Originally appeared on E! Online
LeBron James might have been down, but heโs not out.
After being forced to miss two games with the Los Angeles Lakers in an eight-day span, the NBA forward re-emerged Dec. 15 to help his team score a 116-110 win against the Memphis Grizzlies โ though he was reluctant to step away to treat a foot injury.
โIf it was up to just me, I probably would've played,โ James told reporters of his brief hiatus following the Lakersโ victory, per ESPN. โIt would've been hard to keep me away from it. I have a team and I got to listen to them as well. They look out for my best interest.โ
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The time away seemed to pay off, as he contributed 18 points to the teamโs final total against the Grizzlies.
โI had an opportunity to take more days and get my mind, body and everything where I wanted it to be for tonight,โ James continued. โAnd it worked out.โ
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But the basketball veteran โ who turns 40 on Dec. 30 โ still kept busy during his downtime, noting that he did โa lot of rehabbing, a lot of training still to make sure that I was ready to go tonight. Didn't want to get too much out of shape.โ
Looking ahead, Lakers coach JJ Redick said he would work to give the four-time NBA champion more breaks to avoid having him miss full games.
โNot necessarily less minutes,โ Redick told reporters in a post-game press conference, per EPSN, โbut shorter runs so that he's not getting gassed and then quicker segments on the bench and then he's back in.โ
While James previously expressed his desire to hit the court for all 82 games of the regular season, his coach was more pragmatic about the goal.
โI don't know that's in the best interest of him and us if he does that,โ Redick cautioned as he spoke to reporters Dec. 2, according to ESPN, โbut if he's feeling well and feeling good, then he should play. But we obviously want to ... manage that as best we can."