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Pacers giving up points off turnovers

Pacers giving up points off turnovers

New York Times4 hours ago

Follow live reaction after Oklahoma City won 120-109 behind Williams and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (31 points) to move one win away from an NBA title Imagn Images
The Oklahoma City Thunder got 40 points from Jalen Williams and 31 points from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to survive another fourth-quarter Indiana Pacers comeback and take a 3-2 series lead with a 120-109 win in Game 5 of the 2025 NBA Finals.
The Thunder were up 14 points at halftime thanks to some stifling defense, forcing 10 Pacers turnovers and holding Indiana to 33 percent shooting. But the Pacers stormed back despite a quiet night from Tyrese Haliburton, who was dealing with right calf soreness, thanks to second-half performances from Pascal Siakam and unlikely hero T.J. McConnell, trailing by as little as two in the fourth quarter before the Thunder regained momentum.
Oklahoma City's defense forced 22 Indiana turnovers, Gilgeous-Alexander added four blocks, two steals and 10 assists to his scoring output, and the Thunder have their first lead of the series and are one win away from their first NBA title. Williams is the 14th player in NBA history with a Finals Game 5 performance of 40 or more points and the first since Devin Booker in 2021.
Game 6 is Thursday in Indianapolis.
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Jalen Williams' 40-point Game 5 has Thunder one win from NBA title Connections: Sports Edition Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms
OKC has already scored four points off three Indiana turnovers so far. Certainly not a recipe for success if the Pacers plan to win Game 5 and avoid their first series deficit of these playoffs. Getty Images
To Mike Prada's point, it's not just the screening from Isaiah Hartenstein that helps. He's already found one cutter, when he bounced an assist to Jalen Williams for a dunk.
Hartenstein is the king of finding guys on back cuts. The Thunder have needed someone who can take advantage of off-ball movement. Hartenstein has stepped up in that role early on in this one.
The Thunder had only 11 assists in Game 4 at Indiana Friday night.
Through the first 4:15 of Game 5, Oklahoma City already have 6 assists on their 7 field goals. Isaiah Hartenstein has three of them. Getty Images
This is the value of Isaiah Hartenstein — and why the Thunder have moved him back into the starting lineup. His backcourt screens have knocked Indiana's ball pressure back and made it far easier for the Thunder guards to get the ball up the floor and attack once they do.
Pascal Siakam has been so good in this postseason that it is unusual to see him get out of control or struggle in the slightest. He's committed two turnovers in the first four minutes of this game trying to attack each of the Thunder's twin towers off the dribble.
Thunder getting out on the run early and they've scored four points off of three Pacers turnovers. Getty Images
Q1 7:45 - Thunder 17, Pacers 12
This game has a nice pace to it so far. Chet Holmgren drills a 3 before Aaron Nesmith responds with a long ball of his own.
Isaiah Hartenstein finds Jalen Williams for a cutting layup and after a Pascal Siakam turnover, JDub gets out in transition before powering down a dunk. A few possessions later, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander gets all the way rim for an easy bucket causing the Pacers to call timeout.
That Chet Holmgren layup was one of the most difficult shots that I've seen someone make look so routine.
Jalen Williams continues to be the Thunder's lead ballhandler instead of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, as he was in Game 4.
Q1 12:00 - Pacers 0, Thunder 0
Tied at two games apiece, we have a critical Game 5 tonight in Oklahoma City. There's no more waiting necessary because we're underway.
As someone who has watched a whole lot of introductions over the years, I have to wonder if the league gave instructions to the teams, and then the teams gave instructions to the players, to honor their actual in-arena announcements and not just all run off the bench in a blob.
In Milwaukee, the Bucks are already in their huddle by the time the PA announcer calls the names of the final three players in the starting lineup.
It was Black Moon that once asked us, "Who Got Da Props?" This correspondent believes he has an answer. Again, all odds via BetMGM ... and all pregame vibes via Boot Camp Clik.
Q1 alternate spread of Oklahoma City -4.5 (+105) — OKC has won three of four first quarters in convincing fashion (+9 and +6 in the two home games, then +8 in Game 3). The Thunder lost their first opening period of the series on Friday night, but they still shot better than 50 percent from the field and forced four turnovers.
Tyrese Haliburton over 0.5 blocks (-105) — Believe it or not, Indiana's centerpiece point guard had four blocks across those first four Finals tilts. Before missing out in Game 4, Haliburton notched at least one stuff in five straight playoff games.
Obi Toppin over 1.5 made 3s (+105) — The Pacers reserve has been a surprising source of rebounds and defensive effort in this series. He's making the most of those earned extra minutes, trying a sizable 5.3 treys per Finals game. That bumps up to 6.5 in the road action. I see Toppin topping this one.
I've been going to NBA games on the road since 2021. The coolest part of traveling is seeing how the starting lineup package looks in these arenas. I grew up on the 1990s intros. To finally put them back on television is like a fever dream. Don't take them back off ever again!
Last postseason, I remember telling Athletic colleague Fred Katz that we have it all wrong. Game 7s are not the best games in a series. Game 5s tied at two are the best games in a series because Game 7s tend to be ugly and Games 5s are the sweet spot when desperation has kicked in and both teams know each other well.
