Orlando, Fla. â The Orlando Magic didnât just survive their latest clash with the Miami Heat â they owned it. Behind a 37-point explosion from Desmond Bane, the Magic rolled to a 117â108 win at the Kia Center, advancing to the Emirates NBA Cup semifinals and tightening their grip on Florida bragging rights.
Bane Erupts: 37 Points, Six Threes and Total Control
From the opening quarter, it was clear Bane was in takeover mode. The 27-year-old guard torched Miami for 37 points, six rebounds and five assists, shooting 14-of-24 from the field and 6-of-9 from three. Every time the Heat threatened to close the gap, Bane either buried a jumper, attacked a mismatch or calmly orchestrated Orlandoâs half-court offense.
According to ESPNâs recap, Bane matched his season high in scoring and, once again, turned the NBA Cup stage into his personal showcase, as the Magic moved on to the semifinal in Las Vegas.
Social media reacted instantly to the performance. One fan simply called him a âsuperstarâ while others labelled him âon fireâ and a âbeastâ after watching him dismantle Miamiâs coverages. Another Magic supporter summed it up bluntly: Bane âsingle handedly eliminated Heat.â On a night like this, it didnât feel like much of an exaggeration.
Magic Flip a 15â0 Miami Start and Dominate the Perimeter
The night actually began as a nightmare for Orlando. Miami made its first six shots and raced to a 15â0 lead, with Tyler Herro driving for a layup less than three minutes into the game. But once Orlando settled in, the tone flipped dramatically.
The Magic sharpened their defense, forced tougher looks and began to win the three-point battle. The Heat ended the game just 8-for-33 from deep (24.2%), while Herro went 0-for-6 from beyond the arc. Orlando, by contrast, caught fire, hitting 15-of-32 from three (46.9%), with Bane doing most of the damage from the perimeter.
Associated Press box-score data carried by outlets such as CT Insider highlights just how decisive that outside shooting edge became. Once Orlandoâs shooters settled in, Miamiâs early cushion evaporated and never truly returned.
All-In Trade Already Paying Off for Orlando
This is exactly the version of Desmond Bane the Magic envisioned when they went all-in on June 15, sending Cole Anthony, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and a haul of unprotected first-round picks to Memphis to get him. The price looked massive at the time; now it looks like the cost of doing business for a true offensive centerpiece.
Bane has evolved into a two-way combo guard who can handle, score and steady the team in late-game moments. His current averages â 19.0 points, 4.4 rebounds and 4.5 assists on 44.8% shooting â tell part of the story. The rest is in how he changes Orlandoâs offensive personality: more spacing, more decisiveness and far more confidence in crunch time.
âDefinitely the best player in the Magic this season,â one fan wrote after the final buzzer. Given how often he has bailed Orlando out of stagnant possessions, that argument is getting harder to dismiss.
Supporting Cast Steps Up Without Franz Wagner
Orlando pulled this win off without key forward Franz Wagner, who is set to miss time with a high ankle sprain. Instead, the scoring load was spread around Baneâs eruption.
Jalen Suggs added 20 points with his usual defensive intensity, while Paolo Banchero chipped in 18 points and seven rebounds, bullying Miami inside and drawing extra defenders that freed Bane on the perimeter. The Magic once again looked deep, physical and annoyingly hard to shake when they build a lead.
The AP recap notes that Orlandoâs starters were consistently in double figures, a sign that the supporting cast is matching Baneâs rise rather than simply watching him go to work.
Miamiâs Full Squad Still Canât Solve the Magic
For the Heat, the loss is more than just an early Cup exit. This was their third straight defeat to Orlando this season, and it came with a fully healthy roster.
Norman Powell led Miami with 21 points, while Herro scored 20. Bam Adebayo and Andrew Wiggins each finished with 19. But despite that balanced output, Miami never looked fully comfortable against Orlandoâs pressure and length, particularly once the Magicâs half-court defense was set.
Every attempted comeback seemed to end the same way: a rushed Heat three, a missed rotation, and Bane splashing a jumper over a late contest. By the time Miami finally trimmed the deficit back into single digits, the game clock, not the scoreboard, had become their biggest enemy.
Vegas Next: Magic Eye a Bigger Stage
The win sends Orlando to Las Vegas for the NBA Cup semifinals, where they will face the winner of New York vs Toronto. For a franchise that hasnât won a traditional playoff series since 2010, this new in-season stage offers a rare chance at meaningful, nationally televised basketball in December.
For Bane, itâs another opportunity to reinforce what he has already made clear: he isnât just a complementary piece in Orlando â heâs the engine. If he keeps producing nights like this, the Magicâs Cup run might just become the first real proof that their long rebuild has finally turned into something more dangerous.
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