
NBA Finals: Will Pacers or Thunder win? Team that stays in character
Yet, with their 116-107 victory Wednesday, June 11, the Pacers took a 2-1 lead over Oklahoma City and now sit two victories from their first NBA Finals title in franchise history.
Things could be very different. The Thunder were the best team in the NBA regular season (68-14) and appear to have the deeper team. But, in many ways, these NBA Finals are a case study of what happens in a clash of teams that -- when they play to their strengths and style -- are very tough to beat.
The question becomes: how does one get the other to play out of sorts?
A lot of it has come down to effort.
ANALYSIS: Game 3 winners and losers: Pacers' D contains SGA; Thunder turnovers are costly
OPINION: How the New York Knicks botched their search for a new head coach
"I just thought they really outplayed us on both ends," Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said Wednesday after the game. "I thought they were in character in terms of their physicality, their pressure on defense. Then they were in character in terms of their pace on offense.
"They just stacked way more quality possessions in the fourth quarter than we did."
That's the essence: at this stage in the NBA postseason, with elite teams vying for championships, merely staying in character can mark the difference between winning and losing.
For the Pacers, the key appears to lie in speed and protecting the ball. Because when Indiana does that, it puts up more shots. And as the top shooting team this postseason (49.5%), more shots means more points. More points for this team also signifies fewer transition opportunities for Oklahoma City.
After committing six turnovers Wednesday in the first quarter, the Pacers committed just a single one in the second. Indiana, unsurprisingly, outscored Oklahoma City by 12 in the period. This was the run that set the tone for the rest of the game.
When the Pacers turning the ball over, they play right into Oklahoma City's preferred style. Because the Thunder are at their best when they are physical and handsy on defense, deflecting passes and clogging the paint.
And when the Thunder force teams into turnovers, they can ignite on explosive and overwhelming runs that can put games away.
But when they don't force turnovers, they can become too reliant on Gilgeous-Alexander to lift the team.
"They were aggressive," Gilgeous-Alexander said after the game. "I'm not sure how many points they had, but it felt like when they scored, we were going against a set defense, and it's always harder against a set defense."
Perhaps surprising some, the Pacers have been the aggressor on defense so far. As they have all postseason, relying on their youth, conditioning and athleticism, the Pacers have picked up the opposing team's best player -- Gilgeous-Alexander -- full court, gradually wearing him down.
This has also slowed Oklahoma City's offensive operation, forcing them to work in the halfcourt, which has been exposed this series as something of a weakness.
In the fourth quarter Wednesday, a weary Gilgeous-Alexander put up just three shot attempts and did not record a single assist.
Game 4 on Friday, June 13 (8 p.m. ET, ABC) becomes pivotal. The Thunder are still favored to even the series, but a 3-1 Indiana lead could become insurmountable. Can either team rely on its character to win the series?
It has felt, at times, like the difference has been levels of aggression and intention.
"When you execute the right way, whether it's two years ago in some game that doesn't seem very meaningful in mid-January or in Game 3 of the Finals, these guys see where important things are important, and hard things are hard," Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said.
"That's a phrase I've used many times, hard things are hard. But our guys, they have made the investment, and it's an ongoing thing. It's like a great marriage; it's a lot of work."

