A: I'm not sure I can sit here in September and tell you what might happen in December or January. Remember, the earliest any player signed in the offseason can be dealt is Dec. 15. There also is a second group of players that, because of the way their new contracts are structured, cannot be dealt until Jan. 15, with Tyler Johnson in that group. Because that, for all of what you might consider a glut, it's not as if just about every team didn't have the option to offer Waiters as much or more than the Heat offered (the $2.9 million exception for teams that had previously utilized cap space this offseason). And the thing is, if a player makes himself attractive for a trade, he likely will be making himself valued as a keeper. But what I will say is this: If Johnson shows he can play point guard, if Josh Richardson is just as good at the start of this season as he was at the end of last season, if Waiters shows that he might be more than a one-year rental, if Beno Udrih plays as well this season for the Heat as he did last season, if Briante Weber proves to be a lockdown defender against more than summer-league competition and if Wayne Ellington emerges as a can't-miss 3-point prospect . . . whew . . . then it could potentially open the door for a Goran Dragic trade. But that's a lot to have happen. And, again, there is plenty of time for it to all play itself out. More than anything, too much talent at any position is a dilemma the Heat gladly would embrace.