MIAMI -- LeBron James' regular season is over, and the Cavs can't wait to say the same.

A team source said James would not play in Cleveland's finale Wednesday at home against the Toronto Raptors, but Kyrie Irving may see action. Neither played in the Cavs' 124-121 overtime loss to the Miami Heat Monday, which knocked the Cavs out of first place in the East.

Cleveland is 0-7 this year and 0-of-10 without James dating back to March of last season. The Cavs would need to win Wednesday and have Milwaukee beat the Boston Celtics to claim the No. 1 seed in the East on a tiebreaker over the Celtics.

James will be the first player in NBA history to average at least 25 points, eight rebounds and eight assists while shooting at least .540 from the field. In his 14th NBA season, James at 32 averaged a team-best 26.4 points to go with career highs in rebounds (8.7 per game) and assists (also 8.7 per night). He averaged 37:46 minutes per game. His turnovers (4.1) were a career high and his free-throw percentage (.674) was a career low.

James will have played in 74 of Cleveland's 82 games, missing all but one to rest (though, technically, the Cavs listed him as out of Monday's game with a strained right calf).

While Irving may return for the finale, coach Tyronn Lue said Tristan Thompson is expected to play against the Raptors after missing the last four games with a sprained right thumb. These are the only four games he's missed in the last four seasons.

As for the Cavs, they are just looking for this disappointing regular season to end. They've lost three straight, all in bizarre fashion, to ruin what was a golden opportunity to sew up the top seed after beating the Celtics last week.

Cleveland hasn't won since, losing to the Hawks' reserves on Friday at home and blowing a 26-point lead in the fourth quarter to Atlanta Sunday and losing in overtime. The Cavs were ahead by 11 when the fourth quarter began against the Heat and obviously coughed up that lead, too.

Cleveland, defending champs, was 30-11 at the midway point this season. The Cavs are 21-19 since.

"I think everyone's just ready for the regular season to be done and I think we've shown when we're focused that we can be a really good team, and when we're not we're not a very good team," said Kyle Korver, who scored 18 points against the Heat. "But I think we're just ready for Wednesday to come and go and get ready for the weekend."

If the playoffs started today, the Cavs would host the No. 7 seed Indiana Pacers either Saturday or Sunday at The Q. But there is of course an outside chance the Cavs still land the No. 1 seed, and Chicago trails the Pacers by one game (and holds the tiebreaker) for seventh.

Deron Williams signed as a free agent on Feb. 27, and erupted Monday for 35 points in 46 minutes. He shot 14-of-25 from the field and finished with nine assists, seven rebounds, and 10 turnovers. Now Irving's backup, Williams had only played 30 minutes once in his first 22 games here. This is not where he envisioned this team sitting -- on the outside looking in at first place -- when he signed.

"I thought we'd be playing a little bit better, a lot better actually than we're playing and things would gel, but there's been a lot of variables," Williams said. "Lot of injuries, lot of incorporating guys in, guys resting at times, so the rotations haven't been steady and substitution patterns have been off. Like I said, we've had some bright spots so that's what gives you hope."