If you're a Sonics fan, cackle along with me at the Thunder's game 3 Finals loss
I did not shout in excitement when Indiana's Obi Toppin dunked home the rebound of Tyrese Haliburton's missed lay-in late in Wednesday's Game 3 of the NBA Finals.
I neither hooted nor did I holler. I live in an apartment building and I have neighbors.
But as Toppin dropped from the rim, his dunk having pushed the Pacers' lead to seven points with 4:23 left, I did emit a laugh so high-pitched it could only be described as a cackle: the kind of thing you'd hear from a witch or the furry little rodent that sat on Jabba The Hutt's lap in 'Return of the Jedi.'
I was … giddy, a feeling I'm not sure I've ever experienced while watching sports. I've been so happy that I've hugged strangers (2024 Sugar Bowl, UW vs. Texas). I've been so angry I couldn't speak (UW loss to Oregon, 2021). Two years ago, when Washington beat Oregon at Husky Stadium, a guy puked on my shoes and I was so elated by the Huskies victory that I wasn't even mad.
But nothing has generated as much sheer unadulterated glee for me as watching the Oklahoma City Thunder lose, which is exactly what happened on Wednesday. The Thunder led by as many as nine points in the first half, and they were up five entering the fourth quarter only to watch the Pacers pull away in the final 7 minutes of the game, winning 116-107.
This being the sports section, I probably should probably give you some facts. Bennedict Mathurin, a third-year guard from Arizona, scored 27 off the bench to lead Indiana while Haliburton went for 22 and Pascal Siakam scored 21. Oklahoma City had three players score 20 or more, too: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (24), Jalen Williams (26) and Chet Holmgren (20). The difference was depth. The Pacers' bench scored 49 points, the Thunder's 18.
The truth is I don't care all that much about how it happened so long as the Thunder lost. You see, being a hater is a bottom-line business. I've also discovered that it's a thoroughly enjoyable way to watch a sport. You don't have to wait until Seattle is awarded an NBA expansion franchise to have a rooting interest. We can all join hands together and hope that the team that was stolen from us fails to win a championship for the 17th consecutive season.
I know, it sounds kind of petty and immature. That's because it is petty and immature, and you can sit with the grown-ups if you want, but I'm having a hell of a time down here on the low road, thinking about just how devastating it would be for the Thunder to lose to the Pacers, who were 5-to-1 underdogs when the series began.
He-he-he. I just cackled again.
Don't worry, I know better than to make any premature proclamations. We've still got a long way to go. The Thunder trailed the Denver Nuggets 2-1 in the Western Conference semifinals only to come back and win the series in a seventh game.
As an experienced hater, trust me when I say you've got to keep an even keel about these things. You can't get too high when the team you loathe loses just like you can't let yourself get too low when they win.
You also need some stamina. When you're cheering for a team, momentum builds over the course of a playoff run. People around you are getting excited, too. When you're rooting against one, though, it takes effort and a laser focus not to get discouraged as you watch a team like the Thunder keep clearing hurdles. A cake walk over Memphis in the first round. A seven-game nail-biter against Denver, and then a Minnesota team that absolutely mailed in the fifth and final game of the conference finals.
At some point you might even find yourself conceding that it is possible, perhaps even likely, that the one team you absolutely do not want to win the sport's top prize may do just that.
And it is in those moments, when doubt starts to creep in, I like to remind myself just what I'm in this for: misery. More specifically: Oklahoma City's misery, and the closer the Thunder get to a championship, the more misery a loss is going to induce.
Someone with more going for them and less resentment might decide that investing this much energy in a certain team NOT winning might not be healthy. I have a word for these sorts of people: amateurs.
You don't spend this much time hating this one team without going through a few gut checks that really show what you're made of, and my loathing of the Thunder is built to last.
In fact, I can think of only one thing that might dilute my venom: If Seattle were to be awarded an expansion franchise, and if this expansion franchise were to be named the Sonics, and if the Sonics were to win their second NBA championship before the Thunder were to win their city's first, then I might dial back my animosity.
