ATLANTA, GEORGIA – JANUARY 21: Duncan Robinson #55 and head coach Erik Spoelstra of the Miami Heat react in the final seconds of their 110-108 loss to the Atlanta Hawks at State Farm Arena on January 21, 2022 in Atlanta, Georgia. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
Getty Images
Saturday night at the Kaseya Center, Duncan Robinson returned to face the franchise that helped him author one of the NBA’s more improbable stories.
As a junior in high school in Maine, a state that, with all due respect to Cooper Flagg, is not known for being a basketball powerhouse, Robinson came off the bench. Most players who reach basketball’s highest level are already local stars by the time they reach that age.
That didn’t convince Robinson that he wouldn’t live out his hoop dreams. After graduating, he played at a prep school. He parlayed that opportunity to a spot on the team at Williams College. The six-foot-seven sharpshooter maximized his time there, converting it into the chance to make the leap from Division III to the University of Michigan.
Robinson made his mark in Ann Arbor, but he was coming off the bench. Like his journey to get there, few NBA players can relate. However, even after going undrafted, he never abandoned his pursuit.
The Miami Heat saw his potential and took a chance on him. They signed the undrafted free agent to a two-way deal. That paid off in spades. Robinson became a prime example of “Heat Culture.” He is one of the best testimonies to their elite player development program. And he became a crucial cog in an NBA Finals team.
After seven years in South Beach, Robinson is now with the Detroit Pistons. He has helped his new franchise start the current campaign with a 16-4 record, the best mark in the Eastern Conference.
That includes Saturday’s 138-135 victory in Miami. Before the win, he and his former head coach discussed Robinson’s remarkable journey.
Robinson is one of the Heat’s all-time success stories
As Robinson reflected on his time with the Heat, he thought about the constant trade rumors, the idea of playing somewhere else, and the feeling that he could be one of the rare players who spend their entire career in one uniform.
“I never really thought hard about being anywhere else,” said Robinson, per Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald. “That didn’t mean that I didn’t want to be anywhere else, but it was more so I had been in every trade rumor under the sun throughout my time, and it never happened, and I started to sort of live in this reality where I was just always going to be there.”
While that changed this offseason, his former bench boss, Erik Spoelstra, is still openly rooting for Robinson.
“Duncan has probably been told no, had doors closed on him, more often than he’s had yes’s, and it just strengthens him. I’ve always admired that about him, it’s so improbable what he’s done,” said Spoelstra. “He’s one of the great, all-time Miami Heat success stories. So, we all are extremely happy for him.”
Robinson’s inspirational story is one that compelled Spoelstra to write him a note after he departed from South Beach.
“I still root for Duncan,” stated the Heat’s head coach. “He’s one of the greatest success stories from our building. I wrote him a note after the deal, I think his story is so inspirational that it can be a book, a movie,” he conveyed. “I root for him, but it looks strange in that uniform, it really does.”