Magic Snap Skid in Sunshine State Showdown: Banchero, Black Spoil Heat’s Home Stand 133-124
The rim was crooked. For seven agonizing minutes before tipoff at the Kaseya Center, officials and arena staff fiddled with the hoop, delaying the inevitable clash between two Southeast Division rivals desperate for momentum. Maybe it was an omen for the Miami Heat—a sign that things just weren’t going to line up straight on Wednesday night.
For the Orlando Magic, however, that crooked rim was the only thing standing in their way. Once the ball finally tipped, they didn’t just straighten things out; they completely bent the game to their will in the fourth quarter, snapping a four-game losing streak with a 133-124 victory that felt more like an exorcism than a regular-season win.
A Tale of Two Halves in Miami
If you walked away at halftime, you would have bet the house on Miami. The Heat, fresh off a grueling Western Conference road trip, looked surprisingly spry. They erased an early deficit and dominated the second quarter, outscoring Orlando by 16 points to take a comfortable 68-59 lead into the locker room. Simone Fontecchio was the unexpected spark plug, torching the nets for 14 points in the first half alone. The Heat looked poised, polished, and ready to hand Orlando their fifth straight loss.
But basketball, as they say, is a game of runs. And the Magic had a marathon left in them.
Coming out of the break, Orlando flipped the script entirely. Behind the dynamic duo of Paolo Banchero and Anthony Black, the Magic outscored Miami 40-20 in the third quarter. It was a stunning reversal of fortune. The defensive regression that had plagued Orlando during their losing streak—giving up over 120 points a game recently—seemed to vanish in those twelve minutes. They forced turnovers, crashed the offensive glass, and suddenly, the Heat looked like the team running on fumes.
Banchero and Black: The Future is Now
Paolo Banchero continues to show why he’s the cornerstone of this franchise. Finishing with 31 points and 12 rebounds, he was a force of nature that Miami simply couldn’t contain. When the game got tight in the closing minutes, it was Banchero at the line, calm and collected, sinking free throws to ice the game.
But the story of the night might be Anthony Black. The young guard stepped up massively, pouring in 26 points. With Franz Wagner sidelined due to that nagging ankle sprain, the Magic needed someone to fill the void, and Black answered the call. His aggression in getting to the rim and his ability to create offense kept the Heat defense scrambling all night.
Desmond Bane also deserves a nod, quietly efficient with 23 points on 10-of-16 shooting. It was a complete team effort—36 assists on the night tells you everything you need to know about how the ball was moving.
Heat Burn Out Late
For Miami, this one stings. You could see the fatigue set in late. Bam Adebayo (21 points) and Norman Powell (22 points) fought valiantly, and the team even managed a late surge. Down 17 with under six minutes to play, they clawed back to within six points after a Powell three-point play with 1:25 remaining. The home crowd, sensing a miracle, finally got loud.
But the hole was too deep, and the clock was too fast. Without Tyler Herro and Davion Mitchell, the Heat just didn’t have enough firepower to match Orlando’s fourth-quarter intensity. That 14-0 Magic run in the final frame was the dagger. It showcased a hungry Orlando team refusing to let another winnable game slip through their fingers.
What This Means for the East
This wasn’t just a random Wednesday night game. This was about playoff positioning. The win moves Orlando (24-22) essentially dead even with Miami (25-23) in the standings, tightening the race for the Southeast Division. More importantly, it gives the Magic a 3-0 season series lead over the Heat. In a crowded Eastern Conference, that tiebreaker could be the difference between a guaranteed playoff spot and the uncertainty of the Play-In Tournament.
For the Heat, the schedule offers no mercy. They have to shake off this loss immediately and head to Chicago for a makeup game on Thursday—the first of three games against the Bulls in four days. For the Magic, they head home to host Toronto on Friday, finally breathing a little easier.
The rim might have been crooked to start the night, but by the final buzzer, the Magic had set their season back on the straight and narrow.

