Daily Southtown

For healthy teams, focus on playoffs

- By Tim Reynolds

There are just under four weeks remaining in the NBA’s regular season, which means only one thing.

The regular season is over. It’s a reality that might make those who fancy themselves as purists cringe, but it’s the truth. The point in the NBA calendar where most teams start looking ahead — either to next month or next season — has arrived. A halfdozen or so teams know they’re going nowhere. A few others are still trying to secure spots in the play-in tournament. Everybody else is gearing up for the postseason.

Or as Heat guard Kyle Lowry succinctly called it, “the real season.”

He’s not wrong. The 82-game marathon of a regular season is a compulsory exercise, a prerequisi­te to quality for what matters most. And the focus is clearly shifting in a lot of places, almost as if training camps for the playoffs are opening.

Some of that is dictated by health.

The Bucks finally have Brook Lopez back, after he missed 67 games — he was there for ring night back in October and hadn’t played since — following back surgery. George Hill has been cleared again as well, after a 16-game absence with a neck issue.

The defending champions are still very much in the thick of the race to secure the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference and Lopez’s defense only figures to enhance those chances.

The Warriors have Draymond Green available again, after he missed two months with a disc issue. The Warriors went from elite (27-6 with him in the lineup, not counting his 7-second appearance as a tribute during Klay Thompson’s return game) to relatively ordinary (19-16) without him.

The fact that Green is returning at a point where Thompson is starting to look like himself again is perfect timing for the Warriors, who unbelievab­ly went 33 months without having Green, Thompson and Stephen Curry together for a full game.

The Heat essentiall­y have their full roster together for the first time all season, now that Victor Oladipo is playing again and Markieff Morris has been cleared following his neck problems that led to a four-month hiatus.

Getting guys back is only part of the formula for some teams.

Figuring out how the parts fit best together, that’s the challenge of this time of year.

“We’ve got to figure out quickly what combinatio­ns make sense,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “I think what is becoming apparent to me this year is that we could have a different starting lineup from game to game in the playoffs, from series to series.

“This is not the Warriors from five years ago when you knew exactly what was coming.”

Other teams aren’t quite as lucky on the injury front yet.

The Cavaliers lost All-Star center Jarrett Allen and are now precarious­ly on the line separating those with guaranteed playoff spots from those who will have to get through the play-in round.

The Lakers think they’re getting Anthony Davis back, but they also know that — despite LeBron James’ brilliance that might lead to a 37-year-old winning the scoring title — the best outcome they can hope for when the regular season ends is probably the No. 9 seed in the Western Conference and a play-in appearance.

The Suns haven’t missed much of a beat without Chris Paul and should have home-court advantage for the entirety of the NBA playoffs clinched before long.

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