logo
Pacers ride deafening Indiana crowd as Tyrese Haliburton inspires crucial NBA Finals Game 3 win over Oklahoma City

Pacers ride deafening Indiana crowd as Tyrese Haliburton inspires crucial NBA Finals Game 3 win over Oklahoma City

Daily Mail​2 days ago

Just before Game 3 of the NBA Finals tipped off on Wednesday night, the Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton and his teammates could be seen singing a perfectly befitting soundtrack for their high-wire postseason act.
50 Cent's 'Many Men' - a song inspired by the rapper surviving a harrowing near-death experience - blared from the Gainbridge Fieldhouse's speakers, as Indiana and their fans hoped this improbable run could take a gargantuan step forward towards a 2-1 series lead.
And ultimately, these Pacers proved they were not out of lives just yet as they overcame an early deficit en route to a rapturous 116-107 win.
The Pacers didn't wind up needing Haliburton's now-typical late heroics, though he produced a 'combination of spatial awareness and aggression' in the words of coach Rick Carlisle, as he produced a mature 22-point double-double. Newly-minted MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, meanwhile, scored 24 points, but coughed up six turnovers and went missing down the stretch.
Still, despite the hostile conditions in Indianapolis - who were hosting their first Finals game since 2000 - it was Oklahoma City who raced out to a 15-6 lead, which led to a quick timeout from coach Rick Carlisle.
'The conversation was 'we gotta wake up', you know, I think that was the biggest thing,' Haliburton recalled of the message during that stoppage. 'We had a couple bad turnovers there, we played a little - antsy probably is the right word. I thought we just did a great job responding.'
The retort that followed was emblematic of Indiana's postseason run to this point. Carlisle spoke before the game of the 'pride' in the state's basketball reputation, and that was evident during a game which drew Caitlin Clark to a courtside seat, and saw Pat McAfee deliver a fourth quarter pep talk to fans, telling them to get louder than OKC's home base had been in Games 1 and 2.
Indiana, in front of their adulating fans, did not wilt after its rough start, which included 13 first-quarter points from Chet Holmgren as the young big man torched them inside.
A Haliburton three-pointer towards the end of the first quarter cut the OKC lead to just two points and brought the noise to deafening levels, while a TJ McConnell steal (far from his first of the night) and possession-win after throwing the ball off of Cason Wallace briefly looked like it could be the turning point for the night early into the next period.
McConnell would finally give the Pacers a 37-36 lead not long after with two makes at the free throw line, and what had been a competitive but confident start from the Thunder soon turned skittish.
Indiana's defensive wall firmed up inside, with Gilgeous-Alexander and Co. forcing up some difficult looks, and the stats soon showed that the visitors - previously huge favorites to take this series - had been outscored 15-4 in a four-and-a-half minute span to open the second quarter.
The first half (and beyond) was defined by several supporting-cast performances, as Bennedict Mathurin led the team into halftime with 14 points off the bench (he finished with 27), while Lu Dort's nine points in the first quarter helped his team build an early advantage. Obi Toppin's energy off of the bench also helped turn the tide for the hosts.
'This is the kind of team that we are,' Carlisle said afterwards. 'We need everybody to be ready. It's not always going to be exactly the same guys that are stepping up with scoring and stuff like that. But this is how we got to do it, and we got to do it as a team. And we've got to make it as hard as possible on them.'
But it wouldn't be too long before the stars on both sides woke up, too, and before OKC settled down - even if their offense was clunky and sloppy at times.
Haliburton - who came into the game reportedly battling a minor ankle injury - increasingly probed as the half went on, setting up looks for both himself and his teammates as he darted into the paint, while Gilgeous-Alexander was able to labor his way to his spots, even if the MVP looked uncomfortable with Indiana's defensive pressure at times.
All told, OKC ended the first half with 11 turnovers, which gifted the Pacers 13 points and perhaps more crucially, the belief that they could really stun the NBA universe again.
'Those plays hurt, especially because they're very controllable,' Gilgeous-Alexander said of the Pacers scoring off of turnovers. 'You can take your time. You make mistakes in basketball, no matter the stage. We definitely had opportunities to cover those things up. But you also don't let plays like that happen.'
Indiana's stubborn spirit from the first 24 minutes persisted in the third quarter, as the hosts withstood another Thunder flurry.
OKC quickly flipped the Pacers' lead to begin the period, turning a four-point deficit to a lead of the same amount, which instilled a noticeably nervy energy in the area for a few moments. It actually could've been seven had Holmgren made an open three from the top of the arc.
Gilgeous-Alexander and his teammates were frustrated for long periods of the second quarter
But as these Pacers so often do - as they did against the Bucks, Cavs, Knicks and now against the league-best Thunder - they fought back despite Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams' (team-high 26 points) increasing presence in the contest, with the pair combining for seven field goals in the quarter.
A Haliburton steal and wide open layup (a 'pick-six' if you will), soon pushed the hosts' lead back to four, and the rest of the quarter was back and forth as neither team was able to create much distance.
A three-pointer from Williams to end the quarter then gave the Thunder a five-point cushion and a bit of daylight heading into the fourth. But that speck of comfort proved fleeting.
'I was proud of the way we bounced back from a rough ending to the third quarter,' Carlisle said after the game. 'That was something that could have shaken us up a lot, but the guys that went back in there to start the fourth, they kept their head down and kept competing.'
The pesky McConnell, who nabbed five steals on the night, earned his final one early in the period off an inbounds pass from Caruso, to tie the game at 95 with a subsequent layup.
At this point, Indiana smelled blood in the water and re-gained the lead less than a minute later as Mathurin drilled a three, while OKC's offense clammed up down the stretch.
Haliburton later forced a timeout with 6:42 remaining as his deep-range bomb gave the Pacers a three-point lead. A couple of minutes after, the Pacers and their fans could exhale slightly more as Toppin - not for the first time this postseason - brought the house down with a dunk, which in this case gave the hosts a seven-point lead.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shane Lowry reflects on 'one of the stupidest things I've ever done' after breaking simple golf rule during difficult week at US Open
Shane Lowry reflects on 'one of the stupidest things I've ever done' after breaking simple golf rule during difficult week at US Open

