star games: A decade of Jimmy Butler

Dysfunction, infamous practices and six All-Star games: A decade of Jimmy Butler

Jimmy Butler’s Tumultuous Journey with the Miami Heat

In a move that has sent ripples through the NBA community, the Miami Heat have once again suspended their star player, Jimmy Butler. This marks the third suspension for Butler in just a month, and it seems to be the final straw in his six-year stint with the team. The Heat announced that the latest suspension, which was triggered by Butler walking out of practice after learning he would be coming off the bench, will extend through the NBA trade deadline on February 6.

This indefinite suspension appears to close a complex chapter in Butler’s 14-year career. A six-time All-Star and an Eastern Conference finals MVP, Butler has been the driving force behind two teams reaching the NBA Finals. His impact on each of his four franchises has been undeniable, often elevating them to heights they struggled to achieve without him.

However, Miami is now experiencing the downside of Butler’s presence when he is dissatisfied. His exit strategies have become legendary, characterized by confrontational practice sessions, clashes with coaches, and a general push to make the situation untenable. Butler had already missed nine of Miami’s past 12 games due to suspensions, the first being a seven-game suspension for conduct deemed detrimental by the Heat, followed by a two-game suspension for missing a team flight to Milwaukee last week, before his latest penalty on Monday.

If Butler has indeed played his final game for the Heat, it’s an opportunity to reflect on the veteran’s tumultuous NBA career and how each promising situation eventually devolved into a painful breakup.

Chicago Bulls (2011 to 2017)

Butler’s journey in the NBA began with the Chicago Bulls, where he was drafted as the 30th pick in 2011. Despite a slow start, he quickly climbed the ranks to become a consistent starter by his third season. With Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah sidelined by injuries, Butler took on a leadership role, eventually earning his first All-Star selection in his fourth year. He was instrumental in ushering the Bulls into a new era, transitioning from a team led by Noah and Rose to one centered around his emerging superstar status.

The end of Butler’s era in Chicago marked the beginning of a rebuild for the Bulls, who have only made the playoffs once since trading him, losing in the first round in 2022 against the Milwaukee Bucks.

Minnesota Timberwolves (2017 to 2019)

Butler’s trade to the Minnesota Timberwolves reunited him with former coach Tom Thibodeau. His first season in Minnesota was a success, as he made the All-Star team for the fourth consecutive year and led the Wolves to the postseason, breaking a 13-year playoff drought. However, Butler missed 17 games late in the season, causing the Timberwolves to fall from fourth to eighth in the standings, and they were quickly eliminated by the top-seeded Houston Rockets.

Butler’s time in Minnesota was marked by tension and drama, culminating in a now-famous practice session where he dominated his teammates and expressed his frustrations. Despite the turmoil, Butler was in the starting lineup for the Wolves when they opened the regular season, but his tenure in Minnesota was effectively over. After a two-month saga, Butler played 10 games for the Wolves before being traded to Philadelphia in November 2018.

Philadelphia 76ers (2018-19)

Butler’s arrival in Philadelphia was seen as a move to bolster the 76ers’ chances in the Eastern Conference. With a core of Joel Embiid, reigning Rookie of the Year Ben Simmons, and Butler, the Sixers were poised to be contenders. Although Butler wasn’t eligible to sign an extension immediately, there was an expectation of a long-term deal in the summer. However, six weeks into his tenure, Butler “aggressively challenged” coach Brett Brown during a film session, leading to another rift.

Butler played in only 55 games for the Sixers, but he provided highlights, game-winners, and fourth-quarter takeovers that seemed to prove his point to Brown that more of the offense should be centered around him. Butler was brilliant in the postseason, especially during a thrilling seven-game, second-round series loss against the eventual NBA champion Toronto Raptors.

Butler was eligible to sign a five-year, $190 million deal with the 76ers in the offseason, but the team elected instead to bet on Tobias Harris, who had been acquired from the LA Clippers in a trade two months after Butler arrived in Philadelphia. The Sixers facilitated a sign-and-trade deal to send him to Miami while bringing Josh Richardson to Philadelphia, though the shooting guard lasted just a season there before being shipped to Dallas. Brown was fired as coach after the following season, and Philadelphia still hasn’t made it beyond the second round of the playoffs since 2001.

Three years later, Butler exclaimed “Tobias Harris over me?!” after the Heat defeated the 76ers in the playoffs.

Miami Heat (2019 to present)

The Heat executed a four-team trade to sign Butler to a four-year contract in 2019, and it was instantly a perfect marriage of player and team. The term “Heat Culture” was born and seemed tailor-made for Butler. It was a mantra that fit Butler’s ideology as a player who had worked his way from the end of the bench to stardom, as well as the Heat’s success in turning unheralded players into playoff contributors.

The Heat went to the NBA Finals during the 2020 bubble, dragged there by Butler, who leaned over the guardrails in exhaustion during a game, an image that would become a meme. In 2021-22, Miami was the No.1 seed in the East and missed returning to the Finals by one game, when a furious comeback in the fourth quarter of Game 7 against the Boston Celtics fell just short as Butler missed a potential go-ahead 3-pointer with 16 seconds left. A year later, the Heat got revenge on the Celtics, holding off a 3-0 comeback to win in Game 7 in Boston and return to the Finals, this time as a No. 8 seed. Butler’s playoff performances became so iconic, the nickname Playoff Jimmy began to stick.

But Butler’s postseason performances began to stand in contrast to his regular-season production, especially as injuries kept him out of a combined 40 games during the past two seasons. Butler also missed the Heat’s entire first-round playoff loss to the Celtics in 2024 with a sprained MCL but said later during a radio interview that if he’d been healthy, the Heat would have beaten the Celtics, who went on to win the title. Heat president Pat Riley directed a comment toward Butler at his end of the season news conference, saying, “If you’re not on the court playing … you should keep your mouth shut.” Then, Riley declined to reward a maximum contract to Butler at age 35, despite the two NBA Finals appearances, again reiterating his desire for the veteran to be on the floor more often.

Butler dropped the antics he had become known for on media day — emo hair in 2023, dreadlocks the year before that — and said he wanted to focus on the season ahead. But in December, ESPN reported that Miami was open to trading Butler. When Riley issued a statement the day after Christmas that the Heat “are not trading Jimmy Butler,” it was unclear to whom the declaration was directed — the public or Butler. Meanwhile, Butler was missing in action for most of this time. He rolled an ankle Dec.20 and missed 13 days with an illness.

He returned for a back-to-back in the first two days of the new year, although Butler indicated the team accused him of not playing his hardest in the first game. After the second game, a blowout loss to the Pacers, Butler said he had lost his joy for basketball and that it could “probably not” be found in Miami.

Butler was suspended for seven games Jan. 3, a day after the rant, as Miami issued a second statement: “Jimmy Butler and his representative have indicated that they wish to be traded, therefore, we will listen to offers.”

In a meeting with Riley during that suspension, Butler said he would not sign a new deal in Miami and intended to use his $52 million player option for 2025-26 only as a trade maneuver, sources told ESPN’s Shams Charania on Jan. 14. Butler returned for three games, but then received a second suspension Jan. 22 after he missed a team flight to Milwaukee. After he sat out two more games, the team indefinitely suspended Butler on Monday. The third suspension came when the disgruntled star walked out of morning practice after the Heat told him he’d come off the bench moving forward. Now, he’ll be suspended for at least five games, which runs through the Feb. 6 trade deadline.

Original source article rewritten by our AI can be read here.
Originally Written by: Jamal Collier

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