But probably not. It's too much fun hating the Thunder. I better stop now before I start cackling again.
Danny O'Neil was born in Oregon, the son of a logger, but had the good sense to attend college in Washington. He's covered Seattle sports for 20 years, writing for two newspapers, one glossy magazine and hosting a daily radio show for eight years on KIRO 710 AM. You can subscribe to his free newsletter and find his other work at dannyoneil.com.
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Los Angeles Times
22 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
The Sports Report: UCLA has an advantage at the Men's College World Series
From Brady Oltmans: An NCAA communications official apologized to UCLA baseball coach John Savage before he could join two of his players on the stage for Thursday's news conference. They hadn't printed all the nameplates for the coaches yet. The coach then sat next to star shortstop Roch Cholowsky and outfielder Dean West at the microphone, finished typing into his phone and leaned forward for his opening statement. 'Well, I think you can see by the nameplate, you can tell that they weren't expecting us,' Savage deadpanned. He admitted he was teasing before acknowledging the Bruins' circumstances heading into their Men's College World Series opener against Murray State on Saturday at 11 a.m. PDT (ESPN). No team in this year's CWS field played in last year's tournament — the first time that's happened since 1957. But the Bruins set themselves apart from the field because they have played at Charles Schwab Field this year. Omaha hosted last month's Big Ten tournament. The Bruins won their first three games in the tournament before falling 5-0 to Nebraska in the conference title game. Savage believes that week-long tournament helped the Bruins get a feel for the ballpark. They know the downtown streets, the hotels and the practice schedule. But he doesn't want the team to get too comfortable. He wants them to keep the edge they've developed since being shut out. Continue reading here Men's College World Series schedule All Times Pacific NBA FINALS Oklahoma City vs. Indiana Indiana 111, at Oklahoma City 110 (box score, story)at Oklahoma City 123, Indiana 107 (box score, story)at Indiana 116, Oklahoma City 107 (boxscore, story)Friday at Indiana, 5:30 p.m., ABCMonday at Oklahoma City, 5:30 p.m., ABCThursday at Indiana, 5:30 p.m., ABC*Sunday, June 22 at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m., ABC* *if necessary From Bill Shaikin: The Dodger Stadium Express is scheduled to operate normally this weekend, even as the bus departs from and arrives at an area subject to curfew restrictions. The service, which provides fans a free ride between Union Station and Dodger Stadium, 'will be running per usual,' Metro senior director of communications Missy Colman said Thursday. 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Spaun is still new enough to the U.S. Open, and a newcomer to the brute that is Oakmont, that he was prepared for anything Thursday. He wound up with a clean card and a one-shot lead on an opening day that delivered just about everything. Scottie Scheffler had more bogeys in one round than he had the entire tournament when he won the Memorial. He shot a 73, his highest start ever in a U.S. Open, four shots worse than when he made his Open debut at Oakmont as a 19-year-old at Texas. Patrick Reed made the first albatross in 11 years at the U.S. Open when he holed out a 3-wood from 286 yards on the par-five fourth. However, he finished his round with a triple bogey. Bryson DeChambeau was 39 yards from the hole at the par-five 12th and took four shots from the rough to get to the green. Si Woo Kim shot a 68 and had no idea how. 'Honestly, I don't even know what I'm doing on the course,' Kim said. 