Daily Mail​

time21 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shane Lowry reflects on 'one of the stupidest things I've ever done' after breaking simple golf rule during difficult week at US Open

Shane Lowry was left cursing a moment of madness at the US Open after picking up his ball without marking it — a simple but costly mistake that led to a penalty stroke during his second round at Oakmont. The incident happened on the 14th green, where Lowry — facing a long-range par putt — lifted his ball before placing a marker behind it. His caddie, Darren Reynolds, immediately spotted the error. 'I just picked the ball up,' Lowry later admitted. 'I had the ball in my hand, turned around, and Darren basically said to me, "What are you doing?" 'I put it back down, marked it, and played on. I knew it was going to be penalised. I didn't know if it was going to be one or two [shots].' According to article 14.1c of the Rules of Golf, 'before lifting a ball under a Rule that requires it to be replaced on its original spot, the player must mark the spot.' Failing to do so results in a one-stroke penalty. If the ball is then replaced incorrectly, further penalties can apply — though Lowry avoided the latter by correcting his error. He was docked one stroke and went on to make a double bogey at the hole — one of several costly moments during two bruising days in Pennsylvania. Lowry called the slip 'probably one of the stupidest things I've ever done', but he managed to laugh at himself despite the frustration. 'Maybe my mind was somewhere else,' he added. 'But I fought. I still tried on every shot. That's all you can do in a week like this.' The 2019 Open champion ultimately missed the cut by 10 shots after rounds of 79 and 78, finishing 17 over par. Only three players were under par by the time he left the event on Friday. Lowry said he had arrived at Oakmont in good form, but never found any rhythm on the greens — ranking 153rd out of 156 in strokes gained putting. He three-putted four times across his two rounds and carded five double bogeys in total. 'I drove it in play a lot, did what I was supposed to off the tee, but I didn't have the game I've had for the last while,' he said. 'The round got away from me. I let it do to me what I said it wouldn't. But that's Oakmont. That's the US Open.' Lowry now heads to the Travelers Championship before returning home to Ireland for the first time since Christmas. 'I've been away from my wife and kids for a few weeks now, and there's another week next week,' he said. 'I'm looking forward to getting home, seeing all my friends and family.' In a post on X (formerly Twitter), he added: 'Never nice heading home early on major weekends. My game was in good shape heading into Oakmont but that's golf sometimes. I gave it my all on every shot and that's all I can ask.' 'I play with my heart on my sleeve. I've always been a fiery and passionate player and I'll continue to be. It's who I am and how I got here.' Lowry was not the only high-profile casualty at Oakmont, with Tommy Fleetwood, Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau also missing the cut.