He almost immediately told me I was an idiot. And then we watched the Knicks beat the Pacers by 30 points in Madison Square Garden. And I had to abandon my argument.
No lineup changes for this pivotal Game 5. Isaiah Hartenstein remains in there next to Chet Holmgren for the Thunder in a double-big set. Getty Images
Here's a fun Shai Gilgeous-Alexander stat. His Game 4 performance, where he took 24 shots and had no assists, was just the 26th time in finals history where a player had no assists on at least 24 shots. SGA is the 17th player to do that. It hasn't happened since Game 3 of the 1994 Finals when Patrick Ewing took 29 shots without an assist. Those players are 9-17 in those games.
We've got a tense Finals duel knotted at 2-2. Each team has swiped a road game and both rotations are at full strength. So, naturally, Monday's spread borders on double digits. Oddsmaking is something between a weird science and an inexplicable phenomenon.
Here's how it looks for Game 5. All listings via BetMGM:
OKC is laying 9.5 points at home. If you're surprised to see such a huge number this late in a tied series, just know that you're not alone. A whopping 73 percent of spread bettors are taking the Pacers to cover. The Thunder are -450 to win straight up, and moneyliners are digging that at a more modest 55 percent clip. The point total is coming in at 223.5, and an even 80 percent of the public is smashing that over.
When Indy beats the spread, it does so convincingly — by 11 points in Game 1 and 14.5 in Game 3. It fell one point shy of the +6 mark last time out. The over has hit in just one of these four games, and Friday's final came in 12.5 points under.
The NBA Finals are basketball's ultimate competitive showcase, including the sneakers worn on the court. Historically, that's been a showcase run predominantly by Nike, which includes a large roster of the NBA's biggest and highest-profile players, in addition to still producing merchandise under the Jordan Brand and Kobe Bryant.
It's impossible to watch the NBA without seeing the Nike influence. Nike is the league's official uniform partner, so the logo is on every player, down to the socks.
The 2025 finals, however, aren't about the biggest shoe brands. Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton used Game 1 to debut his first signature shoe with Puma: the Hali 1. Oklahoma City Thunder star and league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is signed to Converse, a subsidiary of Nike.
Read more here.
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NBA players and shoe deals: Motivation shifts to ownership, control vs. the brand
Ben Sheppard's main role in the first half was to press Jalen Williams full-court and the Pacers guard ended up getting beaten at the point of attack several times. On offense, his screening was weak and his off-ball spacing was too static. But he showed signs of life in the fourth quarter, handling Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's drives well on a few occasions and generally kept his arms back to not get called for fouls. The Pacers shouldn't have blown the lead in these minutes, but there were several screw ups on defensive box outs that let the Thunder bigs set up four second-chance baskets in the fourth quarter.
Especially after a game in which the Thunder could not hit an open 3, the Pacers may want to prioritize a tighter defensive shell that can affect the driving lanes and force more kickouts. It worked for parts of the fourth quarter, and if it weren't for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander hitting a tough stepback late in the fourth quarter, the Pacers could have pulled Game 4 out. Though most defenses in the NBA want to limit 3-point attempts, the Pacers have been taking 9.5 more 3s per game in this series and have a little room to play with in that advantage if they think it can limit the Thunder's free throw attempts.
But for all the small tweaks the Pacers could have made in Game 4, this game really came down to the Aaron Nesmith-Gilgeous-Alexander matchup and all those little fouls that piled up. The Thunder were able to get Nesmith switched onto the MVP throughout crunch time and the Pacers accepted the matchup, not shading enough help to force SGA to get off the ball. There likely isn't a better perimeter trio to close it out than Tyrese Haliburton-Andrew Nembhard-Nesmith, so Pacers coach Rick Carlisle will have to decide if he wants to close with Myles Turner or Obi Toppin late.
Carlisle will likely still play eight players at the minimum in Game 5, but he will have to change something to keep the offense going without Haliburton and to keep SGA from living at the line in crunch time.
Now that we are approaching the do-or-die part of the Finals, this is often when coaches trim their rotations down as tight as they can. For Rick Carlisle, that means figuring out who is going to be his eighth man. He experimented in Game 4 with both Ben Sheppard and Benn Mathurin when Tyrese Haliburton hit the bench and got burned by his second unit, losing both the early second quarter and early fourth quarter segments.
In the second quarter, the offense ran through TJ McConnell and Myles Turner once all the starters came off the floor. Because Turner is not hitting his shots right now, that unit was completely reliant on McConnell and that was too heavy a lift for him. Carlisle may choose to keep Mathurin out there instead of Sheppard to keep another attacker who can force the issue if the ball movement isn't getting anywhere. The Thunder defense was able to force outside shots from McConnell and Turner, which is exactly what they wanted.
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Rafael Devers Trade Unique As It Can Be Spun As Larceny For Both Sides
Rafael Devers Trade Unique As It Can Be Spun As Larceny For Both Sides