'Kind of hitting good but feel like this course is too hard for me.' Continue reading here U.S. Open leaderboard Winnipeg's Connor Hellebuyck has won the Hart Trophy as NHL MVP and the Vezina Trophy as the league's best goaltender, becoming the first at the position to do so since Carey Price a decade ago. Hellebuyck was unveiled as the top MVP vote-getter on an awards show Thursday night prior to Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final, hosted by actor and former Arizona State wide receiver Isaiah Mustafa. Kings captain Anze Kopitar won the Lady Byng for sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct for a third time. Edmonton's Leon Draisaitl finished second in the Hart voting and Tampa Bay's Nikita Kucherov third, a single point ahead of Colorado's reigning MVP Nathan MacKinnon, as chosen by members of the Professional Hockey Writers Association. Hellebuyck was a landslide winner of the Vezina as picked by general managers, receiving 31 of 32 first-place votes. Continue reading here All times Pacific STANLEY CUP FINAL Edmonton vs. Floridaat Edmonton 4, Florida 3 (OT) (summary, story)Florida 5, at Edmonton 4 (2 OT) (summary, story)at Florida 6, Edmonton 1 (summary, story)Edmonton 5, at Florida 4 (summary, story)Saturday at Edmonton, 5 p.m., TNTTuesday at Florida, 5 p.m., TNTFriday at Edmonton, 5 p.m., TNT* * If necessary 1908 — Canadian champion Tommy Burns KOs Bill Squires of Australia in 8th round at Neuilly Bowling Palace, Paris to retain world heavyweight boxing title. 1913 — James Rowe, who had won back-to-back Belmont Stake races in 1872-73 as a jockey, sets the record for the most number of Belmont Stakes wins by a trainer, eight, when he sends Prince Eugene to victory. 1935 — Jim Braddock scores a 15-round unanimous decision over Max Baer in New York to win the world heavyweight title. 1953 — Ben Hogan wins the U.S. Open for the fourth time, with a six-stroke victory over Sam Snead. 1956 — 1st European Cup Final, Paris: Héctor Rial scores twice as Real Madrid beats Stade de Reims, 4-3 to claim inaugural title. 1959 — Billy Casper wins the U.S. Open golf tournament over Bob Rosburg. 1971 — Kathy Whitworth wins the LPGA championship by four strokes over Kathy Ahern. 1982 — Jan Stephenson wins the LPGA championship with a two-stroke triumph over Joanne Carner. 1989 — 43rd NBA Championship: Detroit Pistons sweep Lakers in 4 games. 1991 — The National, the nation's first all-sports daily newspaper, ceases publication. 1992 — Sergei Bubka of Ukraine breaks his own world outdoor record in the pole vault by soaring 20 feet, one-half inch. The jump is the 30th time that Bubka has set the record indoors or outdoors, surpassing the 29 world records by distance runner Paavo Nurmi of Finland in the 1920s. 1993 — Patty Sheehan wins the LPGA Championship for a third time, with a 2-under 69 for a one-stroke victory over Lauri Merten. 1997 — Chicago wins its fifth NBA championship in the last seven years, as Steve Kerr's last-second shot gives the Bulls a 90-86 Game 6 victory over the Utah Jazz. 2002 — Stanley Cup Final, Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, MI: Detroit Red Wings beat Carolina Hurricanes, 3-1 for a 4-1 series win; Red Wings' 10th title; coach Scotty Bowman retires with record 9th title. 2010 — Zenyatta wins her 17th consecutive race, giving her the longest winning streak by a modern-day thoroughbred in unrestricted races. The 6-year-old mare, ridden by Hall of Famer Mike Smith, wins the $200,000 Vanity Handicap by a half-length over St Trinians at Hollywood Park. With the victory, Zenyatta surpasses the 16-race winning streaks of Cigar, 1948 Triple Crown winner Citation, and Mister Frisky. 2011 — Boston scores four times in a 4:14 span of the first period and beats the Vancouver Canucks 5-2 in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final at TD Garden, evening the best-of-7 series. Brad Marchand, Milan Lucic, Andrew Ference and Michael Ryder give Boston a 4-0 lead before the midway point of the first period. 2014 — The Netherlands thrashes Spain 5-1 in the World Cup's first shocker, toying with an aging team that dominated global football for the past six years and avenging a loss in the 2010 final. 2014 — The Kings wins the Stanley Cup for the second time in three years with a 3-2 victory over the New York Rangers in Game 5. 2016 — LeBron James has 41 points, 16 rebounds and seven assists, Kyrie Irving also scores 41 points and the Cleveland Cavaliers capitalize on the Warriors playing without suspended star Draymond Green, staving off NBA Finals elimination with a 112-97 victory in Game 5. James and Irving are the first teammates to score 40 points in an NBA Finals game as the Cavaliers pulled within 3-2 and sent their best-of-seven series back to Ohio. 2017 — The Golden State Warriors win their second NBA tile in three years with a win over the Cavaliers 129-120. 2019 — The Toronto Raptors beat defending champion Golden State Warriors, 114-110 to win the franchise's first Championship. 2021 — French Open Men's Tennis: Novak Đoković wins his 19th Grand Slam singles title; beats Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece 6-7, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4. 