MIAMI · Among the reasons Heat President Pat Riley shopped for Antoine Walker, Jason Williams and James Posey in the offseason was to lighten the load on Shaquille O'Neal and Dwyane Wade.
Through the first three games of the preseason, the restructuring instead has come off as a burden.
"It takes time to get familiar with guys," Wade said of the confusion that has the Heat averaging 23 turnovers over its first three exhibitions. "I don't think any of us, maybe Shaq, have played with this many guys who can fill it up, that have got this much one-on-one ability. So it's taking time to learn the team.
"Last year we had a team that everybody had a role. If it wasn't me and Shaq scoring, everybody was spotting up, hitting the jumper. The main thing is it just takes time to learn each other, learn the system."
The view from the front office was that additional options were needed for the times the offense bogged down, such as against Detroit in the Eastern Conference finals.
But that also has Stan Van Gundy coaching more one-on-one talent than in the previous two years he led the team.
"We need some guys who make it work," Van Gundy said. "Sometimes you just need guys to catch the ball and move the ball and get out of the way and create spacing and things like that. I haven't seen a lot of that so far, of guys really willing to do that."
In adding Walker, Williams, Posey and Gary Payton, the hope was that others would step up when needed, not necessarily when each individually saw fit.
"That's why we go through preseason, for guys to get it in their heads, `You've got to trust other guys,' even though all of us feel we have the ability to take over the game," Wade said. "You can't win the game alone. It's the team that's got to do it. We've all got to understand that.
"We've still got [five] preseason games, and hopefully at the end of it we'll all understand what we have to do for the betterment of this ballclub."
Some of the adjustment could have to come from Wade, to allow for the diverse offense the Heat lacked last season.
"I'm sure when we need points, Coach will put the ball in my hands to make a play," the third-year shooting guard said. "I don't think that's going to change.
"Last year, a lot of plays were run for just me and Shaq. This year it's spread out a little bit. It's just a lot of getting used to."
Power forward Udonis Haslem said the essential factor is not overlooking O'Neal's low-post dominance.
"We have something that no one else in the league has. We have Shaquille O'Neal," he said. "We need to learn how to play around the big fella, move the ball and get it back to him."
Less than two weeks into training camp, Van Gundy already finds himself walking a fine line.
On one hand, he has to bring together a group of newcomers in a relatively short time. On the other, he is dealing with some of the largest egos in the game and can't set up the season as seven months of seething.
"[There are] certain areas that regardless of how long you've been together, we should be on point with," Walker said. "I think that's what Coach is frustrated with. We're too talented offensively to give ourselves 20 turnovers."
For now there is confusion.
"It's still preseason," Posey said. "We're still gathering information trying to make this thing work right now, still feeling each other out.
"We know each other, but we don't know each other on the court."
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Yeah, just pre-season, but it'll take longer for them. So when does this team start to gel? I'd say between December and January.