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Miami Heat rule Kyle Lowry (hamstring) out for Game 5 vs. Philadelphia 76ers

MIAMI -- Heat guard Kyle Lowry will not play in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference semifinals against the Philadelphia 76ers on Tuesday night as he continues to deal with a left hamstring injury.

"We've dealt with it before," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said of Lowry's absence. "We've dealt with all the different rotation challenges and that's just what we're dealing with right now. We have plenty of guys that can step up, it can look a little bit different, but we've had recent experience with it."

Lowry initially injured the hamstring during Game 3 during Game 3 of the Heat's Eastern Conference quarterfinals series against the Atlanta Hawks on April 22. He missed four straight games before returning for Game 3 against the Sixers last Friday night. He reinjured the hamstring during the first half of Game 4 against the Sixers and then tweaked it again in the second half -- sitting the final 9:42 of the game.

"There is a human side to it," Spoelstra said. "I know how competitive Kyle is and I know how much he wants to be out there, particularly at this point in his career; this is what he's playing for, these moments. To be 2-2 locked up in a series, there's nothing better than that. So I do feel for him, but he's a great teammate.

"He was as active as anybody in this shootaround, just making sure that everybody's prepped and all the details and all that. And he'll just continue to do all of his treatment and do his Wolverine thing."

Spoelstra said that Lowry did not require another MRI on the hamstring and is considered day-to-day. Heat swingman Jimmy Butler is expected to carry even more of the offensive burden without Lowry on the floor, noting after Sunday's Game 4 loss -- "if Kyle's not out there, it's going to have to be me to get it done."

Spoelstra is confident that Lowry will continue to make an impact on the game even though he won't be able to play.

"He's so sharp," Spoelstra said. "He sees things ahead of most people, that would be players or staff alike. And he has just a brilliant way of communicating, infusing confidence. He's going to have his fingerprints on this game one way or another."