2023 — Stanley Cup Final, T-Mobile Arena, LV: Vegas Golden Knights rout Florida Panthers 9-3 to clinch 4-1 series win; franchise's first title in only 6th year in the NHL; MVP: Jonathan Marchessault (VGK forward). 1905 — Christy Mathewson of the New York Giants pitched his second no-hit game, beating the Chicago Cubs and Mordecai Brown 1-0. Mathewson and Brown matched no-hitters for eight innings. The Giants got two hits in the ninth for the win. 1912 — Christy Mathewson recorded his 300th career victory with a 3-2 triumph over the Chicago Cubs. 1921 — Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees pitched the first five innings and hit two home runs in an 11-8 victory over the Detroit Tigers. 1937 — New York's Joe DiMaggio hit three consecutive home runs to give the Yankees an 8-8, 11-inning tie against the St. Louis Browns in the second game of a doubleheader. 1947 — In the first night game played at Fenway Park, the Red Sox beat the Chicago White Sox 5-3. 1948 — Babe Ruth Day at Yankee Stadium drew 49,641 fans who saw Ruth's No. 3 retired and the Yankees beat the Cleveland Indians 5-3. 1957 — Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox hit three home runs and drove in five runs in a 9-3 victory over the Cleveland Indians as Williams became the first AL player to have two three-homer games in a season. 1973 — The Dodgers' infield of Steve Garvey (first base), Davey Lopes (second base), Ron Cey (third base) and Bill Russell (shortstop) played together for the first time in a 16-3 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies. The quartet would set a major league record for longevity by playing 8 1/2 years in the same infield. 1980 — Pete Rose of the Philadelphia Phillies goes 4 for 5 to move past Honus Wagner into fifth place on the all-time hit list with 3,431. 1998 — For the fourth time in major league history, teammates hit back-to-back homers in consecutive innings. Atlanta's Javy Lopez and Andruw Jones each homered in the second and third inning of the Braves' 9-7 win over Montreal at Turner Field. 2003 — Roger Clemens reached 300 wins and became the third pitcher with 4,000 strikeouts, leading the New York Yankees over the St. Louis Cardinals 5-2. Clemens, the 21st pitcher to make it to 300, gave up two runs in 6 2-3 innings and struck out 10, raising his total to 4,006. Clemens joined Nolan Ryan (5,714) and Steve Carlton (4,136) in the 4,000-strikeout club. 2008 — Chase Utley, Ryan Howard and Pat Burrell hit consecutive home runs in the first inning of Philadelphia's 20-2 rout of St. Louis. 2012 — Matt Cain pitched the 22nd perfect game in major league history and first for San Francisco, striking out a career-high 14 batters and getting help from two running catches to beat the Houston Astros 10-0. Cain's 125-pitch masterpiece featured a pair of great plays by his corner outfielders. Left fielder Melky Cabrera chased down Chris Snyder's one-out flyball in the sixth, scurrying back to make a leaping catch on the warning track. Right fielder Gregor Blanco ran into right-center to make a diving catch on the warning track and rob Jordan Schafer for the first out of the seventh. 2015 — Alex Rodriguez collects his 2,000th career RBI with a two-run home run in the New York Yankee's 9-4 loss to the Baltimore Orioles. Rodriguez is the fourth player to reach the milestone joining Cap Anson, Babe Ruth and leader Hank Aaron. 2019 — Shohei Ohtani becomes the first Japanese player to hit for the cycle in Major League Baseball. 2021 — The Blue Jays set a record for a visiting team at Fenway Park by blasting 8 homers in an 18-4 win over the Red Sox. Seven players go deep, with Teoscar Hernandez doing so twice, while Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hits his major league-leading 21st. 2024 — It took him 14 seasons and 320 other long balls, but J.D. Martinez finally hits a walk-off homer, doing so off Tanner Scott of the Marlins with Francisco Lindor on base in the 9th inning to give the Mets a 3-2 win. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, this is the third most homers by anyone before a first walk-off shot, trailing only Mark Teixeira (408) and Jose Bautista (336). Compiled by the Associated Press That concludes today's newsletter. If you have any feedback, ideas for improvement or things you'd like to see, email me at To get this newsletter in your inbox, click here.