Forbes

time8 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Rafael Devers Trade Unique As It Can Be Spun As Larceny For Both Sides

Fans of the NBA know where they were when they heard the news of the trade of Luka Doncic from the Mavericks to the Lakers. Most people's immediate reaction was, 'Is that all it took?' Anthony Davis, Max Christie and a 2029 1st round pick landed one of the NBA's elite players in his prime. A much lesser light in Desmond Bane was traded from Memphis to Orlando this week for a significantly larger package. Suffice it to say that Mavs' GM Nico Harrison didn't get the best detail he could for Doncic. Well, this week, one of MLB's biggest stars changed clubs. It was an unusual deal as both clubs involved fancy themselves as contenders, and no cash was included in the deal on either side. The Red Sox dealt cornerstone offensive player Rafael Devers to the Giants for lefty starter Kyle Harrison, righty hurler Jordan Hicks, 2024 1st round pick James Tibbs III, an outfielder, and rookie ball hurler Jose Bello. Depending on whose opinion you're reading, the deal has been spun as larceny for either club. Those with an analytical bent think the Giants got swindled, believing that Devers is not worth his 10-year, $313.5 million deal that runs through 2033, his age 36 season. Many others can't fathom how the Giants landed one of the best hitters in baseball without including a present significant MLB contributor in the deal. Honestly, there's merit on both sides of the equation. Any evaluation of Devers must include the ongoing fiasco involving his unwillingness to move off of third base in Boston. The Red Sox signed Alex Bregman as a free agent this past offseason, and he is a far superior defender compared to Devers. The assumption was that Devers would move to DH, and the club would be much improved. Problem was, no one let Devers in on this. Or at least, the club handled it so clumsily that Devers flatly refused to move at first. Then to make matters worse, 1B Triston Casas was injured and lost for the season, and Devers, now grudgingly serving as a very productive DH, wasn't willing to play first. After a brutal 0 for 19, 15 strikeout start, Devers locked in, and through Sunday's games, was hitting .272-.401-.504. So the club, who completed a three-game sweep of the Yankees on Sunday to improve its record to 37-36, could maintain the status quo, or shop their franchise player. They chose the latter. Harrison is the presumed gem of the deal. While he's only 9-9, 4.48, with a 178/62 K/BB ratio in 182 2/3 innings in his brief MLB career, his minor league pedigree is strong. Each year, I compile a list of top minor league starting pitcher prospects based solely on statistical performance and age relative to league and level. Harrison was my #37 pitching prospect in 2021, #2 in 2022 and #5 in 2023. That's pretty special stuff. The Red Sox have some pretty strong pitching evaluators in their front office and on their coaching staff in former big leaguers Craig Breslow and Andrew Bailey, and they obviously see something they like. They must also like what they see in Hicks, whose record is poor at 1-5, 6.47, but who absolutely throws the heck out of the baseball. He's locked up through through 2027 on a four-year, $44 million deal. Tibbs is a well regarded prospect, lacking star ceiling but possessing a high floor. Bello is a live-armed 20-year-old who hasn't even pitched in a full season league yet. He's a lottery ticket. The key to evaluating this deal is projecting Devers' future. And the first thing that must be done to that end is to assess his present, as he's unlikely to ascend from here, as he's moving the wrong way on the defensive spectrum and his body has begun to soften up at age 28. Batted ball authority has always been Devers' calling card, and on most batted ball types, he has reached career bests in 2025. His overall average exit speed of 94.0 mph, his fly ball average exit speed of 95.3 mph and his ground ball average exit speed of 92.8 mph are all career highs. The