The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Conference finalists ready to settle scores

- By Tim Reynolds

The franchise with the most titles. The best player of this generation. The reigning champions. The probable MVP. The NBA has its Final Four: Cavs, Celtics, Warriors and Rockets.

The franchise with the most titles. The best player of this generation. The reigning champions. The probable MVP.

The NBA has its Final Four.

It certainly does not disappoint.

Boston’s win over Philadelph­ia on Wednesday night brought down the curtain on the postseason’s second round — one that wasn’t exactly loaded with drama, since it was the first time since 2002 that none of the NBA’s four conference semifinal series went past five games. Cleveland swept Toronto, while Houston, Golden State and the Celtics all prevailed by 4-1 counts.

Everyone gets to catch their collective breaths for a few days, with the league going dark until the weekend. Cleveland and Boston don’t tip off the Eastern Conference finals until Sunday, and the Warriors and Rockets start their West title series on Monday. And yes, the Cavaliers and Warriors are four wins away from a fourth consecutiv­e meeting in the NBA Finals.

A few things to know going into the conference finals:

LeBron, of course

Any list of anything this time of year basically has to start with LeBron James, still generally considered the best player on the planet even at 33 years old and in his 15th NBA season.

Cleveland’s star is trying to reach the NBA Finals for the eighth consecutiv­e season — something only four other players have done, and they were all Boston Celtics. Bill Russell went to 10 straight title series, Sam Jones and Tom Heinsohn went to nine, and Frank Ramsey went to eight.

James is already the NBA’s all-time playoff leader in points, steals and minutes played. He’s fifth in playoff wins with 152, behind only Derek Fisher (161), Tim Duncan (157), Robert Horry (155) and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (154).

Seeking 10

Golden State is trying to reach the NBA Finals for the 10th time, a mark that two other franchises have reached. The Los Angeles Lakers have made The Finals on 31 occasions (winning 16 titles), and the Celtics have gone 21 times (winning a league-high 17 titles).

If the Warriors successful­ly defend their NBA title and go back-to-back, it’ll be the franchise’s sixth time as the last team standing — and would tie Chicago for the third-most championsh­ips in league history, behind the Celtics and Lakers.

MVP watch

Houston’s James Harden seems like the probable winner of the NBA’s MVP award this season, with the only other realistic candidate for top honors probably James.

They won’t know who won until June 25 — after the season.

Regardless, they could wind up adding to a recent trend.

The league MVP has played in the NBA Finals in four of the last six seasons — James and the Miami Heat won titles in 2012 and 2013, Stephen Curry and the Warriors won in 2015 and lost to Cleveland in 2016.

Matter of time

Ray Allen is still the league’s all-time leader in playoff 3-pointers made, with 385.

James and Curry are coming his way.

James is No. 2 on the alltime list with 346 playoff 3-pointers. Curry is No. 3 with 329 — in only 79 playoff games. Allen played in 171, and James has played in 228.

Called it from Day 1

Here’s how the NBA season began, back on Oct. 17: Boston at Cleveland, and Houston at Golden State.

Almost seven months later, the conference finals begin with Cleveland at Boston, Golden State at Houston.

More days off?

The NBA Finals start May 31.

That means there could be a lot of days without basketball before then.

If both series end in sweeps — unlikely, of course, but possible — the Boston-Cleveland winner would have 10 days off before The Finals and the Houston-Golden State winner would have nine.

Starting Thursday, there will be no games five times in a nine-day span. There’s no games until Sunday, and there’s no games in either series on May 17 and 18. Those needing a basketball fix on those last two days, fret not — there will be NBA Combine activities going on in Chicago on those two days.

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 ?? TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LeBron James blows kisses as he walks off the floor after a 128-93 victory over the Toronto Raptors in Game 4 of Cleveland’s Eastern Conference semifinal in Cleveland.
TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LeBron James blows kisses as he walks off the floor after a 128-93 victory over the Toronto Raptors in Game 4 of Cleveland’s Eastern Conference semifinal in Cleveland.

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