Axios
39 minutes ago
- Axios
2025 NBA Finals: Law enforcement locks in for Game 3
As the Pacers prepare for another NBA Finals faceoff with the Thunder, local law enforcement and first responders have drawn up a Game 3 game plan of their own. Why it matters: A coordinated emergency response effort backed by a beefed-up police presence aims to keep the tens of thousands of basketball fans slated to hit the Circle City safe Wednesday night. Emotions between dueling fanbases can run hot. What they're saying:"We have plenty of practice at managing large crowds and major events, and the fun that follows. This experience with the NBA Finals is going to be no different," said IMPD chief Chris Bailey. "Our neighborhoods will be protected. No one in our city will go without police protection despite the festivities going on in downtown Indianapolis." Zoom in: Expect to see more police on foot, in squad cars, on horses and using drones throughout the city. There'll also be undercover officers. Other Central Indiana law enforcement agencies, the Indiana State Police and federal partners are also providing support. Between the lines: Security inside Gainbridge Fieldhouse will look similar to other Pacers and Fever games at the venue, and the existing bag policy will be adhered to, said Pacers Sports & Entertainment CEO Mel Raines. Yes, but: Starting four hours before home game tip-offs, fans will need to show their tickets to gain access to the different parts of Gainbridge, including the Morris Bicentennial Plaza public space outside the arena. Fans will still be able to access the Pacers store via Pennsylvania Street as late as two hours before tip-off. Fun fact: The Pacers will host watch parties in the plaza during Games 3 and 4 for a limited number of fans, Raines said, and plans are in place to host a Game 5 watch party inside Gainbridge. Plaza watch party ticket information is still pending, but Raines said those events should be able to accommodate 1,000-1,500 fans. To keep hoops fans in the loop, the Marion County Emergency Management Agency will roll out a mass text service for the NBA Finals, director Jacob Spence said. What's next: Game 3 tips off at 8:30pm Wednesday on ABC, or you can listen on 93.5/107.5 The Fan.


New York Times
40 minutes ago
- New York Times
Kobe Bryant's coming-out party in Indiana dashed the Pacers' title hopes 25 years ago
INDIANAPOLIS — Kobe Bryant held each hand out in front of him near his waist, palms pointed to the hardwood as he jogged to the defensive end. His head tilted, confusion painted on his face, the Lakers guard gently pushed down, as if he were testing the softness of a mattress. He wasn't confused about his readiness for this moment, but how everyone didn't share his conviction that he was divinely fashioned for the grandest stages, the brightest lights, the highest stakes. Advertisement He'd been declaring it for four seasons, in word and deed, through playoff air balls and All-Star Games. So when Shaquille O'Neal fouled out in overtime of Game 4 in the 2000 NBA Finals, on the road in raucous Hoosierland, he didn't believe panic was necessary. Worry wasn't welcomed. Twenty years before, another precocious Lakers' player also faced a finals crucible. In 1980, when the Lakers played the 76ers in the championship series, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar badly sprained his ankle in the third quarter of Game 5. He somehow managed to return to help the Lakers win and take a 3-2 series lead. But he left the Great Western Forum on crutches and was done for the series. Magic Johnson, then a bubbly rookie point guard, sensed the team's dread after the news about Kareem. So when Magic got on the team plane to Philadelphia, he lightened the spirits of his squad by sitting in Kareem's seat. As his teammates boarded the plane, they were greeted by the interim captain, smiling and declaring, 'Never fear, Magic is here.' He then played all five positions in Game 6 and went for 42 points, 15 rebounds and seven assists. The Lakers won the title, Magic won Finals MVP, and a star was born. In 2000, Bryant did the same to ignite a new generation of Lakers dominance. He wasn't smiling, though. He didn't use words. He laced jumpers like daggers into the hearts of the Pacers. Then Bryant gestured to his teammates, to the fans, to everyone who had yet to fully comprehend the level of No. 8. Everybody, calm down. Kobe is here. A superstar was born. 