A: There absolutely is a way. Once Chris Bosh's money comes off the books, there will be about $37 million in cap space available. So if James Johnson and Dion Waiters are as committed to a return as they have stressed, perhaps they each come in at about $12 million for 2017-18. That's leaves $13 million in remaining cap space. Then you have Wayne Ellington's team option, So if the Heat picks that up, that takes you down to about $6 million. From there, you can re-sign Willie Reed and then work with Luke Babbitt's Bird Rights and everyone is back. But that also means you're finished, nothing more than minimal exception space. This exact roster, plus a first-round pick and Justise Winslow for more than half a season. So what does that get you? Does it get you doubling the second half 30-11 record to 60-22? Or does it get you in the middle of the East playoff pack and one-round-and-done. As Udonis Haslem said after Wednesday's victory over the Wizards, this team is well positioned to complement a superstar. But the problem is that if the Heat bring in a star, there won't be cap space for nearly as many as complements. So what is the preference: quality or quantity? There is plenty to be said about an erstwhile group of workers. There's also something to be said about championship contention. That is what the Heat will have to mull when it comes to loyalty to a group that salvaged a season.