A: It is hard enough to win when you are not making 3-point shots and while you are missing free throws. It's practically impossible to win when you also are loading up on turnovers. What you are seeing now is last season's successful second-half game plan having been fully scouted. Just as the Heat know what they want to do after going 30-11 over the second half of last season, so does the opposition. Opponents have gone to school on the attempts to spray the ball back to the perimeter and those inside passes that had been so effective. This is when precision enters the equation, and that precision should be there from a team that returned largely intact. When the Heat succeeded over the second half of last season, it was because of a recognition of minimal margin for error. That margin, with the limited star appeal of this roster, remains minimal. As James Johnson noted of Saturday's loss to Boston, three better possessions in that game and the Heat win. One better possession and the Heat win Monday against the Timberwolves. Instead, the sloppiness has left the Heat with a three-game losing streak.