Miami Heat Notch Huge Win Over Charlotte Hornets Behind Tyler Herro’s Near Triple-Double
The Miami Heat needed a road statement. They needed a comeback win away from home. And on Friday night in Charlotte, they got both. Tyler Herro did his absolute best impression of a man on fire.
Final score: Heat 128, Hornets 120. Winning streak for Miami? Four games. Winning streak for Charlotte? Officially dead and buried.
Tyler Herro Was Unconscious From Three
Let’s not bury the lede here. Herro finished with 33 points, 9 rebounds, and 9 assists. He was 8-for-10 from three-point range. That’s not hot. That’s a fever that no amount of ice baths can cure.
The narrative around Herro over the last few weeks has been about his three-ball going cold after returning from a rib injury. He’d shot just 5-for-15 from deep in his three previous games, and there were real questions about whether his range had come back with him. On Friday night, he answered every single one of those questions, lit them on fire, and walked away whistling.
The dagger? A go-ahead three that snapped a 108-all tie with 7:06 remaining, igniting a 9-0 run that essentially sealed the deal. Herro didn’t just play well. He took over.
“It felt like a playoff game,” Herro said after the final buzzer. That quote should tell you everything you need to know about what this win meant.
The Heat Refused To Fold When It Mattered Most
This wasn’t a comfortable game. Not even close. Charlotte led 101-98 heading into the fourth quarter, and the Heat entered that situation with a brutal 0-15 record on the road when trailing after three. Zero wins. Fifteen losses. A record so bad it’s almost impressive. They made it 1-15 on Friday. The hard way.
Bam Adebayo had 24 points and 12 rebounds, despite an uneven shooting night that saw him go 1-for-8 at one point. He kept fighting, kept attacking, and delivered when Miami needed him most. Jaime Jaquez Jr. chipped in 21 points off the bench, shooting an uncharacteristic 4-for-6 from beyond the arc. On a night when everyone was raining threes, Jaquez decided he wanted in on the fun too.
Miami finished 18-for-38 from three-point range. That’s 47%. Against a Charlotte team that was riding a six-game winning streak, each victory was by 15 or more points. The Hornets hadn’t just been winning. They’d been beating teams by an embarrassing margin, tying the second-longest such streak in NBA history. The Heat looked at all of that and simply did not care.
Charlotte Threw Everything At Miami, and It Still Wasn’t Enough
To be fair to the Hornets, they didn’t go quietly. Kon Knueppel dropped 27 points and hit six threes. Brandon Miller had 22 points and 13 rebounds. LaMelo Ball put up 21 points, though his 7-for-22 shooting night told a rougher story than his final stat line suggests.
Charlotte cut the deficit to three late in the fourth, and for a brief moment, it looked like the party might continue in Charlotte. Then Herro hit another jumper. Then Dru Smith added a follow shot. Then it was over. The Hornets fall back to .500 at 32-32. After a six-game stretch where they looked like genuine contenders, reality came calling.
What This Win Means For Miami
The Heat are now 7-2 in their last nine games, and they did it without Norman Powell, who has been nursing a groin strain, and without Andrew Wiggins, who sat with a knee injury. Miami trotted out its 21st different lineup of the season on Friday night and still figured it out.
That’s the kind of resilience that wins in April, May, and June. Up next, Miami hosts the Detroit Pistons on Sunday to open a four-game homestand. They’ve got the six seed in their sights, and right now, nobody in the Eastern Conference is playing Heat basketball quite like the Heat are.
