A: Again, this is why I take issue with the NBA's approach of draft first and then free agency, as opposed to the NFL's approach of starting with free agency, having the draft in the middle, and then finishing off free agency. I appreciate that the length of the NBA season, the timing of the NBA Finals and then the start of summer league make it difficult to change the current order, but I believe such a shift would be beneficial to long-term roster construction. That said, Chet Kammerer, who is among those who take the Heat's lead in draft situations, went out of his way to insist to me that drafting the best prospect is the only way to go. And with teams needing depth, I can appreciate that perspective. But whether Waiters stays or goes, with the Heat already with Goran Dragic, Tyler Johnson, Josh Richardson and Rodney McGruder (and possibly Wayne Ellington, as well), guard is one position I'm just not sure makes sense at this stage for the Heat in the draft. But if you do draft a guard and then re-sign Waiters, where do the minutes come from? And once other teams know you have to shed a guard, what you get in return could be compromised. So, yes, if a guard is the Heat's selection, then you would have to figure there would be a corresponding Part B to that equation.