Dwyane Wade out against Pacers

ByBRIAN WINDHORST
April 11, 2014, 11:50 AM

— -- MIAMI -- The Miami Heat were without Dwyane Wade for a ninth straight game Friday night in a 98-86 win over the  Indiana Pacers.

Wade hurt his left hamstring in the fourth quarter of the Pacers' 84-83 win over the Heat on March 26. It appears there's a good chance Wade will miss the rest of the regular season.

"Look at the history of hamstring injuries in the league, things can look good and then you have a setback," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "We're going to take our time."

The Heat will get back forward Udonis Haslem from illness after missing two games. 

Greg Oden, who has a sore back, will also not play. Oden was signed largely to face the Pacers' Roy Hibbert but will end up having played just six minutes in four regular-season games against the Pacers. Hibbert dominated those six minutes, and Oden suffered a back injury.

While the Heat weren't at full strength, the Pacers were.

Indiana coach Frank Vogel surprisingly and controversially held out all five of his starters Wednesday night at Milwaukee, citing the need to rest his front line after a series of disappointing losses -- including a stunning blowout home defeat Sunday against the Atlanta Hawks.

The Pacers made the choice look good, squeezing out a 104-102 victory over the last-place Bucks after backup Chris Copeland made a runner with 1.2 seconds left. Combined with the Heat's loss to Memphis, the Pacers returned to the top spot in the East standings by a half-game.

Vogel also gave the starters Monday and Tuesday off, meaning the five have had their most down time since the All-Star break. All players went through the team's workout at the Heat's practice facility Thursday.

"There was a lot of energy at practice, they definitely had their legs," Vogel said. "The decision [to rest the starters] was every bit as much about the bench guys as the starters. Hopefully that took care of the bench, and the fresher legs will help the starters."

Since beating the Heat by one point in Indianapolis two weeks ago, the Pacers are just 2-5 and have struggled in various phases. Although they won short-handed over the worst team in the league, Vogel cautioned that rest isn't guaranteed to be the antidote.

"I think rest is part of the solution. How much, who knows?" Vogel said. "We still have a lot of rhythm and timing and execution that needs to improve."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.