overall and grounder marks are over two standard deviations above league average, the fly ball mark is over one above. He's not Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani authority-wise, but he's in the next tier. His K/BB profile is also an asset, and that's a relatively new development. While his K rate has always been fairly well managed for a power hitter (22.8% this season, in the league average range), his BB rate has mushroomed to 16.8% this season, over two standard deviations above league average. He was leading the AL in walks with 56 at the time of the trade. His batted ball profile also has no measurable weaknesses. His 37.4% fly ball rate is his highest ever, and his 3.0% pop up rate is his lowest since 2020. Both are in the league average range. His 18.2% liner rate is nearly a career low, but I wouldn't sweat it - liner rates are notoriously volatile. On top of everything else, Devers sprays the ball to all fields on the ground - he is not an extreme grounder-puller. Thus far in 2025, Devers has been a bit lucky in the air (225 Unadjusted vs. 180 Adjusted Fly Ball Contact Score) and on a line (149 vs. 114), but has been very unlucky on the ground (94 vs. 143). All told, he 'should be' hitting a bit less than his current actual numbers, more like a .253-.380-.480 hitter, for a 150 wRC+. I'm not really sweating the low present batting average projection given the low liner rate. I see him as basically the same hitter he was in 2024, but with a higher walk rate. Where is he going? Let's compare him to Miguel Cabrera, an even better hitter whose body was in a better place at age 28. He remained at least a 5.0 WAR player (a level Devers hasn't exceeded since 2019) through age 33, and then fell off of a cliff. Devers' contract runs through his age 33 season. He's going to be falling from a lower peak, at perhaps a higher rate of descent than Cabrera, but if he can remain 80-90% of his present offensive self through age 31-32, could the Giants really complain? The other interesting angle here is that Devers is going from one team with a Gold Glove 3B to another, as Matt Chapman is locked in for the long term in San Francisco. Expect the Buster Posey-led Giants to more concisely and professionally lay out their expectations for their new star, who will move forward as a DH/1B. Another overlooked piece of this deal is that while there is risk in Devers' contract, there is also risk in Hicks'. Sure the Red Sox could figure him out and make him more productive, but the chances of him being an impact starter or a high-end closer would appear remote at this point. Useful piece? Sure, with some luck. This partially mitigates the financial cost absorbed by the Giants, and cut loose by the Sox. From the Bosox' perspective, it's all about Harrison. There's a high-end starter in there somewhere, and it's up to them to unlock it. They need to be patient with him, and if all goes well, he could be a nice counterpart to Garrett Crochet atop their rotation. So I get that Devers' contract might be technically underwater, but 28-year-old star bats generally aren't available, and the Giants are out from under Hicks' money now too. And I get that the Red Sox didn't get a now dude as part of this transaction, but they removed a massive financial liability that enables them to go star-hunting, and Harrison could turn out to be really something. When proponents of both sides of a deal are going crazy in polar opposite directions for entirely different reasons, the truth tends to be somewhere in the middle. It's now up to the players, player development systems and coaching staffs to get to work to determine who wins and loses it.

Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton vows to go in Game 6: ‘If I can walk, then I want to play'
Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton vows to go in Game 6: ‘If I can walk, then I want to play'

New York Times

time15 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton vows to go in Game 6: ‘If I can walk, then I want to play'

