Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images

Defeat is a funny thing in that it can breed a sense of doubt in even the most successful operations.

But the Miami Heat, possessing organizational fortitude in spades, seem to represent an exception to that rule.

One year removed from capturing consecutive NBA titles, Miami suffered two crushing defeats in the span of a month. One to the San Antonio Spurs in the Finals and another at the hands of the Cleveland Cavaliers, champions of the LeBron James free-agency bonanza.

Miami was subsequently shrouded in uncertainty and rightfully so.

How would the offense flow without James? Who would emerge as the Alpha dog? Was there enough residual firepower to stabilize Miami's attack in a rapidly improving Eastern Conference?

In the face of continual queries regarding an imminent decline, the Heat have adjusted.

The season may be young and the pieces variable, but Miami has shown a willingness to borrow from the Spurs' championship playbook early and often.

As a result, balance has reigned supreme, which has produced some aesthetically pleasing results, according to NBA.com's Couper Moorhead:

It was perfectly reasonable to expect the HEAT to need some time to build an offense. They’ve shuffled up the point-guard rotation, expected-starter Josh McRoberts has been recovering from toe surgery and six players who have been given meaningful minutes weren’t even on the team last season. But with those new players being brought in for their particular set of skills, Erik Spoelstra has been able to slot everyone into a tweaked version of an existing system that is producing results closer to what you might expect from the period just before the All-Star Break.

Shredded by the Spurs' ball movement in the NBA Finals a season ago, Miami has enlisted the help of a selfless approach to keep points flowing at a steady pace.

“We’re three games into this, so it could quickly go the other way if guys start to feel comfortable and try to start to do it on their own,” head coach Erik Spoelstra said following Miami's 107-102 win over the Toronto Raptors last Sunday, according to Moorhead. "And that’s not the makeup of this group. That’s not at all a referendum on our personnel; it’s the power of working together that will make us more successful."

USA TODAY Sports

Speaking of communal efforts, it's imperative that we compare Miami's distributive numbers during the final season of the Big Three's existence to this season in order to understand how imitation of the Spurs' system has helped Miami flourish.

Following Saturday night's 102-92 win against the Minnesota Timberwolves, Miami is averaging 328.4 passes per game, according to NBA.com, a significant improvement over last season's mark of 295.6. For comparison's sake, San Antonio averaged 332.9 passes per game last season while ranking first in total assists.

It's been rather implicit to this point, but by closely monitoring Miami's tendencies in the early going, it's clear the team is prioritizing the system over the star. Another San Antonio staple.

With Gregg Popovich at the helm, the Spurs have become renowned for the way they preserve players' bodies throughout an 82-game slog. By limiting stars' minutes during the regular season and redistributing them among role players, the Spurs have crafted a formula that the Heat appear willing to replicate.

That's particularly true after San Antonio burned Miami time and again in the Finals thanks to its full complement of fresh legs.

Last season, Miami had three players (James, Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade) average more than 32 minutes per game. Those heavy burdens caught up with the Heat's superstar trio, and the effects became particularly evident when a third straight Larry O'Brien trophy was on the line.

Andy Lyons/Getty Images

"No team has made the Heat pay for their flaws like the Spurs," NBC Sports' Kurt Helin wrote after San Antonio's Game 4 win. "Half-hearted traps are quickly exposed with a sharp pass, every slow rotation becomes a layup or an open three. Heat coach Erik Spoelstra will search the game tapes and the depth chart looking for an answer, but there will be none."

Learning from his mistakes, Spoelstra has appropriated minutes with the big picture in mind. Thus far, only one player is averaging more than 32 minutes (Bosh) per game. Furthermore, nine players are averaging at least 18 minutes while 11 have logged better than 10 minutes a night.

And guess what? The defending champions employed a nearly identical strategy last season, when no San Antonio starter logged more than 30 minutes per game and nine contributors crossed the 18-minute-per-game threshold.

While change can often be scary, Spoelstra didn't panic.

It takes a certain degree of humility to evaluate one's shortcomings and adapt in such a timely fashion, but Spoelstra's exposure to the gold standard of stability and selflessness quickly quelled concerns that Miami would fade out of relevancy sans James.

The on-court shift hardly ensures Miami a spot in the Eastern Conference title chase come May, but it's undoubtedly a step in the right direction after the team's short-term stock was shorted aggressively this summer.

With the fruits of their collective labor paying immediate dividends, Miami can thank Popovich and Co. for providing a blueprint on how to seamlessly combat adversity in the most effective way possible.

All statistics courtesy of NBA.com and current as of Nov. 8 unless noted otherwise.