While disappointed to not put away the Celtics on Tuesday night, the Heat weren’t sweating their Game 4 loss. “All year long, we’ve been better when we’ve had to do things the hard way,” Jimmy Butler said.
MIAMI — As Jimmy Butler walked to the podium following the Miami Heat’s 116-99 loss to the Boston Celtics in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals Tuesday night, he was singing.
It was Alicia Keys’ 2007 song “No One” — but the specific verse he closed with was “everything’s gonna be alright.”
While Butler and the 8-seed Heat lamented that they couldn’t close out the Celtics and earn their second trip to the NBA Finals in four seasons, there remained an air of confidence within the group that it could go back to Boston for Thursday night’s Game 5 and find a way to win one more.
“If anything, it will build momentum for us knowing that we have to play with a lot more energy,” Butler said. “We’ve got to play like our backs are against the wall. But I think all year long, we’ve been better when we’ve had to do things the hard way.”
Butler scored 29 points while grabbing nine rebounds and dishing out five assists, but he was still frustrated with the way he performed with so much at stake for a Heat group that came into Game 4 hoping to complete the sweep.