OKLAHOMA CITY — Tyrese Haliburton entered his postgame news conference injured and crestfallen. The Indiana Pacers had lost 120-109 to the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 5 of the NBA Finals to go down 3-2 in the series. He had hurt his right leg and struggled during the game. He had made no field goals. The Pacers' point guard acknowledged he could've played better, but make no mistake, he was going to play. Advertisement 'It's the finals, man,' he said. 'I've worked my whole life to be here, and I want to be out there to compete with all my teammates any way I can. I was not great tonight by any means. 'But it's not really a thought of mine to not play here. If I can walk, then I want to play.' In Monday night's first quarter after falling to the court, Haliburton winced and grabbed his lower right leg. He briefly left the game for treatment before returning with his leg wrapped. Haliburton eventually returned to the court and tried to contribute, but he was never quite right. 'Just trying to keep pace in the game, impact whatever way I can,' Haliburton said of his efforts in the second half. 'Just trying to get (Pascal Siakam) the ball in the right spots. Try to get the ball to guys in the right spots if I can. As far as what happened there, we have to watch film to see it. 'We feel like we did a good job in the second half of putting pace in the game, and really getting out and running.' Haliburton's apparent injury occurred on the same leg he was seen limping on in Game 2, though he said he was uncertain whether the two injuries were connected. 'He's not 100 percent. It's pretty clear,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. 'But I don't think he's going to miss the next game. We were concerned at halftime, and he insisted on playing. 'I thought he made a lot of really good things happen in the second half. But he's not 100 percent. There's a lot of guys in the series that aren't. We'll evaluate everything with Tyrese and see how he wakes up tomorrow.' After going scoreless at halftime. Haliburton finished 0-of-6 on field goals and 0-of-4 on 3-point attempts. His career playoff low of four points came on 4-of-4 free-throw shooting. In the third quarter, veteran point guard T.J. McConnell helped swing the game's momentum toward the Pacers. McConnell, an offensive spark for Indiana, scored 18 points off the bench, including 13 in the third quarter. Advertisement Siakam drilled a 3 in the fourth quarter to help pull the Pacers within two, but the mistakes started piling up again. Just as they did in Game 4. 'Yeah, it's unfortunate,' Siakam said. 'Even with the game that we had, we still put ourselves in position (to win) at that point. We've got to take care of that — rebounding, or just those 50/50 balls, we've got to come up with it. Yeah, just that fast, it kind of like went away from us. But I thought the fight was there. We continue to fight no matter what, and we gave ourselves a chance until we made some mistakes there.' The Pacers turned the ball over 23 times. Siakam had six turnovers, and Haliburton added three. It was another night when the Pacers just couldn't seem to get out of their own way, as turnovers and offensive rebounds plagued them all night. 'We had 23 turnovers for 32 points,' Carlisle said. 'That's the game. We've got to do a heck of a lot better there.' While the Pacers struggled with miscues, the Thunder used them to turn the tide in their favor, stifling any small runs Indiana tried to make. 'They're good at playing with a lot of pressure at home,' guard Aaron Nesmith said. 'That's something we're going to have to do a lot better at and weather that storm.' In addition to turnovers, rebounds were once again a sore spot for the Pacers, even though they finished with five more rebounds than the Thunder (50-45). 'We fought back, though, through all the turnovers and extra possessions we gave them and showed a lot of fight,' McConnell said. 'But no moral victories. We got to go out and protect home court. Siakam finished with 28 points, six rebounds, five assists, three steals and two blocks. Nesmith added 14 points, six rebounds and one steal. Center Myles Turner contributed 13 points, and Obi Toppin added 12 off the bench. Advertisement For the first time in these playoffs, the Pacers have fallen behind in a series. Games 4 and 5 were their first back-to-back losses in more than three months. Throughout this postseason, Indiana has emphasized its resilience, citing past comebacks, and expressed confidence in its ability to fight and compete at home. But with the mistakes continuing to add up, an injured Haliburton and their backs against the wall, the Pacers return to Gainbridge Fieldhouse with their magical ride seemingly nearing its end.

Jalen Williams' NBA Finals breakout powered by years of hard work and conviction
Jalen Williams' NBA Finals breakout powered by years of hard work and conviction

New York Times

time21 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Jalen Williams' NBA Finals breakout powered by years of hard work and conviction