'You only get a few of those players,' Ron Harper, Bryant's Lakers teammate, said to The Athletic this week. 'You can count on a few of them: Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Isiah Thomas. They get to those special moments when the game slows down in their eyes, when it speeds up for everybody else. 'He went and got the game. He allowed the game to come to him, but he went and got the game.' Twenty-five years ago Saturday, in the same building where the Indiana Pacers are, today, waging a pitched battle with the Oklahoma City Thunder in hopes of finally winning the franchise's first NBA title, the last Pacers team to make it this far was in an equally daunting fight. As with this season's team, those Pacers were heavy underdogs to Kobe, Shaq and the Lakers. And those Pacers, like the current iteration, faced a pivotal Game 4 of the finals on their home court, knowing one more home win dramatically increases Indiana's chances at a ring. Advertisement That night in 2000, the Pacers played well, and very well on occasion. Reggie Miller overcame a bad first half shooting to make multiple clutch shots down the stretch. And Indiana got a huge gift when O'Neal fouled out of the game midway through the overtime period. Without the Diesel, the Lakers were suddenly at a major disadvantage against Indiana's 7-foot-4 center Rik Smits, the Dunking Dutchman. The Pacers were down just three when Shaq fouled out. They were in position to change the series. But Kobe Bean Bryant was having none of that. With three clutch baskets in the last two-plus minutes of OT, he lifted the Lakers to a 120-118 victory and a 3-1 series lead. Five days later, O'Neal (41 points, 12 rebounds) and Bryant (26 points, 10 rebounds) led the Lakers to a Game 6 victory over the Pacers, securing the franchise's first championship since 1988. 'Shaq fouled out,' Harper said. 'Phil (Jackson) was talking and (Bryant) was like, 'I got this, coach. You guys just play. I got this.'' That night, Kobe Bryant, all of 21 years old, showed the world who he already was, and who he would become. As the kid morphed into the Mamba, Pacers big man Dale Davis kept yelling at Miller, Indiana's greatest player. 'I'm like, 'Reg, yo, control this young kid,'' Davis told The Athletic on Wednesday, 'And he's like 'Man, I'm trying.'' Miller would have had more luck catching water with a tennis racket. He and his Indiana Pacers found out, in real time, that Bryant was every bit as good as he'd told the world he'd be. That he was worth every drop of sweat and angst from Los Angeles Lakers' ultra-tightly wound GM, Jerry West, who'd bet that a high school kid from outside of Philadelphia would be the franchise's next great superstar. That he could carry a team to an NBA championship, by himself, if he had to. Advertisement With the passage of time, the Lakers' three-peat from 2000-02 now seems preordained. West, already a Hall of Famer for his majestic playing career for the franchise, was one of the best talent evaluators ever. Jackson, hired specifically to bring L.A. multiple titles, just as he did with the Bulls, would become the winningest playoff coach in league history, with 11 championships, two more than Red Auerbach. O'Neal and Bryant, while often chafing at each other as teammates, were both destined for the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. But the path was anything but smooth. The Lakers, who won 67 games that year, were pushed to a win-or-go-home Game 5 in the first round against Sacramento, featuring Chris Webber and Vlade Divac. Then the Lakers were down 15 points early in the fourth quarter of Game 7 of the 2000 Western Conference finals to Portland, before, somehow, rallying to beat the Blazers, in a game punctuated by Bryant's alley-oop pass to O'Neal for the series-clinching dunk. 'We were a veteran team,' said Harper, who'd won three rings in Chicago with Michael Jordan and the Bulls before going to the Lakers in 1999. 'When I first got there, I sat him and Shaq down. I said, 'This team's only going to go as far as you two take us. We have a bunch of great role players here, but you two are going to define us. … whatever y'all do is going to be us. 