NBA analyst Adam Aarronson breaks down that the Philadelphia 76ers trading for Miami Heat's Jimmy Butler is not a reasonable move.
The Miami Heat weighed whether to change the designation for the suspension they issued to disgruntled star Jimmy Butler, according to NBA insider
The six-time All-Star is eligible to return from suspension Friday, but the tension surrounding the team remains palpable, writes Mark Medina.
Jimmy Butler and the Miami Heat are at odds, and their relationship continues to get worse daily. In a report from Jake L. Fischer and Marc Stein, it was revealed that Jimmy Butler has grown more agitated with the team and has begun acting out to force a move.
One of those is the defending champion Boston Celtics, who — at full health — dropped a disappointing game Wednesday night against a Toronto Raptors team that entered the night with only nine victories. Boston still has elite talent, but it has one glaring issue it seemingly can’t shed.
Kyle Lowry spent two and a half seasons playing alongside Jimmy Butler on the Miami Heat, and the two players seemingly had a good relationship. But
Jimmy Butler addresses his return from suspension, clarifying his conflict is with the Miami Heat front office, not his teammates.
Jimmy Butler addressed his future with Miami after his return from suspension, offering cryptic comments that hinted at lingering discord.
Butler finished Friday's 133-113 loss to the Nuggets with 18 points (7-15 FG, 0-2 3Pt, 4-4 FT), three rebounds and two assists across 33 minutes. Seeing his first action since Jan. 2 following the completion of his seven-game suspension from the Heat,
Miami Heat forward Jimmy Butler returns from a seven-match ban with 18 points as his side lose to the Denver Nuggets.
Butler was indeed back, scoring 18 points in 33 minutes in a Heat loss to the Nuggets, where Denver was comfortably in charge most of the night. Nikola Jokic had a 24-point triple-double to lead Denver.