OKLAHOMA CITY — This father knew that look. Intimately. Those steely eyes above a scrunched nose and curled lip. A grimace of supremacy. His shoulders forward, arms bowed into a flex. Radiating a roaring, marauding energy. Monday night at Paycom Center, Pops saw it, felt it, as his son Jalen Wiliams bent Game 5 of the NBA Finals to his will. The All-Star forward attacked the Indiana Pacers like his reputation needed saving. Crossovers to the paint. Shoulder into chests. Layups softly off glass. Advertisement Williams constructed the game of his life: a playoff career-high 40 points in the most significant game he's ever played. He demoralized Indiana while lifting the Oklahoma City Thunder to the brink of a championship. After each body blow delivered, Williams bellowed from the depths of his confidence. He's typically economical with his words, so he said it with his chest. Williams' dad, Ronald, smiled as he recalled one of the original displays of that signature moxie from 15 years ago. A family game of two-on-two pitted parents against children on the courts of the Luke Air Force Base in Arizona. Willams and his younger brother Cody took on Ronald and their mom, Nicole — both hoopers in their day. Dad, as fathers do, asserted his physical superiority. He shoved the boys around a bit, antagonized them into frustration, toyed with their emotions as the game went to the wire. Jalen, about 9 years old at the time, shot his dad an angry stare. He backed his old man up with a hard jab step and then fired a 3-pointer. He drilled it for the game-winner. He yelled at his father, mustering all the machismo stored in his scrawny body as he lost himself in the basketball ecstasy. 'And for a minute,' his father said, his fluffy gray beard widening with his smile, 'he forgot I was his dad. I told him, 'I'll give you that one. But I'm still your dad.' He was just in the moment. And I said to myself, 'He's got something.' What you see here, he's been doing since he was 8 years old.' Conviction is a proficient octane. Jalen Williams keeps a full tank. He's 6-foot-6, 220 pounds with a 7-foot-3 wingspan. He's 24 years old with a motor that doesn't shut off. He dribbles with a point guard's ease, shoots it well spotting up and on the move with cotton candy touch around the basket. Yet, his greatest attribute is his unwavering belief. He's moved with confidence since he was knee-high to a grasshopper. And it's only grown as his game has developed, because faith without putting in the work is dead. Advertisement The most glaring question mark for Oklahoma City as it pursued its first title regarded whether Williams could handle the role of co-star on a champion. In just his third season, in his first finals appearance, he's morphed into the ideal co-star at warp speed. He scored 26 points in Game 3. Then 27 in Game 4. Then in Game 5, he delivered his signature performance. 'He was, like, really gutsy tonight,' Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'He stepped into big plays. Felt like every time we needed a shot, he made it. He wasn't afraid. He was fearless.' Trey Wertz, who started 33 games in his three seasons at Notre Dame, worked out with Williams this past summer in Las Vegas. They hadn't been on a court together since Santa Clara, when Williams was a wide-eyed freshman and Wertz was the sophomore leading scorer. Williams was a 6-foot-3 senior point guard at Perry High in Gilbert, Arizona, graduating in 2019. Santa Clara was one of only a few Division I offers he received. Wertz transferred out of Santa Clara before Williams' growth spurt, so he'd never laced them against this burgeoning NBA star, selected No. 12 in the 2022 NBA draft. And after working out, Wertz and Williams dove into one-on-one action. As he did years before, when he taught the lessons, Wertz stared down his defender, jab-stepped and pulled up for a jumper. Williams blocked it. Wertz, defiantly, tried the same move again. 'He blocked both of 'em,' Wertz said, 'And I'm like, 'Hold up. This is not how this used to go.' It was just funny how long his arms were. It can seem like you've got the space to get the shot off. But he's so long and lanky. Yeah, that was funny.' Williams's parents embedded the confidence in him early. Their conviction provided an example, plus they implanted theirs into his heart. Belief is a cornerstone of the Williams family and the eldest son, as a result, developed mental fortitude early. Because faith is undetachable from accountability. It's permanently intertwined with growth because of its bent on action. Advertisement Ronald and Nicole served a combined 36 years in the United States Air Force. Ronald did nine years as a jet engine mechanic before serving his last 15 years in logistics. Nicole served 12 years as a nurse. They believe in working like you're convinced of the outcome. It explains the old soul in Williams. He chewed as much wisdom as bubble gum in his youth. Now his mentality is fortified. It especially seeps out with the sayings he loves posting on social media. Sometimes, the things that break your heart end up fixing your vision. The young man just had to mature physically into his grown-up confidence. That's why Williams' pops — who played point guard back in his day at George Washington Preparatory High in Los Angeles, or Wash High to the locals — made sure his son played up in age and ran the point. And since dad topped out at 6-foot-7, a growth spurt was expected. They prepared for it by