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NBC News
7 hours ago
- NBC News
In the biggest moment of his career, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander kept his cool — and saved the Thunder's season
INDIANAPOLIS — Through the first three quarters of Game 4 of the NBA Finals, Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander — the regular season MVP — was faltering in the highest-stakes moment of his career. Though he had 20 points at the time, the Thunder were outscored by 16 with Gilgeous-Alexander on the floor. The offense looked discombobulated, and SGA was being hounded by Indiana Pacers guard (and childhood friend) Andrew Nembhard, unable to find space to operate. Oklahoma City looked very much in danger of going down 3-1, a deficit only one team has ever overcome in the championship round. And SGA was being rendered ineffective, forced to play off the ball by Nembhard's aggressive defense and failing to put his imprint on the game. But the MVP saved his best for last, scoring 15 points in the final frame, a poised response in the midst of a hard-fought battle. As a result, the Thunder out-clutched the most clutch team in the postseason with a 111-104 win — and now they're back in the driver's seat of the finals. 'I just tried to be aggressive,' Gilgeous-Alexander said of his performance down the stretch. 'I knew what it would have looked like if we lost tonight. I didn't want to go out not swinging. I didn't want to go out not doing everything I could do in my power, in my control to try to win the game...I guess it paid off.' All of SGA's fourth-quarter points came in the last four minutes and 38 seconds of the game, accounting for 15 of his team's final 16 points. 'I didn't know that, but that's crazy,' Oklahoma City center Chet Holmgren said when told about that stat. 'We've seen it before from him. We know that that's the type of player he is. But it's still impressive.' 'It's unbelievable,' said Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault. 'He really didn't have it going a lot of the night. He was laboring. We had a hard time shaking him free. For him to be able to flip the switch like that and get the rhythm he got just speaks to how great of a player he is.' It would have been easy for SGA to be frustrated. Game 4 was a slog. It was a physical matchup with both teams being called for over 25 fouls. And Nembhard was seemingly attracted to Gilgeous-Alexander by a magnetic force, following him around every square inch of the court. Instead, Gilgeous-Alexander remained at an even keel. When his team absolutely needed him to score, SGA found ways to evade Nembhard, often by drawing Indiana guard Aaron Nesmith into ball screens to force a switch, aggressively hunting a more favorable matchup. SGA finished the fourth quarter 3 of 6 from the field and 8 of 8 from the free-throw line, and the Thunder outscored the Pacers by 16 points in the 11 minutes and 12 seconds he was on the floor. It was the opposite of Gilgeous-Alexander's Game 3 fourth-quarter performance, when he looked fatigued and scored only three points. 'You really wouldn't know whether he's up three, down three, up 30, down 30, eating dinner on a Wednesday. He's pretty much the same guy,' Daigneault said of his star's resolve. 'You wouldn't know if it was a preseason game or it's Game 4 of the NBA Finals down 2-1 with him,' Thunder guard Alex Caruso added. 'No matter what's going on, you look at him and he's the same. Underneath that stoic personality or look on the court is a deep, deep-rooted competitiveness.' Gilgeous-Alexander wouldn't have been in position for his late heroics if not for OKC's defense, it should be noted. Indiana started the game on fire, scoring 20 points in the first four minutes and 48 seconds of the opening quarter. In the final five minutes and three seconds of the fourth, the Pacers scored only seven points. The lockdown defense set the stage for SGA, and he took advantage, turning the finals into a best-of-three series and wrestling back homecourt for the Thunder. 'Winning, especially this time of the season, it comes down to the moments, it's going to come down to late game,' the MVP said. 'Every team is good. There's rarely going to be a blowout. It comes down to the moments and who is willing to make winning plays on both ends of the floor. 'When I was a kid shooting at my driveway, I'd count down the clock for those moments. Now I get to live it. It's a blessing, it's fun, and I relish it.'


Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Stephen A. Smith accused of lying as video emerges after denial of 'embarrassing' act in NBA Finals
Stephen A. Smith has been accused of lying after video emerged of him playing soliatire on his phone during the NBA Finals, where he was working for ESPN. Smith, who earlier this year signed a $100million ESPN contract, was at first only pictured playing on his phone during the game and he insisted it had been taken during a timeout. But now, video has surfaced showing the NBA Finals game between Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers being played in front of him while he was glued to his phone. The ESPN man had defiantly shot down suggestions he wasn't being professional on Friday night, saying on X: 'Yep! That's me. Who would've thought….I can multi-task. Especially during TIMEOUTS! Hope y'all are enjoying the NBA Finals. This is going 7 games now, peeps!' That tweet now has a scathing readers' note which says: 'Stephen A. Is lying. This photo was taken during gameplay, NOT during a timeout.' Smith, who has not responded yet to the video, was tagged in a post by X user @BleedBlue1986, who wrote: 'How can you have all of these opinions while you're playing solitaire instead of watching the game @stephenasmith?' He has been accused of lying after video showed him playing on his phone during the game The user then replied to his denial: 'Fool, this was you during game play. There's videos. You started this new round during timeouts.' Smith was also mocked by NBA great Kevin Durant on social media - the Phoenix Suns player shared the picture of Smith on his Instagram with the caption: 'Cmon Steve'. Durant wasn't the only one who was left unimpressed. 'That's embarrassing,' one user said about Smith's behavior in Indianapolis. 'He is a disgrace,' another fumed. 'And some of you believe he watches games in his free time from home. He can't even watch a game 4 NBA finals game in person,' argued a third. 'ESPN used to be serious but have become such a gimmick based sports network.' Later in the night, Smith shared a photoshop of his phone screen, showing last night's game alongside solitaire. It is all the more remarkable though because Friday's NBA showdown was a huge night of drama, with the Thunder beating the Pacers 111-104 to level the Finals at 2-2. The Thunder went on a gripping 12-1 rampage in the final three minutes to seize victory. Newly-crowned MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had a game-high 35 points to lead all scorers, including a 12-for-24 mark from the field. Smith's embarrassing moment comes after he ramped up his feud with Pacers superstar Tyrese Haliburton, who appeared to throw shade at him earlier this week by saying: 'What do they really know about basketball?' After responding by calling him 'ignorant', the outspoken analyst continued about Haliburton: 'It just amazes me how cats can be sometimes. Win the damn chip, bro. 'In the first two games of this NBA final series, you had your moment with 1.3 seconds left. Other than that, you didn't play well.' Game 5 in the series is Monday night, back in Oklahoma.


