MIAMI — On the final night of the regular season, LeBron James and Kyrie Irving rested. So did fellow playoff-bound stars such as DeMar DeRozan, Draymond Green, John Wall, Paul Millsap and Giannis Antetokounmpo.

For them, the second season awaits.

For others, it was just a night off before a lot more nights off.

A season that had plenty of debate about players missing games to rest got another layer of it in Wednesday's round of finales.

Brooklyn sat six players for its finale in Chicago, a decision that raised some eyebrows in Miami — since the Heat needed a win by either the Nets or Atlanta (in Indiana) to have a shot at reaching the post-season.

The Nets will finish with the NBA's worst record, and some of their regulars who weren't on the floor for the last game of the season said they wanted to play.

Atlanta, which will head to Washington to open a playoff series this weekend and is locked into the No. 5 seed for the Eastern Conference playoffs, was without five of its top players for the game in Indiana.

The Chicago, Indiana and Miami games were deciding the final two spots in the 16-team field for this year's playoffs.

"Obviously, I completely understand they can be upset about it," Nets centre Brook Lopez said. "I'm disappointed that I can't be out there personally. Again, it frustrates me."

He wanted to play mainly because it was a chance to go up against his brother, Bulls centre Robin Lopez.

"It's frustrating for me because I definitely want to be out there," Brook Lopez said. "There is a lot of different reasons. Obviously I love being on the court with my teammates, playing against Robin and just the situation of the game, super-exciting."

Nets coach Kenny Atkinson defended the plan.

"I'm going to be honest as a competitor, I understand it, I understand the point of view that some of you have, some of the press has and maybe other teams, I do understand it," Atkinson said to reporters in Chicago.

"But again, we have to look at it from the Brooklyn Nets franchise and what is best for us and that's how we're looking into it in a vacuum. That's my responsibility as coach."

Heat point guard Goran Dragic understood what the Nets were doing. That doesn't mean he liked the decision.

"Maybe they're tired," Dragic said. "I don't know."

Dragic also said that the Heat shouldn't have had to rely on help from anyone else on the season's final night.

And on Tuesday, when word came that the Nets were sending a skeleton crew out for the Chicago game, Heat managing general partner Micky Arison tweeted a message to fans to not worry what other teams were doing.

"I think everyone plays 82 games and each one is just as valuable," said Nets guard Jeremy Lin, one of the Brooklyn players sidelined Wednesday.

"Not to say they don't have a right to be upset, but ... if you look across the league every team that has an opportunity to do it is doing it."

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra — who played six guys in Miami's finale at Philadelphia two years ago, four of them for all 48 minutes, though that game had no impact on any playoff race — wanted no part of discussing decisions made by other clubs.

He also didn't want the Heat thinking about it before its finale with Washington, which was resting Wall and Bradley Beal among others.

"I'm not talking about anybody else but our team," Spoelstra said.

The rest issue — not in Game 82, but for the rest of the season — has been a very hot topic across the league in recent weeks. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver told the league's board of governors last month that resting starters in some games is "an extremely significant issue for our league" and pressing owners to be more involved in the decision-making process.

Silver reiterated that last week, and the league will make changes to the schedule next season to further reduce back-to-backs and eliminate four-games-in-five-nights stretches.

Brook Lopez said the topic also came up in a recent conversation he had with the commissioner.

"Fans pay good money to come see certain players on the court, but at the same time you want to protect your players, so it is a lot of give and take," he said. "I think it's going to take a lot to figure out how to situate the schedule to most benefit the players as well give the fans what they want."

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Associated Press Writer Patrick Rose in Chicago contributed to this story.