The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Regular season is about to end at last

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LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — The last day of an NBA regular season typically sees just about every team in action, with plenty of drama surroundin­g down-to-the-wire playoff races and statistica­l titles on the line.

Typical doesn’t seem to exist in 2020.

The NBA’s regular season ends — sort of — Friday with just four games, none with any bearing on matchups for the first round of the playoffs that begin next week. The biggest items to be settled Friday are which teams will wear home uniforms to start the Miami-Indiana and Oklahoma City-Houston series.

“Everybody’s excited about what’s at stake,” Oklahoma City guard Chris Paul said. “We’ll try to have as much of a home-court feel as possible, as far as the music and things like that, but when you get down to it I think everybody’s trying to make sure they’re going into the playoffs as healthy as possible.” Playoffs start Monday. All the matchups that can be set are locked in: Milwaukee-Orlando, Toronto-Brooklyn, Boston-Philadelph­ia and Heat-Pacers in the Eastern Conference, with the Los Angeles Clippers-Dallas, Denver-Utah and Thunder-Rockets about to face off in the Western Conference. The

West No. 1-seeded Los Angeles Lakers will meet the winner of the play-in series that starts Saturday.

The winner of Friday’s Heat-Pacers game — spoiler alert, don’t expect starters to play much if at all in that one — will be seeded No. 4 in the East, the loser will be seeded No. 5.

Oklahoma City would be the No. 4 seed and Houston would be the No. 5 seed in the West if the Thunder beat the Clippers on Friday; there are also ways for the Rockets to be the No. 4 seed, all of them involving a Thunder loss.

“Seeding doesn’t really mean anything in this bubble,” Clippers forward Paul George said. “There’s no home-court advantage.”

Some of the storylines to note going into the longdelaye­d end of the NBA regular season:

STAT CHAMPIONS

Houston’s James Harden will be the NBA’s scoring champion, the Lakers’ LeBron James is the assist champion, Cleveland’s Andre Drummond won the rebounding title, Philadelph­ia’s Ben Simmons took the steals crown and Portland’s Hassan Whiteside won the blocks title for the second time.

James won the assist trophy for the first time and becomes the first person 6-foot-8 or taller to win it since Magic Johnson got his last assist crown in 1986-87.

The last time Whiteside was the NBA’s top shotblocke­r was 2015-16 — a season that preceded a trip to free agency where he landed a four-year, $98 million contract.

Timing is everything, perhaps. Whiteside, also a past NBA rebound champion, is a free agent again this summer.

BEST SEASON

Win or lose Friday, the Toronto Raptors — after losing Kawhi Leonard and Danny Green as free agents following last season’s run to the NBA championsh­ip — are assured of their best regular season in franchise history.

If Toronto drops its finale to Denver, the Raptors will finish 52-20, or with a .722 winning percentage.

That would still top the .720 mark that the 2017-18 Raptors turned in when they went 59-23. Last year’s team was 58-24 (.707) on the way to Toronto’s first championsh­ip.

3S STILL WILD

For the eighth consecutiv­e year, the NBA’s record for 3-pointers made per game was topped.

Every NBA game this season saw, on average, 24.4 makes from 3-point land. The total for 3s in a season won’t be broken this year, only because 14% of the season wasn’t played because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. But the pergame number was broken again, up from 22.7 3s made per game last season.

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