Daily Mail
16 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Solitary sin as Stephen A Smith caught playing on phone in 'embarrassing' clip from NBA Finals
Stephen A Smith's credibility as a sports commentator is being questioned after he was seen playing solitaire on his phone during the NBA Finals on Friday night. The ESPN analyst was caught in the 'embarrassing' act by a home fan as the Indiana Pacers hosted the Oklahoma City Thunder at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Smith was working for the broadcaster on the night - meaning he was expected to provide analysis before, during and after the game. X user @BleedBlue1986 wrote: 'How can you have all of these opinions while you're playing solitaire instead of watching the game @stephenasmith?' It was initially unclear whether the image was genuine or not, despite the photographer - Kimberly - insisting she took it during the third quarter. After it went viral online, Smith confirmed the picture is real. He responded on X: 'Yep! That's me. Who would've thought….I can multi-task. 'Especially during TIMEOUTS! Hope y'all are enjoying the NBA Finals. This is going 7 games now, peeps!' Yet Kimberly hit back in an instant, shutting down Smith's claim that it was captured during a timeout. 'Fool, this was you during game play,' she replied along with another picture of him tackling the card game. 'There's videos. You started this new round during timeouts.' Admission: After it went viral, Smith confirmed the photo is real and claimed it was taken during a timeout Footage shared by another user online appears to show Smith playing solitaire while Pacers and Thunders players are very much in action on the court. The First Take personality also poked fun at the controversy by sharing a mocked-up image of a solitaire game positioned just above coverage of Friday's Pacers-Thunder matchup. But NBA fans were far from impressed by his lack of focus on the biggest game of the season so far. 'That's embarrassing,' one user said about Smith's behavior in Indianapolis. 'He is a disgrace,' another fumed. 'And some of you believe he watches games in his free time from home. He can't even watch a game 4 NBA finals game in person,' argued a third. 'ESPN used to be serious but have become such a gimmick based sports network.' 'Bro don't even care about the game,' wrote a fourth. While one simply asked: 'Good god really???' Tears why u lying — ᴅ ʀ ᴇ ᴡ (@FeelLikeDrew) June 14, 2025 In the game itself, the Thunder went on a 12-1 run in the final three minutes of the game to stun the Pacers in a 111-104 come-from-behind victory, which has tied the NBA Finals at two games apiece. Newly-crowned MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had a game-high 35 points to lead all scorers, including a 12-for-24 mark from the field. Smith's embarrassing moment comes after he ramped up his feud with Pacers superstar Tyrese Haliburton, who appeared to throw shade at him earlier this week by saying: 'What do they really know about basketball?' After responding by calling him 'ignorant,' the outspoken analyst continued about Haliburton: 'It just amazes me how cats can be sometimes. 'Win the damn chip, bro. In the first two games of this NBA final series, you had your moment with 1.3 seconds left. Other than that, you didn't play well. 'That ain't on me. That's on you, you know. And, oh, by the way, just in case he was talking about me, my brother, I'm not going away. 'I'm gonna be here for a while. So next year, and the year after that… I'm going to be here, and players far more accomplished and far more superior have made their efforts trying to call me out. How has that worked out?'