'First, second, third quarter, we're coming to (O'Neal). But if you miss a couple of free throws in the fourth, we've got one of the best closers since MJ.' Bryant's pain threshold became a huge part of his legend. Famously, he walked off the court in 2013 after tearing his Achilles tendon, rather than be carted off in a wheelchair — a direct shot at Paul Pierce, who'd been carted off during Game 1 of the 2008 finals against the Lakers, only to return to the game a few minutes later and help the Celtics win. But in 2000, no one yet knew that side of Bryant. They soon would. Advertisement Early in Game 2 of the series against the Pacers, Bryant went up for a jumper. Indiana guard Jalen Rose slid his foot underneath Bryant as he came down to earth. Bryant's foot came down on top of Rose's foot, and Bryant crumpled to the floor. It was a sprained ankle — a bad one. Bryant left the game and didn't return after playing fewer than nine minutes. The Lakers won Game 2 without him, but Jackson held him out of Game 3 as a precaution, and Indiana won Game 3 at what was then called Conseco Fieldhouse, 100-91. Rose did it on purpose. 'One of the things that happened in my career, I don't think it's cute or am I proud of it,' Rose told in 2021. 'I came from an era where you did whatever it takes to win,' Rose said. 'We also realized very quickly we couldn't guard him. This dude is something different. So I acted like I was contesting the jump shot and purposely made him come down on my foot. In my mind, I didn't want him to break his ankle. But I wouldn't mind if he missed the next few games because we would have a better chance to win.' With round-the-clock electrical stimulation treatment, and with two days between Games 3 and 4, Bryant at least had a chance to play in Game 4. But it wasn't a certainty until the Lakers' longtime celebrated athletic trainer, Gary Vitti, went to work on Bryant's foot. 'We want those bones in your feet to be mobile, to have some movement, so they can absorb shock and transfer force,' Vitti told The Athletic in 2021. 'And so his cuboid, which is one of his tarsal bones, is really, really tender. And I'm working on it, and I'm mobilizing it, and I'm mobilizing it. And I do a mobilization technique. And I can feel a pop, and he can feel a pop. 'And we both look at each other. And I'm like, 'Holy s–, man, I think that's it.' And he looked at me, and he goes, 'That's it.' And he got off the table and he walked around, and said 'That's it.' And he put his shoe on, and he ran.' Bryant started Game 4. He also started slowly, missing three of his first four shots as he tried, in real time, to assess how much he could do on the ankle. The Pacers led by 10 in the second quarter, but couldn't put L.A. away, and led just 54-51 at the half. Bryant picked up his fourth foul a minute into the third quarter, but was able to stay on the floor and get himself going, despite Rose and Pacers guard Mark Jackson both trying to draw a fifth foul on him via post-ups. He scored 10 points in the third as the Lakers took an 80-77 lead after three. Advertisement 'He had that supreme confidence,' Harper said. 'I was like, 'All right, young boy.' I'm like, yeah, he's feeling it.' The fourth quarter belonged to Miller, who hadn't made a fourth-quarter basket in the first three games of the series. He made five of six shots, including three 3-pointers, the last of which put Indiana up 101-99 with 3:18 left. But the Pacers didn't score again until Sam Perkins' 3 with 35 seconds left in regulation tied the game at 104. Inexplicably, the Pacers' backup guard Travis Best took the last shot of regulation for Indiana rather than Miller and missed, sending the game to overtime. The Lakers led by four early in OT. But O'Neal picked up his sixth foul with 2:33 left in overtime, heading to the bench with 36 points and 21 rebounds. He'd even had what was, for him, a great night at the line, making 10 of 17 free throws. After O'Neal fouled out, 'I was like, (on to) Game 5,' Lakers forward Rick Fox told The Athletic Wednesday. 'You're thinking about the odds in that moment.' Tyronn Lue coached the Cleveland Cavaliers to an improbable comeback from a 3-1 finals deficit against the mighty Warriors in the 2016 finals. In 2000, he was a Lakers reserve guard. 