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OAKLAND, Calif. — Golden State Warriors forward Andre Iguodala says he plans to play in Game 7 of the NBA finals despite a balky back that limited him the previous game.

Iguodala took part in a brief walkthrough Saturday and got treatment while the Warriors held a light practice ahead of Sunday’s final game of the season against Cleveland.

Iguodala played 30 minutes in Game 6 on Thursday night when he had to spend some time in the locker room getting treatment after his back “locked up.”

He said the injury stemmed from the long flight and the heavy workload he has had in the playoffs.

Iguodala said he plans to spend the time before Game 7 getting treatment, watching U.S. Open golf and watching the final episode of “The Sopranos.”

LeBron James faced a question early in a press conference about whether his legacy might be riding on Game 7 of these NBA finals.

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“No,” he said, straight-faced.

He got asked more than once about carrying the burden of a championship-starved city in his native northeast Ohio, and how he promised to bring a title to Cleveland when he came home two years ago following a successful four-year stint in Miami.

Nah, he can’t have that on his mind in a moment of this magnitude.

“It’s an opportunity for us to do something special,” James said matter of factly.

The Cavaliers and all those people willing them to win just one more are counting on another spectacular, jaw-dropping outing by James in the winner-take-all Game 7. They all expect it after consecutive 41-point performances by James as Cleveland twice, improbably, staved off elimination and rallied from 3-1 down against Stephen Curry and the Warriors to even the series at three games apiece.

“We’ve got to slow him down,” Klay Thompson of Golden State said. “It’s nice to get it out of his hands, obviously, but when he doesn’t have the ball, try to do everything you can to not let him get it back because he’s so good at making the right play. So we’ll adjust. I can’t tell you what our game plan is now, but if we just force him to beat us over the top, make tough shots, we can live with it.”

James has been so dominant the past two games, everybody can now envision the sweet end to 52 years of Cleveland sports heartbreak, and the city’s first major championship since the Browns won a title in 1964.

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