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Dwyane Wade's gone, and the Miami Heat still have plans (and hopes) of being a playoff team next season. Instead of chasing one marquee free agent in a compromised market that's already seen the few impact players available sign elsewhere, the Heat are trying to fill the gap with value-based deals.

They continued that trend on Sunday as reports surfaced that the Heat have agreed to deals with shooter Wayne Ellington, and athletic forward James Johnson:

Ellington at $6 million per year is a little pricey, considering he was just a 35.8 percent 3-point shooter last year and has always been just a rotation wing, but the Heat are hoping the same with him as with Johnson, that under Erik Spoelstra's system, which often gets a lot out of shooters and big slashing forwards, that they can find a higher level of success.

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James Johnson joins the Heat USATSI

Miami lost Wade, Joe Johnson, and Luol Deng in free agency, and could lose Tyler Johnson if they fail to match an offer sheet from the Brooklyn Nets for him. They have Justise Winslow, Hassan Whiteside, and Goran Dragic, but it remains to be seen whether they can still be a playoff team sans Wade with that core. Still, they're making the best they can of a bad situation and if one of these signings pays off it will be great return on investment.

Johnson averaged 5.0 points and 1.7 rebounds per game last season for Toronto, losing his rotation spot to better shooters and defenders for the Raptors, but did shoot 48 percent from the field and 30 percent from 3-point range.