Heat Dismantle Nets 124-98 as Bam Adebayo Puts on a Masterclass
Some nights, the basketball just flows. Tuesday was one of those nights for the Miami Heat.
Bam Adebayo was everywhere. Not just scoring — though he did plenty of that — but stealing the ball, crashing the glass, and setting the tone from the opening tip. When the final buzzer sounded at Kaseya Center, the Heat had handled the Brooklyn Nets 124-98, and the win felt even more convincing than the scoreline suggested.
This was Heat basketball at its best. Disciplined, physical, and relentless.
Adebayo Carries the Heat With a Complete Performance
Adebayo finished with 23 points, nine rebounds, and six steals. Six steals. In a game where Brooklyn was already struggling to generate offense, Bam made it personal. Every time the Nets tried to set something up, he was there — reading passing lanes, jumping routes, turning defense into instant offense.
His stat line told the story of a player who understood exactly what his team needed. He also reached a franchise rebounding milestone during the game, a quiet achievement that spoke to years of sustained excellence in South Beach.
Tyler Herro chipped in 22 points, looking sharp and aggressive in his 27 minutes. Jaime Jaquez Jr. added 20 off the bench, proving once again that the Heat’s depth is a genuine weapon. The contributions were spread across the roster, which is exactly what a playoff-caliber team looks like.
Heat Build a Lead and Never Let Go
Miami shot 53% from the field in the first half. That’s not luck — that’s execution. Adebayo and Herro each had 15 points before halftime, and Jaquez and Andrew Wiggins both contributed 13, helping the Heat build a 69-54 lead going into the locker room.
Brooklyn never seriously threatened. The Nets closed the gap slightly in the third quarter, but the fourth quarter was all Heat. Miami outscored Brooklyn 33-23 in the final period, pushing the margin to 27 points. The home crowd was loud, the team was clicking, and there was nothing Brooklyn could do about it.
The Heat’s defense was suffocating. They forced 18 turnovers and recorded 13 steals as a team. That kind of ball pressure doesn’t happen by accident — it’s the product of a team that takes pride on that end of the floor.
Nets Lose Ninth Straight as Porter Jr. Struggles
On the other sideline, Brooklyn’s night was a series of compounding problems.
Michael Porter Jr., the Nets’ leading scorer, went 3-for-17 from the field and missed all nine of his three-point attempts. He finished with nine points. His coach, Jordi Fernandez, pulled him with under 10 minutes left in the third quarter — a clear message that things weren’t working.
Noah Clowney led Brooklyn with 17 points. Ziaire Williams added 16. Nolan Traore chipped in 14. But contributions from role players don’t mean much when your best scorer disappears.
The Nets have now lost nine straight games, and their last two wins came on back-to-back nights nearly a month ago. At 15-46, Brooklyn is watching the lottery odds tick upward with each passing defeat.
Nic Claxton was honest after the game: “It’s tough, honestly. Stacking losses, it’s tough to keep your good energy.”
What’s Next for the Heat
The Heat improve to 33-29 on the season and sit squarely in the middle of a tight Southeast Division race. Winning five of their last seven games has given them momentum, and Tuesday’s performance showed a team capable of imposing its will on any given night.
The two teams meet again on Thursday at the Kaseya Center. Given how this one went, Brooklyn will need to show up with something completely different.
The Heat will be ready.

