The Latest from @HotHotHoops on YouTube

Postponed Heat-Bulls game rescheduled to Jan. 29

Heat Bulls
The Jan. 8 contest between the Miami Heat and Chicago Bulls was postponed due to slippery court conditions. (Mandatory Credit: Justin Casterline/Getty Images)

The postponed game between the Miami Heat and Chicago Bulls, originally set for Jan. 8, was rescheduled to Jan. 29, the team announced Monday.

The game will be the first of three consecutive games between the two teams. The inaugural contest will be in Chicago, while the final two will be in Miami.

The originally scheduled Jan. 30 Heat Bulls game will move to the following day to accomodate the rescheduled match. Per the team, the tickets for the Jan. 30 game will be honored on the 31st.

This isn’t your grandfather’s NBA, where the scheduling was all out of whack before the player’s association had any leverage in negotiations. Though this is a very unique circumstance for each team.

These three games in four nights mean both will have four games in five nights. Additionally, Miami will have nine games over a 15-night span ahead of the All-Star break, which begins Thursday, Feb. 12.

The Heat and Bulls have squared off just once this season — a 143-107 Heat win. It was Miami’s fourth time reaching 140 points, a feat it’s recorded seven times this season.

Miami has routinely bested Chicago in the play-in tournament. Well, guess what?! Both teams are projected to meet there again; Miami is currently the No. 8 seed at 20-19, while Chicago is No. 10 at 18-20.

Should the Heat square off with the Bulls in the play-in, it would mark their fourth-straight play-in matchup.

***

This is a developing news story. Stay tuned for updates!

To check out our other content, click here.

Follow Hot Hot Hoops on Twitter/X here!

Follow Hot Hot Hoops on Instagram here!

Check out Hot Hot Hoops on Facebook here!

Subscribe to our YouTube channel here!

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
8 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
SunManFromDogBone
SunManFromDogBone
3 months ago

Barry Jackson: 
Per source, one reason why the NBA hasn’t terminated Rozier contract and given Miami cap space (unlike what it did with J. Porter) is the league has not been given access to whatever evidence the feds have in their charges against Rozier. So NBA has no evidence to overturn its previous conclusion that Rozier did nothing wrong.

The NBA concluded Rozier did nothing wrong so neither Silver nor the Hornets chose to inform the Heat of the pending federal investigation. This decision to conceal relevant information for Miami to consider before agreeing to the trade, left the Heat competitively and financially vulnerable. Yet, The NBA/Silver/Charlotte have done absolutely nothing to resolve the situation. Riley should be suing both the NBA and the Charlotte Hornets for full reimbursement, restoration and damages.

  • If a seller fails to disclose material information before a contract, buyers have legal recourse including rescission (canceling the sale for a refund), suing for damages (repair costs, lost value, fees, potential punitive damages), or, rarely, specific performance; claims often involve fraud, negligent misrepresentation, or breach of contract, with remedies depending on proving the seller knew about the defect. 

WHEN CAN NON-DISCLOSURE RISE TO THE LEVEL OF FRAUD?

Failure to disclose facts that are relevant and important may rise to the level of fraud. To succeed with a claim of fraud by non-disclosure, the party who claims to have been defrauded (the plaintiff in a civil lawsuit) must prove all of the following elements:

  • The defendant had a duty to disclose certain facts to the plaintiff because, for example, the defendant created a false impression or the defendant was a fiduciary
  • The defendant concealed or failed to disclose these facts to the plaintiff
  • The undisclosed facts were material, i.e., important and relevant to the subject of the contract
  • The defendant knew that the
  • plaintiff was ignorant of the facts and
  • that the plaintiff did not have an equal opportunity to discover the facts
  • The defendant was intentionally silent when they had a duty to inform
  • The defendant intended to induce the plaintiff to take action or refrain from acting by failing to disclose the facts
  • The plaintiff relied on the defendant’s nondisclosure
  • The plaintiff was injured as a result of acting without knowledge of the undisclosed facts

I believe this matter meets the criteria to be considered fraud.

SunManFromDogBone
SunManFromDogBone
3 months ago

The “rebuilding” Phoenix Suns finished the 2024-2025 season with a record of 36-46, placing them in 11th place in the Western Conference.

This year’s team is currently tied for 5th place with the Lakers with a record of 24-15. The Suns have the NBA’s best record over the past 10 games at 8-2. During that stretch, Phoenix has beaten the Thunder, the Knicks and the Lakers.

If Phoenix can do it, so can Miami! The only thing required is a commitment by the owner and management to doing it. Period.

heat for life
heat for life
3 months ago

32 teams try to do it some do it some dont right now we are donts

SunManFromDogBone
SunManFromDogBone
3 months ago

The Miami Heat NEED To Blow It Up

The Miami Heat lost their third-straight game on Sunday against the Oklahoma City Thunder, and now the Heat record is 20-19. Heat president Pat Riley is forced with a decision on what to do with this Heat roster as we get closer towards the 2026 NBA Trade Deadline. Heat Report host Nic Rohloff believes Miami should think about being sellers at the deadline. Nic lists Bam Adebayo, Tyler Herro, Norman Powell, and Andrew Wiggins as possible Heat trade candidates. Truth is, nobody on this Heat roster is untouchable in trade talks. Miami Heat rumors, trade rumors, and more on this Miami Heat YouTube video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tprgpC1IHGk

Heat fans are quietly realizing it may be time for the unthinkableThere may not be a better option.

Even though the Heat’s front office may not completely agree just yet when it comes to whether it’s time to hit the hard reset button or not, I almost guarantee that there have been conversations about this reality. And if something doesn’t change quickly, the Heat won’t have any other option but to head down this path.
https://allucanheat.com/heat-fans-are-quietly-realizing-it-may-be-time-for-the-unthinkable?utm_campaign=FanSided+Daily&utm_source=FanSided+Daily&utm_medium=email&sc=e0273490fd355e2c28bdb25751d41af65a4dd80936ff00a80be9866c97887955

SunManFromDogBone
SunManFromDogBone
3 months ago

For those thinking that Ja Morant is the answer to Miami’s problems, think again.

Morant is currently out with a calf injury and has played just 77 games in the last three seasons combined. 
Morant is on the books for $39M this season, $42M in 2026-27 and $45M in 2027-2028.
I would still prefer a straight up swap of Herro for Dejounte Murray.

Last edited 3 months ago by SunManFromDogBone
Hothothoopsfan4life
Hothothoopsfan4life
3 months ago

And Memphis shouldn’t get not a single draft pick for him

SunManFromDogBone
SunManFromDogBone
3 months ago

Absolutely not. Morant WAS a great player a few years ago. He’s a big pain in the @$$ now! The Heat’s problems are bigger than what one player can fix. Adding Morant would only make it worse. Morant, Rozier, Jovic.

heat for life
heat for life
3 months ago

hes not that bad player sun whens last time youve seen him play.get him asap for herro

Scroll to Top