Dion Waiters has been looking for a team that can offer him a prominent scoring role.The Miami Heat could have just the role for him after a disappointing split with franchise star Dwyane Wade.Waiters and the Heat have agreed to a two-year contract worth $6 million with a player option in the second year of the deal, as first reported Monday by The Vertical and confirmed by ESPN.?Waiters would receive an additional bonus if he is traded.Waiters averaged 9.8 points for the Oklahoma City Thunder last year, but had several big games in the playoffs. His offensive burst with the second unit helped the Thunder keep pace when stars Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook needed rest, and his aggressive mentality fit well with a bench unit that needed some force.Waiters played particularly well against Dallas and San Antonio in the playoffs, helping the Thunder advance to the Western Conference finals against?Golden State. The matchups werent as favorable for him in that series, one in which the Warriors came back from a 3-1 deficit to beat Oklahoma City.Waiters could slide right into the starting lineup in the Heat backcourt next to point guard Goran Dragic, offering the 24-year-old shooting guard the playing time and role in the offense that could help him lock down a more lucrative long-term deal down the road.The Heat have a need for scoring after Wade made the surprising decision to leave the only franchise he has ever played for to join his hometown Chicago Bulls earlier this month.There are definite similarities between Wade and Waiters beyond just their initials. Both are 6-foot-4 scorers with stout frames that help them absorb punishment on drives to the basket. Both are aggressive scorers who rely more on the midrange game and getting to the rim than 3-pointers. Both have worn No. 3 on their jerseys.Wade, of course, is far more accomplished in his 13-year career, with three championships and 12 All-Star nods that made him an icon in South Florida.The daunting prospect of replacing such a celebrated figure in the Heats starting lineup would likely do little to deter Waiters, a supremely confident personality who never hesitated to take big shots in Cleveland despite Kyrie Irvings status as the go-to player, or in Oklahoma City when playing with Westbrook and Durant.Waiters started the summer as a restricted free agent, a designation that would have given the Thunder the right to match any offer given to Waiters. But after losing Durant to the Warriors, the Thunder rescinded their qualifying offer to Waiters, making him an unrestricted free agent.The Heat also matched guard Tyler Johnsons four-year, $50 million offer from the Brooklyn Nets and have other versatile pieces such as?Justise Winslow and Josh Richardson in coach Erik Spoelstras rotation.With Waiters?agreeing with the Heat, the Thunder?now have the option to offer Russell Westbrook a maximum level extension.Information from The Associated Press was used in this report. Mike Cameron Mariners Jersey . -- Linebacker Myles Jack ran for four touchdowns, defensive end Cassius Marsh caught a scoring pass, and No. Carlos Guillen Jersey . Aaron Harrison scored a 22 points for Kentucky (6-1), which has won four in a row following a Nov. 12 loss to current No. 1 Michigan State. Julius Randle overcame a scoreless first half and added his sixth double-double in as many games with 14 points and 10 rebounds. https://www.cheapmariners.com/2245k-sam-tuivailala-jersey-mariners.html . Louis Blues. Shane Hnidy joins Brian Munz for the broadcast on TSN 1290 Radio at 7pm ct. Randy Johnson Jersey . The giant slalom world champion slipped during her first run in the morning, landing on her back and then twisting forward before getting her leg caught in the protective material on the side of the slope. Custom Seattle Mariners Jerseys . Supported by three-run homers from Jayson Werth and Wilson Ramos, the young right-hander went seven strong innings in the Washington Nationals 8-4 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Friday night. SILVERSTONE, Great Britain -- Mercedes boss Toto Wolff says Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton are on their final warnings following their collision at the Austrian Grand Prix.A meeting between Mercedes core race team and its drivers on Thursday morning resulted in new rules of engagement on track, but ultimately the drivers will be free to race. Although Wolff refused to go into details about the new agreement, he confirmed another collision would have serious consequences.We have had a warning, he said. This is the final warning, consider it like that.Asked why he could not elaborate on the details of the agreement, Wolff added: Because it is like a contractual detail. We are talking about possible sporting, possible financial consequences and we wouldnt want to go into detail.You know how a driver is calibrated and what is important for a driver so it is clear that if it would happen -- which is entirely in their hands -- it is something that would have a negative outcome for their campaign.When it was put to Wolff that it was like mission impossible to try to prevent Rosberg and Hamilton colliding on track, he stressed that the situation is in the drivers hands.If it would be a mission impossible then we wouldnt see any clean racing out there and that would mean every single overtake would end in contact. There is clean racing and the great racing is hard racing, trying to pass and out-smart your competitor without the contact.It could damage your own race so I believe -- especially considering the skill-set of the two -- clean racing is possible and achievable.The fundamental principle iis the moment the lights go green, they have a responsibility, we are not sitting with them in the car, it is just two of them.dddddddddddd We provide them with the best possible car but once the race is on only the two of them are able to manage the situation, which is a good thing because it is entirely within their hands and the outcome is in their hands.Wolff said there is a fine line between doing what is best for the sport and what is best for the team.I completely understand your point. I think we had more press around F1, Mercedes, the controversy... we gave real narrative and it is a fine balance. My job is to secure wins and championships in the least detriment and most possible way for Mercedes-Benz. If the drivers crash three times in five races it is not positive anymore and is risking our main objective, and this is to win the championship.I understand the importance of headlines for F1 and it is great, so it is not an easy task and I wouldnt want to change the wiring. This is the essence. In a couple of years we could be looking back and saying Rosberg-Hamilton was one of the most iconic and best fights, similar to Senna-Prost had.I am very aware of that and I dont want to over-manage it and try to extinguish the whole thing. Equally there is the responsibility for the organisation, the brand and the background and if every Monday after the race you have headlines that there is animosity or controversy around the drivers, that is not good either. ' ' '