Both the Miami Heat's strategy and three stars themselves manufactured this problem.
First, the Miami Heat declined to build the supportive cast for this team instead opting for a 2014 free of contract obligations with the illusion of manufacturing cap space.
How so? They've been a capped out team and then a taxpayer. They haven't had salary slots to sign a supporting cast they could have built.
They've also had few draft picks due to the Bosh/LBJ sign and trades.
I don't buy that as the sole-reason they couldn't put something more worthwhile together. It's no coincidence that all the roster contracts on that team had been concocted to not go beyond the year in which the player options for the big 3 were set to go into effect.
Manufacturing enough space, at least last year, to have enough to offer a full mid-level to someone worthwhile shouldn't have been that hard to accomplish.
But you had a lot of money tied up on players like Battier, Haslem, Chalmers, and Ray Allen. Three of them old, but in expiring deals. This shouldn't have been hard to move, particularly during the off-season after a Championship year.
You're just flat out wrong about this. Cutting down to below 70 million dollars to use the full MLE wasn't doable. Dumping a bunch of salary like that costs picks and the Heat don't have many to give.
They amnestied Mike Miller and traded Joel Anthony cutting a lot of their books and they were still at 80.5 million dollars.
They had 56.5ish tied up in Wade/Bosh/LeBron, virtually impossible to get to full MLE level if you don't gut the team entirely. Being a taxpayer also meant that they cannot receive players in sign and trades so that avenue was also closed to them.
The new CBA hamstrung the Heat far more than you're allowing in your argument.