A: So does this three-part question count for all three of today's questions? OK, I'm game, so here goes: To me, much of what you address comes down to the role selected for Winslow. If he is in the starting lineup, then the ballhandling and playmaking of James Johnson might be redundant. That would allow the two Johnsons to play together with the second unit, while adding Olynyk's outside threat to the first unit, which still would have Goran Dragic's playmaking. But you also are correct about McGruder, that he did plenty of good things last season and should not therefore be shuffled out of the mix. And yet, if he does not start, I'm not sure where he would fit in with the perimeter rotation. So perhaps James Johnson starting with McGruder might make some sense, with Winslow coming off the bench to guard the opponent's hot hand. For all the adjustments the Heat went through last season, there clearly will be new challenges this season for Erik Spoelstra, including working Winslow into a mix that thrived in his absence. What the Heat can't afford is what happened last season -- going months before establishing a rotation identity. I would venture that the Heat already are crunching the analytics to postulate about the best possible combinations.