The Oakland Press

Lakers, Heat start their preparatio­ns

- By TimReynold­s

LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. » Bam Adebayo woke up on Monday with the realizatio­n that only two teams still have a chance to win this season’s NBA championsh­ip.

Goosebumps kicked in at the thought.

What was once a 22team bubble at Walt Disney World is down to the final two, with Adebayo and the Miami Heat set to take on LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals that start onWednesda­y night. It’s the first finals matchup between the clubs, with the Lakers looking for a record-tying 17th title and the Heat seeking their fourth in the last 15 seasons.

“It’s pretty cool considerin­g, when you really think about it, it’s you and one other team that are still left standing and one of the two will be raising the Larry O’Brien Trophy,” Adebayo said Monday. “But we know that the job isn’t done yet.”

TheHeat were spending much of Monday resting up before an evening team meeting would officially start their finals preparatio­n process. The Lakers, who won the Western Conference finals on Saturday — a day before Miami finished off the Eastern Conference crown — were starting to get their game plan in order after a one-day break as well.

Much like the Heat, the Lakers took a moment to enjoy winning the conference title. Winning a day ahead of Miami just happens to give the Lakers a bit more time to prepare for Game 1.

“We appropriat­ely had fun with it that night, enjoyed it that night. And then the next day, it’s time to move on to the next ... and now it’s all business,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said Monday. “I don’t think there’s any kind of an eye towards the end of getting home or anything like that. It’s really about staying singlemind­ed in our focus about what needs to happen for us to beat the Miami Heat.”

Both teams are scheduled for regular practices today. It’s definitely a tight squeeze, preparatio­n wise, compared to last year: the 2019 NBA Finals started on May 30, with Golden State clinching its spot in the title series on May 20 and Toronto on May 25.

“I tell you, it’s going to be brutalizin­g for our video staff,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said.

The Heat, who ousted East No. 1 seed Milwaukee in the second round, are trying to become the second team in the last 18 seasons to beat a pair of No. 1 seeds in the same playoff. Toronto did it last year, first to Milwaukee, then to Golden State. Before that, one would have to go back to 2002 when the Lakers pulled off the feat.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra, center left, hands the Eastern Conference trophy to Bam Adebayo as they celebrate their NBA conference final playoff win over the Boston Celtics with the Eastern Final trophy Sunday in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.
MARK J. TERRILL— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra, center left, hands the Eastern Conference trophy to Bam Adebayo as they celebrate their NBA conference final playoff win over the Boston Celtics with the Eastern Final trophy Sunday in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.
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