See you at the weekend: With possible three games left, Cavs might not know their opponent until next weekend.

Apr 15, 2017; Cleveland, OH, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) reacts after a 109-108 win against the Indiana Pacers in game one of the first round of the 2017 NBA Playoffs at Quicken Loans Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-USA TODAY Sports

The Cleveland Cavaliers finally caught a break.

After struggling through the final weeks of the regular season and losing the number one seed in the Eastern Conference, the NBA defending champions assured themselves of getting a little more rest. They can use it.

"We have some good miles on this team, some guys who have played in a lot of postseason action," All-Star Kevin Love said after grabbing 16 rebounds and completing a first-round sweep at Indiana.

Right now, that's all Cleveland can do.

With the Milwaukee-Toronto series tied at Two, the next two games (yesterday night and Thursday) and a possible Game Seven set for Saturday, the Cavs might not even know their opponent until next weekend.

If the series goes a full seven games, the Cavs might have more than a full week between Sunday's 106-102 victory and their next game.

While the extended rest could help a veteran, playoff-tested team stay fresh, that's a tack coach Tyronn Lue has employed all season when it comes to his three biggest stars — Love, LeBron James and Kyrie Irving.

James also understands the danger. Just eight wins short of a third straight trip to The Finals, Cleveland cannot afford to get stale.

Fortunately, James already is in championship form.

He finished with 74 points, 23 rebounds and 16 assists in the final two games of the Indiana series, virtually willing the Cavs to two wins. And he continues to break records, climb the career lists and even stretch bounds of credulity with ridiculously good play.

James almost single-handedly led Cleveland back from a 25-point halftime deficit, the largest second-half comeback in playoff history and then made every big play over the final 90 seconds Sunday.

"Game 3, that probably will go down for all of us as a historic moment," Irving said. "The ability for our guys to come in and come out and be ready and be the consummate professional, to come out with a win like that and for LeBron to put on a performance like that is nothing short of special."

Cleveland's supporting cast is doing its job, too. James, Love and Irving all topped the 25-point mark in Game Two.

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