honing his guard skills. The shooting touch came from his mom, who also played ball. She was a guard/forward who could stroke it from the outside. The career moment Williams produced Monday was a collage rendered brilliantly into focus. Those floating layups off the wrong foot? Those came from aching knees during his growth spurt, prompting him to lean on finesse instead of burst. Those turnaround jumpers and the money 3-point range? That's in part from hours and hours of workouts, with Bay Area trainer Packie Turner, with Cody, with the Thunder's loaded roster of shooters. That sense of the moment, the way he ran toward the heat, embraced the risk of disappointment? That's a byproduct of struggling last year in the Western Conference semifinals. He was overwhelmed by the moment against the Dallas Mavericks, in just his second year. His last big Game 5 came against Dallas last year, on this same floor. He totaled 12 points on 13 shots in 39 minutes. The West's best team lost in the second round to the Mavs. Advertisement He was widely declared unready for the tall task of being a No. 2 on a contender. It was a long summer, with rough film sessions. A certain darkness is needed to see the stars. 'He's one of those guys that you want to see succeed, especially when you know him personally,' Chet Holgren said of Williams. 'You want to root for him. You want him to do good just because he shows up every single day, does the right things. He's a good guy off the court, treats everybody well. He's always respectful. He works really hard. 'You want to see it pay off for him. … We don't get here without him playing as good as he's playing. So, we've got to make sure he gets his credit, gets his flowers.' It's increasingly clear that if they aren't given to him, he'll take them. He pillaged the Pacers' garden Monday. Williams took 16 of his 25 shots inside the paint. This was the first time in his career he took at least 20 shots and at least 10 free throws. This new level of aggression came with Gilgeous-Alexander playing well. On this night, Williams was so sure of himself he put the game in his own hands. This wasn't a night for deferring, but defining. Game 5s in a 2-2 series are name-makers. Legacy builders. Game 5s are the beginning of the climax in a close series. The opening salvo in the grand finale. It is perhaps not a coincidence that Williams chose this setting to go his hardest. 'Great force,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'I mean, that's the word. We've used that word with him in his development. When he's at his best, he's playing with that type of force. 'That was an unbelievable performance by him, just throughout the whole game. He really was on the gas the entire night. Applied a ton of pressure.' The one applying pressure is no longer under its weight. Against Dallas last season, Williams played like a man who felt the magnitude. So he played bigger. Advertisement He's an All-Star. He made third-team All-NBA. He made second-team All-Defense. He defends multiple positions. He has the versatility to run the point and even switch over to center in the Thunder's small-ball lineups. And when the moment comes now, it belongs to him. He takes ownership. Off the court, his confidence comes off as swag. A liberation of style. He can sport a gold grill and dark glasses right along with a furry cardigan and magenta jeans. He mixes avant-garde with a durag covering meticulous cornrows, wears more rings than a guitarist and has a T-shirt range spanning from Jesus to The Judds, from Bruce Lee to OKC sideline reporter Nick Gallo. The regimented fashion sense of his military parents skipped a generation. 'That is not me. That's all God,' his dad said through a laugh. 'But he gets his creativity and his style from his mother. That's where his swag comes from.' On the court, his confidence manifests as bravado. He's a chill, humble kid from Chandler, Arizona, who speaks softly, smiles easily, is known for spreading warmth and diligently protects the vibes he curates. But between the lines, he's marked by his edge. It comes from knowing who he is, and who he wants to be, and how much he's put towards that conviction. His physique has caught up to his perspective. His skill supports his certitude. His tenacity feeds his work ethic. And his experience is catching up to his ambition. The fruit of his belief: a game 'I'd be lying if I said I could imagine doing' on the biggest stage of his life. He believed he could get here eventually. Just not this soon. He scored 24 points in the second half of Game 5, 11 in the fourth quarter. When Indiana cut the host's lead to two points, evoking flashbacks of how the Pacers rallied late to steal Game 1, Williams buried a 3-pointer from the right wing to seize the momentum back with 8:06 remaining. A minute and a half later, his driving floater kissed high off the glass to put the Thunder up 105-97. Just shy of two minutes later, he lost Pacers guard Aaron Nesmith with a fake before hitting a turnaround fadeaway from 17 feet. Advertisement With the series hanging in the balance, with Loud City peaking, Williams arrived on time. Nothing about it felt early. Not with how smoothly he backpedaled after the jumper. Not with how his eyes squinted and lips puckered, an expression declaring how cold he is — and getting even colder. He's sure of it. Realized the same water I thought was drowning me, taught me how to swim.

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