
"I mean, we've been taking literally one minute, one hour, one step at a time throughout this whole process. So, see how I feel this afternoon, see how I feel tonight. When I wake up in the morning. ... We'll probably have (a) shoot-around (Tuesday). So, just gotta see how the body responds over the next 24 hours-plus."
"Like I said, if you ever had it, you go about it and you wake up one day and you hope that when you step down from the bed that you don't feel it. You go to bed at night, and you hope that when you're in the bed that you don't feel it. So I've been doing pretty good with it as of late. There's a lot of exercises and a lot of mobility things and a lot of things you can do to help it."
LeBron James returned to Lakers practice after being sidelined by sciatica and reported that his lungs felt like those of a newborn baby and his voice was already gone from practice. He did not fully commit to playing Tuesday against the Utah Jazz but appeared close to making his season debut in his 23rd NBA season. He described a gradual recovery aided by exercises and mobility work and emphasized monitoring how his body responds over the next 24 hours. Coach JJ Redick likened his presence in practice to having a new player. The Lakers have four days off after Tuesday's game.
Read at Los Angeles Times
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