<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>In the ESPN the Magazine cover story about Miami guard Dwyane Wade, Heat coach Pat Riley suggests that Wade may be too consumed with business matters off the court. "I tell him he needs to learn to leave a little on the table," Riley says about the former Marquette star. "He can't gobble up all of life right now - all the endorsements, all the businesses. You have to be true to who you are, as a person and as a player. I tell him, your greatest refuge is the court; it's what got you here. Sometimes young players get away from themselves with all the stuff that comes from them." Wade does not see it that way. "From coach's perspective, yeah, it looks like I have a lot going on. From my perspective, I want more. It's my life. I know what I can take on." Wade addresses speculation that his marriage is in trouble. "Wade admits that he and his wife, Siohvaughn, are in a rough patch, that his marriage, like everyone else's, has its ups and downs," writes the author of the story, Allison Glock. "But no papers have been filed, and the couple is diligently trying to work things out. If they don't, they don't. Either way, he has nothing to hide." Wade is in his fifth season in the National Basketball Association. Miami is to play Milwaukee tonight at the Bradley Center.</div> Source: JS Online Both Shaq and now Wade have both been distracted by their marriage problems. Shaq is going through a rough divorce and Wade is having a tough time with keeping his together.