LOS ANGELES—LeBron James hit his first free throw to put the Lakers up by two. Dwyane Wade sidled up to him before the second shot.
“Bro, just miss it so I can shoot the game-winner,” Wade said in the waning seconds of their last game together. “Me and you. One on one. Just let me shoot it and go for it.”
LeBron didn’t miss. Dwyane didn’t really expect him to.
They still got that last showdown, one on one with the game on the line. Wade launched a 27-foot fadeaway jumper that didn’t go down, and the buzzer eventually sounded on the Lakers’ 108-105 victory over Miami on Monday night while they scrapped for one last rebound.
To the final moment in their 16 seasons of simultaneous stardom, these rivals and teammates competed with passion and love. When it was over, they hugged and vowed to get together soon.
“That’s just us,” James said. “Some people say you shouldn’t be friends with your competitors. But even with our friendship, we competed against each other, and we pushed each other.”
James scored 28 points and Los Angeles survived Wade’s 15-point performance in the second half.
James and Wade savored what was likely the final joint chapter of two careers that have intersected repeatedly since they entered the National Basketball Association together in 2003. After seven seasons as Eastern Conference rivals, Wade and James teamed up with the Heat in 2010 to win two championships while reaching four consecutive NBA Finals, and they spent half of last season together in Cleveland.
Wade intends to retire after this season, and Staples Center sent him out of Los Angeles in style with multiple standing ovations and a tribute video in the first quarter. Wade’s wife, actor Gabrielle Union, was among the fans at courtside as the high-scoring guard played 32 minutes and got rolling with a second-half flurry that recalled his prime.
James and Wade both missed big shots down the stretch, but James hit those two free throws with 22.5 seconds left. They also got to guard each other down the stretch, their teammates stepping back to allow the superstars to revel in the spotlight.
“This was the last time I was going to be able to guard him, so I waited to the end,” said Wade, who finished with 10 assists and five rebounds after a scoreless first half. “He knows my moves just like I know his moves. I just wanted to enjoy the competition for the last time.”
They traded jerseys after their postgame chat, but they could be even closer in the future. Wade expects to spend more time in Los Angeles next year in retirement, and James has already invited him to work out together and to “help me out with the young guys” on the Lakers.
Kyle Kuzma scored 33 points for the Lakers, who have won 13 of 17 overall and five straight at home.
Justise Winslow scored a career-high 28 points for Miami, hitting six three-pointers in the third stop on the Heat’s six-game road trip.
CURRY, WARRIORS BEAT WOLVES
STEVE KERR long ago ran out of superlatives to describe Stephen Curry.
The Warriors coach isn’t even trying anymore, not with the way his All-Star point guard is playing since coming back from a groin injury.
Curry had 38 points, seven rebounds and six assists, and Golden State beat the Minnesota Timberwolves, 116-108, on Monday night in Draymond Green’s return to the Warriors’ lineup.
Klay Thompson scored 26 points, and Kevin Durant had 22 as Golden State prepared for Wednesday’s showdown with Toronto by earning its fourth straight win.
Curry went 7 for 14 from three-point range.
“He’s good at basketball,” Kerr deadpanned. “Nothing he does surprises me. Even on a night he gets off to a slow start he finds a way.”
Curry, who recently returned after sitting out 11 games with an injured groin, got going after missing six of his first nine shots. He made a pair of threes and scored 14 points in the third quarter, including Golden State’s final nine of the period, and then made consecutive shots from deep after the Timberwolves closed to 101-93 in the fourth.
Thompson and Durant provided plenty of support. It’s the fourth time this season that the trio has scored 20 or more points in the same game.
Curry is averaging 31.4 points in five games since coming back from the injury.
“We were trying to do a lot in the first half just because we had another playmaker out there,” Curry said. “We were playing really, really fast and excited. Just had to settle in and make the simple play. In the second half we kind of slowed down.”
Green, the 2017 NBA Defensive Player of the Year, had seven points, 10 rebounds and seven assists after being sidelined for 11 games with a right toe injury. He made his first shot, a 3-pointer, and then playfully challenged the Timberwolves to come guard him.