A: I've been back and forth on this for a while now and can make cases for both. Weber gives you the type of dogged defender at point guard the Heat otherwise lack. Udrih gives you a definitive, proven veteran playmaker to be available for the occasional games that Goran Dragic might miss, a plug-and-play element who could go from inactive list to spot starter. But I also could make a case to mitigate the significance of each. The Heat also could utilize Josh Richardson as a defensive point guard in moment-of-truth situations. And the Heat are getting enough playmaking from Dion Waiters and even Tyler Johnson to make a case for enough veteran playmaking already being in place. So, in a long-winded manner, what I'm saying is that it is a tough, tough call. I believe the Heat will lean toward Udrih initially, with the belief that Weber can be brought back up from the D-League at a point when the roster thins out, possibly when there is a resolution with Chris Bosh or if there is a trade after Dec. 15 that sends out more players than are brought back in. What would I do? I believe this team, at this moment, has to take the long view, and should keep Weber. But I'm not a general manager, and didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night.