Fast-expanding Kings League eyes US launch by 2026
Fast-expanding Kings League eyes US launch by 2026

Reuters

time27 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Fast-expanding Kings League eyes US launch by 2026

PARIS, June 14 (Reuters) - The Gerard Pique-founded Kings League said on Saturday that it aims to launch its seven-a-side soccer format in the United States by 2026, adding to the list of nations where the online-orientated competition already has a footprint. At a briefing in Paris, Kings League CEO Djamel Agaoua told reporters that a U.S. Kings League could be launched around the end of this year and start of the next. "We feel ready to attack the big animal, which is the U.S. market ... we start on the East Coast for operational reasons," said Agaoua, who was in the French capital for the Kings World Cup Clubs final at La Defense Arena on Saturday evening. Various new buzzy soccer formats, with smaller teams and shorter games than traditional 90-minute football, have sprung up round Europe and elsewhere in recent years, attracting a host of online influencers and former professionals. With special rules to heighten entertainment, the leagues are attracting major investment and large streaming audiences, even as some traditional fans deride them as a glitzy distortion of the world's favourite sport. Created by former Spanish international Pique in 2022, the Kings League has expanded fast to Italy, Germany, France and Brazil. It also plans to launch a MENA league for the Middle East and Africa later this year in partnership with Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund's sports arm. The league estimates a 5-7 million euro ($5.8-$8.1 million) investment in each new market, though the U.S. venture would cost more, Agaoua said. The Kings League raised 60 million euros from investors in its latest funding round last year. However, it was staying away from China due to regulatory challenges and from the U.K. because streaming, including the Twitch platform, was less developed, the Kings League CEO said at the briefing with Pique. The Baller League, already in Germany and the UK, also plans to launch its six-a-side format in the U.S. later this year, with online personality iShowSpeed, whose real name is Darren Watkins Jr., its president. Pique, 38, a defender who played for Barcelona, told Reuters the existence of rival leagues was not a deterrent. "In Italy, for example, we had Goa7 League before we arrived ... It doesn't exist anymore," he said. "We have already two copycats that have created some similar concept ... in Germany, but we decided to go to Germany anyway and we've been there with also great success." The two competitors in Germany are the Baller League Germany and ICON League, which was set up by ex-player Toni Kroos and content creator Elias Nerlich. With an eye to videogame rules, the Kings League has novel twists such as 'President Penalties,' which gives club bosses a chance to get on the scoresheet as well as players. "You have a portion of fans that are a little bit tired of seeing the same thing every year," Agaoua said of traditional soccer. "We estimate that we have probably 60% of our fans that are football fans and 40% that are not football fans that came to football through us." Pique said 85% of Kings League viewers were under 35, consuming sports via Twitch, YouTube and other social media. The league says it has generated over 7 billion impressions and 400 million engagements globally on social media. ($1 = 0.8657 euros)

Saints sign RB Cam Akers to 1-year contract
Saints sign RB Cam Akers to 1-year contract

Reuters

time31 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Saints sign RB Cam Akers to 1-year contract

June 14 - The New Orleans Saints signed free agent running back Cam Akers to a one-year contract. Financial terms were not disclosed in the team announcement on Friday for Akers, who participated in the Saints' minicamp on a tryout basis. Akers, who turns 26 on June 22, had 104 carries for 444 yards and two touchdowns in 17 games (two starts) split between the Houston Texans and Minnesota Vikings in 2024. He has rushed for 2,025 yards and 13 touchdowns and caught 52 passes for 388 yards and four scores in 53 games (17 starts). He also has played for the Los Angeles Rams (2020-23), who selected him in the second round of the 2020 NFL Draft. --Field Level Media

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store