'Shaq fouled out, and so everybody kind of panicked,' Lue, now the Clippers' head coach, said on the 'All The Smoke' podcast. The Lakers led 112-109. Many doubted that lead would last, especially after Smits immediately tossed in a hook over Shaq's backup, veteran center John Salley, to bring Indiana within one. Yet Bryant, the youngest player on the court for both teams by several years, was completely in his element. On the Lakers' next possession, Bryant got a screen from Robert Horry on Miller, but Miller was able to stay in front of Bryant. Didn't matter. Bryant went between his legs with the dribble to create separation, and pulled up for a 22-footer that hit nothing but net, to put L.A. back up by three. As he went down the court, Bryant raised and pushed both his hands down, with a smirk on his face, as if to say, 'Everybody calm down.' Advertisement Smits tossed in another hook to make it 114-113. 'I remember him scoring two or three straight on Reggie Miller,' Jackson recalled on his podcast, The Mark Jackson Show. 'I say to Reg, 'I got him. Let me get him one play.' Stupid New York City mentality.' So Jackson picked up Bryant. He didn't plan to actually stop him, just hammer the youngster and send a message. This was Indiana's time. And some kid wasn't stealing the Pacers' moment. Jackson never got the chance to deliver. One crossover and a sudden pull-up just inside the arc and Kobe was mid-jumper before Jackson could even react. He drilled the 23-footer from the top with 1:20 left to keep the Lakers up three. Jackson promptly passed the assignment back to Miller. 'I'm like, 'Reg, you got him,'' Jackson said. ''I got nothing for you, man. You got him.' That was it.' Miller made two free throws at 1:05 to make it 116-115. Smits got a piece of Bryant's jumper at the other end, but the Lakers crashed the glass for two offensive rebounds, the second from veteran guard Brian Shaw, whose putback again gave the Lakers a three-point edge with 46 seconds left. Smits made two free throws with 28.1 seconds remaining to pull Indiana within a point, 118-117. Indiana didn't foul, opting to play it out. Miller face guarded Bryant to keep him from getting the ball, leaving Shaw to create a shot. He wound up with a runner across the lane. It missed. But Bryant didn't, hitting the offensive glass and tipping the ball in with his left hand to make it 120-117 with 5.9 seconds left. Indiana got a last chance to win the game, after Fox was called for a dead-ball foul before the ensuing inbounds pass, giving the Pacers a free throw plus possession. Miller made the free throw and had a great look at a potential game-winning 3 at the buzzer off a double-stagger screen. But it rimmed out. The Lakers, now with a 3-1 series lead, closed Indiana out in Los Angeles five days later. Advertisement It's hard to understate how significant this game, this performance, was for the Lakers. Title windows are finicky. Nobody knows that better than the Pacers; missed windows close faster. Do they become a dynasty if they don't pull through in Game 4? Would losing in their first trip to the finals exacerbate the drama perennially hovering over those Lakers? This was year four of the Kobe and Shaq experiment. Does West get impatient and switch up if they don't win? Basketball history may have hung in the balance Everybody, calm down. Kobe is here. Now familiar with triumph, the Lakers went on to smoke the Philadelphia 76ers in the 2001 finals, and the New Jersey Nets in 2002, to secure their three-peat. And Bryant led L.A. to two more titles in 2009 and 2010. But the moment of alchemy was here, in this city, where Oscar Robertson unfurled his burgeoning greatness at Crispus Attucks High School in the mid-1950s, and the Pacers ruled the ABA in the 1970s. Kobe is here. Basketball graffiti, written in two-and-a-half special minutes, on the fieldhouse floor. 'Kobe left his shoes in the locker room after that game,' Fox said. 'And as he was walking out, I was like, 'Yo, Kob – your shoes.' And he was like, 'Nah, I don't want them.' He just left them there. 'He was so focused and locked in. When I tell you, he was a different animal after that game. He became Kobe.' (Top photo of Kobe Bryant: Bob Rosato / Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)