Riley settling into new role with Heat, once again
MIAMI â The Miami Heat gathered on their practice court, the squeaks of sneakers and the bouncing of basketballs echoing off the walls. It was like countless workouts before. This time, however, Pat Riley wasnât the coach. The new era of Heat basketball â with Erik Spoelstra the coach â opened with the start of training camp Saturday, and Riley insists he couldnât be happier. A Hall of Fame coach with 1,210 wins, seven championship rings and an iconic legacy in the league, Riley decided five months ago that the time was right to turn the keys over to Spoelstra, who worked his way from the video room to the coachâs chair in 13 years. Riley is still around, but will lead from the front office, not the front lines. âMy role is that Iâm the president of basketball operations and my job is to try to build this team back to where we want to become a championship contender again," Riley said. âI want to do that as quickly as I can. But Iâll do it from behind my desk. Iâm not going to be out there in front. I think itâll be a lot like it was the last time. ... I know where my place is." Almost to a man, everyone in the Heat locker room, even those who never played for him, still call him âCoach Riley." The fact that he isnât coaching anymore wonât change that. His office is a short walk from the practice floor, heâll almost be a fixture at most games â whether heâs visible or not â and still has a powerful voice in every Heat personnel decision. Plus, Spoelstra isnât shy about saying heâs a product of the Heat culture, the one Riley installed when he arrived in South Florida in the mid-90s. âAll Iâve experienced in my two years prior to this is coach Riley running everything," third-year point guard Chris Quinn said. âBut coach Spo was my summer league coach for two years, so I kind of have a little taste of it. Itâs exciting, kind of a new beginning, especially after last year. Itâs exciting to have another year and to get things going." Riley met with Spoelstra constantly during the offseason, talking about how to revamp the roster while keeping salaries below the luxury tax threshold; the Heat did that with a mere $415,000 to spare. But their chats were about players, not plays. On that point, Riley is clear: Itâs Spoelstraâs call. âI know heâs an X-and-O coach. I know that part of the game, from that standpoint, heâs very knowledgeable," Riley said. âHeâs going to be organized. Heâs going to be disciplined. And I think heâll bring it out on the court, every single night." Riley will be watching closely, of course. His role is still, in many ways, patriarchal within the Heat, having spent years grooming Spoelstra for this opportunity. That doesnât mean that if Riley disagrees with something Spoelstra does, heâll necessarily chime in with his opinion. âIâm not going to be up and down with him on anything that I see, that I might not agree with," Riley said. âEverybody does it differently. I trust that heâs going to do it in the nature that he feels comfortable in doing it in, so Iâm going to give him a free rein here." Riley retired once before, tapping former top assistant Stan Van Gundy to be his replacement in a stunning move days before the start of the 2003-04 season, Dwyane Wadeâs rookie campaign. Van Gundy eventually stepped down as well, citing family reasons 21 games into the 2005-06 season. Riley returned, led the Heat to that seasonâs NBA title, and stayed for the last two injury-plagued years. He insists that this time, his coaching days are done for good. âOne day I was driving to work and then all of a sudden my mind went there, and I just said, âThank God Iâm not in there doing film and doing playbooks and doing all these things that would overwhelm your mind,â" Riley said. âEven though Iâm a little bit overwhelmed with my desk duties now, thatâs behind me. And I love watching Erik work." â AP