"We'd be lying to ourselves," Wade said afterward, "if we said we were playing our best basketball right now."
Even if they did say that, no one would believe them. Not after seven losses in their last 10 road games, the last three of those defeats all by at least 15 points, capped by rock-bottom for this season so far, a 19-point loss at Boston on Sunday where Miami set season-lows for points, field-goal percentage, free throws made and free-throw percentage.
The Heat have won 15 straight at home, the NBA's longest such streak this season, and start a five-game homestand on Tuesday against Philadelphia. Oklahoma City — which embarrassed the Heat last week — comes in on Wednesday, followed by games with Memphis on Friday, Detroit on Sunday and then the Celtics again next Tuesday.
If there's a time for the Heat to get rolling again, it might be now.
"It's not about talk. It's not about whatever the perceptions are out there," Spoelstra said Monday. "We're not a perfect team, like a lot of teams out there. Yesterday was unacceptable and today we worked as a group to fix it and to make it better."
Spoelstra used that same word — unacceptable — after Sunday's loss.
By then, his mind was made up that even with another hectic week ahead, the Heat couldn't afford to use Monday as an off day. There's simply too much for them to address.
"It's not like we're hitting the panic button," James said. "He's saying it's unacceptable and we've got to own up to it. We've got a veteran ballclub and we know we can't play that way, offensively or defensively."
Without playing, Monday was a good day for Miami in the standings.
Miami (37-14) is within three games of Chicago (42-13) in the race for the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference again, though just one game back in the loss column after the Bulls' home loss to Houston on Monday night. The Bulls and Heat play twice more before the playoffs begin. And Oklahoma City (40-13) is now just two games ahead of Miami in the race for the best overall record, after falling at home to Memphis.
With 15 games left in the regular season, Miami still insists there's more than enough time to get things back on track. And in James' mind, that's more vital than anything related to how the playoff brackets shake out.
"Right now it's not even about seeding for us," James said. "We have to play better."
Like every coach, Spoelstra preaches about consistency.
Pleading for it might be the better description these days.
In the past month, the Heat averaged 92.9 points on the road, shooting just under 45 percent. At home, those numbers rise to 97.7 points on nearly 49 percent shooting. The most glaring difference is the one Spoelstra probably ranks as the most important — in Miami, the Heat allowed 86 points per game in the past month, a far cry from the 95.1 they yielded away from home.
"We're much better than that," Spoelstra said. "We're a tale of two teams sometimes and we're going to work and change that."
It would take an unforeseeable collapse for Miami to finish any worse than No. 2 in the East, though James and Chris Bosh both said that the memories of being able to win a conference-final series against Chicago last year without the benefit of home-court advantage mean nothing to the Heat now.
"We just have to get back to our spacing, get back to our spots on the floor," Bosh said. "We're focused and we know what we're doing."
The one thing that is consistent with the Heat: Confidence isn't lacking.
James has been banged up for a couple weeks, Mike Miller remains sidelined with a sprained ankle and Bosh managed only four points in the Boston game, tying a season-low. James says he's seeing gradual improvement, health-wise. Miller may be back soon. Bosh still insists Miami is the NBA's best team, saying he will not waver on that claim.
Maybe a week of home cooking is all they'll need.
"It's the time of the year where if you're having problems and things are going wrong you have to figure it out," Wade said. "You don't want to limp into the playoffs playing your worst. You want to go into the playoffs playing your best."
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Follow Tim Reynolds on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ByTimReynolds
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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