The Bakersfield Californian

A moment of rest finally arrives at the NBA Finals

- BY TIM REYNOLDS

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James got back to his hotel suite after Game 4 of the NBA Finals early Wednesday morning. At 6:30 a.m., he was already tweeting out images to announce to his 47.6 million followers that he was wide-awake.

When the season’s over, he’ll sleep plenty.

Until then, his cycle is going to be a total mess.

Like it or not, the NBA Finals are on hiatus until Friday — the first two-day break in this series between the Lakers and Miami Heat. When Game 5 happens, the Lakers will enter with a 3-1 series lead and on the brink of their 17th NBA championsh­ip.

“For me, I mean, at this point in the season, I don’t care about rest,” James said. “I really don’t. I don’t care about sleep. I don’t care about resting throughout the game. ... I don’t care about resting because I can rest in a week, max.”

Maybe sooner. James’ teams — two in Miami, one in Cleveland — are 3-0 in finals games when they stand a win away from a championsh­ip. All-time, his teams are 38-10 in games where they have closeout chances.

Clearly, James doesn’t like to wait when the chance comes to clinch a series.

“They are going to make adjustment­s. We got to be prepared for it,” Lakers forward Anthony Davis said of the Heat, who are

facing an eliminatio­n game for the first time in these playoffs. “We’re going to make adjustment­s. It’s going to be a big two days for us. Come out Game 5 and hopefully finish it off.”

Game 4 on Tuesday night was the first grind-itout matchup of this series; the Lakers won 102-96, both teams finishing the game with a series-low in scoring and Miami shoot

ing a series-low 42.7% from the floor. Some of that could simply be defenses catching up with offenses, but it also could have been the toll of four highly competitiv­e games taking place in a seven-day span.

“Our guys love competitio­n and love the challenge,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “We are here for a purpose. We never expected this to be easy. We’ll just rest and recover. I think everybody could probably use that a little bit. Recalibrat­e, get back to work on

Thursday.”

The Heat could use a couple days off from a health perspectiv­e. It remains unclear — doubtful is probably the best word — if point guard Goran Dragic can play anytime soon because of the torn plantar fascia in his left foot. But getting All-Star center Bam Adebayo back from a neck injury for Game 4 was a plus, though he confessed he’s not 100 percent.

“I feel like collective­ly we all need two days off,” Adebayo said.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL / AP ?? The Lakers celebrate their Game 4 win over the Heat on Tuesday in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.
MARK J. TERRILL / AP The Lakers celebrate their Game 4 win over the Heat on Tuesday in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

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