In May of last year, Heat president Pat Riley confronted Jimmy Butler in the only way that he knew how. It hasn’t worked yet. Riley, however, was equally critical of Tyler Herro, referring to him as “fragile.” Herro, who is in the middle of a career season, responded to Riley’s “fragile” comments during an interview.
Tyler Herro Responds to Pat Riley’s ‘Fragile’ Comments
Herro Is A Perfectionist
Herro recently talked about how Riley’s remarks inspired him last summer before the 2024–25 season in an interview with Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald.
“I’m a perfectionist in my own way,” Herro said. “I don’t need anyone to tell me I’m fragile or I haven’t played as many games. I’m aware of what’s going on. I know I missed the last two seasons, with the hand injury and half the season last year. I’ve seen the comments coach Riley said. In my own world, I was going to try to play more games on my own either way. I took his words, obviously, into consideration and used it as motivation as I always do.”
Herro In All-Star Form
Herro answered, and in strong fashion. He hasn’t missed a single game this season, which has coincided with also being the most productive in his career. In 35.4 minutes per game, the soon-to-be 25-year-old guard is averaging 24.3 points, 5.7 rebounds, and 5.0 assists.
His shooting percentages of 47.4 percent from the field, 40.8 percent from three-point range, and 86.4 percent from the free-throw line are sufficient for a 58.7 effective field goal percentage (highest of his career by 5.6 percent) and a 62.5 true-shooting percentage (best by 6.7;percent).
Herro has cut long two-pointers out of his diet entirely. He switched out some of those long twos into threes, averaging 9.8 a game, or 55.7 percent of his total shot diet. He has also reached the rim and free-throw line at career-high rates by using his increased strength and speed.
The “Important” Player
Although he isn’t a flawless player, development isn’t necessarily linear. The 6-foot-5 guard has utilized his development to emerge as one of the Heat’s most important players.
“This is not an overnight thing,” Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra told Chiang about Herro’s growth. “I think people only recognize if the scoring average goes up. But his skill set has been really developing for the last three years. He was a heck of an offensive player when he was Sixth Man of the Year [for the 2021-22 season]. Now he’s added some strength, he’s defending better, his playmaking has gotten better, off-the-catch movement has gotten better. We know what he’s been able to do with the ball in his hands — that has been two or three years now. But it’s really putting a lot of things together to help your team.”
The Last Word
Herro’s maturity and will to succeed are evident in his answer to Riley’s remark that he was “fragile.” Herro accepted the criticism instead of taking offense, using it as inspiration to raise his level of play. Herro’s growth mentality shows that he is prepared to become a vital member of the Miami Heat. His response couldn’t be better, but he will have to keep improving while remaining glued to the scouting reports of other teams.
The post Tyler Herro Responds to Pat Riley’s ‘Fragile’ Comments appeared first on Last Word On Basketball.