The Pacers were on their way to taking a commanding 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals Friday night when their offense inexplicably hit a wall, writes James Boyd of The Athletic. The crisp passing and constant motion they’ve displayed throughout the series disappeared in the fourth quarter, allowing Oklahoma City to rally for a 111-104 victory and head back home with the series tied.
“We just got too stagnant,” coach Rick Carlisle said. “The ball was not being advanced quickly enough. We weren’t creating problems, and we were up against the clock a lot. So things got very difficult, but you gotta give Oklahoma (City) credit. They made it very difficult.”
The numbers tell an ugly story as Indiana was outscored 31-17 during the final 12 minutes. Tyrese Haliburton, who went 3-of-7, was the only Pacers player to make more than one shot during the fourth quarter as they registered just one assist and committed three turnovers. Ten of their 27 fouls came in the fourth quarter, and they shot just 5-of-18 as a team while missing all eight of their three-point attempts.
“I gotta do a better job of keeping pace in the game,” Haliburton said. “I thought I did a much better job of that last game, especially down the stretch. Keeping pace, getting rebounds and really pushing (the ball). I think we gotta do a better job of when we do get stops, getting out and running. A lot of times in that fourth (quarter), we were fouling too much, taking the ball out, having to kind of run (a set play) versus just random basketball.”
There’s more on the Pacers:
- Even with the late struggles, Indiana was positioned for another miracle finish when Bennedict Mathurin went to the foul line trailing by four points with 24 seconds remaining, per Kyle Neddenriep of The Indianapolis Star. Mathurin missed both shots, but got another opportunity a few seconds later with a five-point deficit. He split those attempts, effectively killing any hope of a Pacers comeback. “It’s very tough,” said Mathurin, who had been connecting at 89% from the line throughout the playoffs. “I’ve made those free throws, and I love making tough free throws. The only thing I can do is to knock them down next time.”
- During Friday’s broadcast, ABC announcer Mike Breen shared a conversation with Pacers forward Aaron Nesmith, who credited Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla for helping him early in his career, relays Brian Robb of MassLive. Nesmith played two seasons in Boston before being traded to Indiana in 2022.
- Carlisle has been preparing his players for a lengthy series, which will last 18 days if it goes the full seven games, according to Jamal Collier of ESPN. Carlisle believes his team will be mentally ready when play resumes Monday night. “It’s long. It’s arduous. But it’s the greatest opportunity going,” he said. “It’s really hard, and it’s supposed to be hard. This is where we’re going to have to dig in and circle the wagons and come back stronger on Monday. This is a big disappointment, but there’s three games left. This series is going to come down to the basics. … This kind of a challenge is going to have extreme highs and extreme lows. This is a low right now, and we’re going to have to bounce back from it.”
As soon as hali touches the ball, 2 okc players immediately defending him . He wants to take more shots but thunder D is all over him. Indy gotta find a way to create for space for ty
And refs gotta stop being so incompetent & corrupt. Its disgusting. Entering gm 4, sga had 26 fta, hali had 0. Zero!
Nesmith fouled out 2 consec gms. Ridiculous calls
Haliburton has a career FT attempts of well below 3 per game ……. that’s across 5 regular seasons and 2 post-seasons.
Hali’s great, but maybe it’s his high-dribble, pass-first, finesse playstyle that’s the cause of this low FT attempts rather than the refs.
Have u watched the gms? If a pacers player looks at a thunder player the wrong way he gets called for a foul. If he sneezes he gets a T
Officiating has been absurd
Yall act like OKC getting 10+ more fts a game. Every game has been a single digit difference. The one they had 8 they lost…FTs are hardly a difference keep grasping.
I have watched the games, save for G3 (saw parts of it). IMO it’s been a fairly called series so far.
SGA’s game has evolved, the game has slowed down for him, foul-merchant aspect included …… but this is the way the league has been called, aggressive play tends to be rewarded with more whistles.
Hali’s just not that type – he’s great, but he’s finesse, his dribble is way high, can’t create separation easily than others. He doesn’t look for contact on drives as well.
He looks to score. SDA looks to “make contact” and then throws up a wild stupid shot.
Leading by 4, Pacers should have challenged that foul called on nesmith on that foul-baiting move by SGA which happened in the 3 1/2 minute mark in the 4th qtr.
Or the push-off by SGA resulting to a mid range jumper, thunder getting the lead by 1…
The push off was such a terrible non-call. SDA does it all game.
> Leading by 4, Pacers should have challenged that
> foul called on nesmith on that foul-baiting move by
> SGA
A challenge would have failed. That’s a foul every time. “Hand in the cookie jar”. Defensive player reaches and rests his hand on the ball-handler’s extended arm, giving ball-handler opportunity to draw instant foul. Dumb, dumb play by Nesmith.
You might not like rule, but SGA isn’t alone in taking advantage. KD may be the best at it. Kobe was expert.
Rigged game.
Why is there this comparison between SGA and Hali free throws? It’s apples and screwdrivers comparison. One guy drives often to the hoop to initiate contact and does it often.
The other guy dribbles around a bunch at the top of the key and chucks up 3s and rarely drives to the hoop unless he has a lane or on a turnover.
Of course the first player is gonna shoot way more free throws.
Cry harder about the refs. They’re missing calls on both sides.
How about don’t miss 8 free throws in clutch time and turn the ball over when you have a lead. Indy has ONLY themselves to blame for choking away game 4 at the end.
Hali hasn’t learned that yet. SGA has it down to instinct. He is taking them to school.
Pacers had a chance to win this game. They were up 87 — 80 after 3Q. Thunder out scored them 31 — 17 in 4Q. Thunder closed this game out. SGA played like the MVP in 4th quarter. Pacers need consistent scoring. Only Siakam has provided that. Hali should be trying for 12-15 ast. The shots will be there for him. If he does that.