CLEVELAND, Ohio -- LeBron James missed Saturday's loss to the Chicago Bulls with strep throat and Kyle Korver apparently suffered a bruised right knee late in the fourth quarter.

Because of their various illnesses and ailments, James and Korver's status for Monday's game against the Milwaukee Bucks is in question.

There's not much to say about James beyond what he has -- the nasty, painful virus possibly passed on by one of his two school-aged boys that kept him out of the Bulls' 117-99 win Saturday night.

James practiced Friday and posted a video to Instagram of him drinking a glass of wine and eating lunch in the driveway of his suburban Akron mansion in the unseasonably warm weather. But James missed shootaround and of course the game, texting a confidant Saturday afternoon that he was quite sick and wouldn't play.

The Cavs are now 4-19 without James since the start of the 2014 season and have lost their last seven on nights when he doesn't play.

As for Korver, he said he landed "straight legged" on his right leg with 2:59 left in the game and then had his knee hit. He stayed down on the court and was attended to before slowly standing and limping to the locker room.

Korver returned to the bench, and afterwards said the Cavs training staff tested his knee and there was no ligament damage. He said no imaging was done.

"I didn't know what it was going to feel like when I stood up," said Korver, who scored 14 points in the game. "I was really worried. I don't like to stay down on the ground long, but it just, until I put weight on it I didn't really know. I'm feeling very fortunate right now. It could've been worse."

Korver wouldn't commit one way or the other to Monday's home game against the Bucks, saying he needed to see how he feels Sunday.

Korver moved into fifth place in NBA history with 2,014 career 3-pointers, knocking down four treys to pass both Vince Carter and Jamal Crawford. Korver is 62-of-118 since joining the Cavs in a trade from the Hawks in early January.

"You want to enjoy the moment, and I want to keep climbing. But that's, yeah I don't have the words for it right now to truly say what that means to me.