BOSTON – Erik Spoelstra knows what you want. A narrative. An anecdote. A lightbulb-clicking moment that transformed Miami from a sputtering 11-30 team to one surging toward .500 and a playoff spot.

Here’s the problem: He doesn’t have one.

“Everybody wants an ‘ah-ha’ moment; there hasn’t been [one],” Spoelstra said. “What it is, is boring, methodical, incremental and not even straight-line improvement. It’s what nobody wants to hear nowadays in this millennial generation. It’s not an overnight thing. It was two steps forward, one step back. One step forward, three steps back.”

Miami took a step back on Sunday, losing to Boston 112-108, seeing its lead over Chicago for the final playoff spot erode to a half-game. Still, that the Heat are in this position is astonishing. Flash back to mid-January, the end of a 1-6 road trip and Miami’s low point of the season. The Heat have All-Star-level talent (Goran Dragic, Hassan Whiteside), but lack the kind of prolific scoring wing a high draft pick could offer. Allowing the season to slip away, through trades or resting players, was an option.

Other teams have done that. There has been widespread outrage recently over title contenders cherry-picking games to rest tired stars. Yet there is little fervor over the handful of teams that have shown no interest in winning since the All-Star break. The Lakers – operated by Jeanie Buss, who once called tanking “unforgivable” – have won twice since the break and have yanked Luol Deng, Timofey Mozgov and Nick Young from the rotation. Desperate to hold on to that top-three protected draft pick, L.A. has decided it is willing to accept devolving into a national embarrassment.

And how about Phoenix? Devin Booker dropped 70 on the Celtics on Friday. The Suns lost by 10. Soaking in the performance was Eric Bledsoe, Brandon Knight and Tyson Chandler, three starters the 22-52 Suns have elected to sit the rest of the season. Coach Earl Watson has sidestepped criticism by declaring the benchings management decisions, brazenly pointing the finger at general manager Ryan McDonough. The Suns aren’t just bad, they are bad and dysfunctional.

Tyler Johnson is averaging 13.9 points for the Heat. (AP) More

Amazingly, no one cares. Warriors coach Steve Kerr gives Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson a night off, it’s a three-day headline. Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue sits his Big Three for one night in L.A., it prompts a strongly worded league memo. The Lakers and Suns have become the NBA’s Washington Generals, and that gets chalked up to sound long-term strategy. Good thing ESPN doesn’t have Phoenix booked for national TV.

Miami? Even at its lowest point, the Heat never considered scuttling the season. “That’s just not our style,” Spoelstra told The Vertical. “Look, I’m not naïve. I know that if it didn’t get better, [team president] Pat [Riley] might have had to do his job in a different way. I’m very aware of that. But there was never a discussion about not playing this guy, or games are not meaningful. That’s just not us.”

Miami’s focus: Player development. Few coaches are better at it than Spoelstra, and few organizations are as committed to it as the Heat. Three years ago, Hassan Whiteside was on the NBA scrap heap. Today, he’s a 16.9-points-per-game scorer and the NBA’s leading rebounder. Tyler Johnson was an undrafted free agent. Two-plus years with Miami and Johnson is a 13.9-points-per-game scorer.

Then there is Dion Waiters, a radioactive two-guard who signed a short-money deal with Miami last summer. Notoriously stubborn, Waiters had a reputation as a chucker. This season he has evolved as a playmaker (4.3 assists per game) and 3-point shooter (career-high 39.4 percent) while being entrusted as a late-game scorer.

The Heat’s philosophy is simple: Earn everything. Starts are not promised. Minutes are not guaranteed. Play poorly, don’t hustle and you will get used to wearing warmups. “With injuries, even with our bad record, guys had to learn quickly that, no, you are not getting your same spot back,” Spoelstra said. “You have to fight for it. The first time that happened with some of our young guys, we got quizzical, almost entitled looks. Then that look changed to, ‘Oh, [expletive], this is real.’ Then it was, ‘OK, I have to fight for this. Let me get to work.’ That is a very powerful thing to go through for a young player.”

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