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Pacers fans gasp at Haliburton's Game 7 injury in NBA Finals before responding to Indiana's effort

Pacers fans gasp at Haliburton's Game 7 injury in NBA Finals before responding to Indiana's effort

Yahoo4 hours ago

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana Pacers fans arrived at Gainbridge Fieldhouse ready to celebrate their first NBA title.
Seven minutes into the game came the hush.
As star point guard Tyrese Haliburton fell to the floor in Oklahoma City on Sunday night with what his father, John, later called an Achilles tendon injury, fans gasped as the replay was shown and they saw the anguished look on John Haliburton's face.
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The moment may go down as another cruel chapter in the franchise's long, painful history.
'Absolutely not what we wanted to see but you know what he's going to want. He's going to want this team to continue to fight,' Chris Denari, the Pacers' television play-by-play announcer, said to tempered cheers. 'He is the leader of this team. We know what he's meant since he arrived from Sacramento and he's going to need all of our thoughts and prayers, but he is going to want this team to fight and win an NBA title.'
The Pacers didn't stay down long.
As the Pacers fought through the loss of Haliburton, the near-sellout crowd had raucous reactions to each Pacers 3-pointer, Thunder foul or turnover.
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It is Indiana, after all.
But these fans are also plenty familiar with what happened Sunday.
Since the ABA powerhouse joined the NBA in 1976-77, it has endured seemingly every imaginable and unimaginable setback: the 1977 telethon that saved the team, the Malice in the Palace that cost Reggie Miller his last title shot, the near-misses against LeBron James more than a decade ago and last year's Eastern Conference finals sweep as the injured Haliburton watched the last two games from the bench.
There's also the injury legacy. Danny Granger, Paul George and Victor Oladipo all appeared to be ascending when their careers were derailed by injuries, and now the fear is Haliburton could join that list.
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How painful has it been to be a Pacers fan? Just ask 27-year-old Anthony Brehob, who came dressed in a No. 55 Roy Hibbert jersey and had big expectations before tip-off.
"Heartbreaking,' Brehob said, describing the back-to-back conference finals losses to James and the Heat in 2013 and 2014. 'I'm expecting a close game, and I'm really hoping Haliburton pulls it off at the end. If they lose, it's going to be a long night.'
The Pacers' effort brought the crowd back into it. Indiana fought through Haliburton's injury, rekindling thoughts of another comeback story from the state that produced 'Hoosiers.'
Pregame lines snaked around the arena for more than an hour and with the roaring crowd and familiar soundtracks, it was hard to tell if the first Game 7 in an NBA Finals since 2016 was being played in Indy — or nearly 800 miles away in Oklahoma City.
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'This is like triple what it was, and they won it that year,' 53-year-old Rick McNeely said after making the journey from Dayton, Ohio, to Indy, comparing this trip to the one he made to Chicago when Michael Jordan won his last title. 'I think it's because this is Indiana.'
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/nba
Michael Marot, The Associated Press

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MVP. Finals MVP. Scoring champ. NBA champ. OKC's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander now holds all those titles
MVP. Finals MVP. Scoring champ. NBA champ. OKC's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander now holds all those titles

Washington Post

time32 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

MVP. Finals MVP. Scoring champ. NBA champ. OKC's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander now holds all those titles

OKLAHOMA CITY — He's the most valuable player. The scoring champion. And now, an NBA champion along with NBA Finals MVP. All in one season. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has entered one of the game's most elite clubs. The 26-year-old Canadian is atop the basketball world now in almost every way imaginable. Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder captured the NBA title on Sunday night, beating the Indiana Pacers 103-91 to win the finals in a seven-game thriller. He becomes the fourth player in NBA history to win MVP, Finals MVP, a scoring title and play for a champion in the same season. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar did it once, Michael Jordan then did it four times, and Shaquille O'Neal was the last entrant into that fraternity — until now. 'A lot of hard work, a lot of hours in the gym,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'This isn't just a win for me. This is a win for my family. This is a win for my friends. This is a win for everybody that was in my corner growing up. This is a win for the fans, the best fans in the world.' The title caps a season where the Thunder won 84 games, tied for the third most by any team in any season in NBA history. Gilgeous-Alexander finished the season with 64 games of at least 30 points. The only other players to score 30 points that many times in a season: Wilt Chamberlain, Rick Barry, Elgin Baylor, Bob McAdoo, James Harden, Jordan and Abdul-Jabbar. It is amazing company. With due respect to those legends, Gilgeous-Alexander doesn't care. The Thunder are NBA champions. That's more than enough for him. 'Focusing on just being the best version of myself for this basketball team, for whatever it takes, for however many games it is, however many possessions is needed, however many moments,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'Ultimately, I'm just trying to stay in the moment. I think that's what's gotten me here. That's what has helped me achieve the MVP award, achieve all the things I've achieved. It's helped this team win basketball games.' This was not a sneak attack up the ladder of superstardom. Gilgeous-Alexander has been climbing those rungs for years. He's one of only two players — Giannis Antetokounmpo is the other — to average at least 30 points per game in each of the last three seasons. He led Canada to a bronze medal (over the United States, no less) at the World Cup in 2023, been an All-Star and first-team All-NBA pick for three years running, played in his first Olympics last year, and just finished a season where he posted career bests in points and assists per game. He scored 3,172 points this season, including playoffs, the ninth-most by any player in NBA history. Oh, and he's a champion now. 'He's getting better every year in just about everything,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'I think he's really improved as a playmaker. … And then he's an unbelievable scorer, and incredibly efficient. We lean into that. He leans into that. He's learned when teams load up on him and they overcommit, to get off it early, and I think that's reflected in the way we've played offense throughout the course of the season.' Opponents have no choice but to marvel at how Gilgeous-Alexander does what he does. He's not a high-flying artist like Jordan, not an unstoppable force of power like LeBron James, not a 3-point dazzler like Stephen Curry. He looks like he's playing at his own pace much of time, largely because defenses have few ways to slow him down or speed him up. 'Shai, he's so good,' Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton — who suffered a serious lower leg injury that knocked him out of Game 7 in the first quarter — said during the series. 'He's so slippery in between those gaps. He splits screens, like, I don't know how he's doing that. … He's a really tough cover.' 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Like Kylian Mbappe or Vinicius Jr, Xabi Alonso is one of Real Madrid's stars
Like Kylian Mbappe or Vinicius Jr, Xabi Alonso is one of Real Madrid's stars

New York Times

time35 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Like Kylian Mbappe or Vinicius Jr, Xabi Alonso is one of Real Madrid's stars

The way Xabi Alonso congratulated his Real Madrid staff and players after the 3-1 win against Pachuca had a message along the lines of: 'That's right! That's what I want!'. The Spanish coach had made his Madrid managerial debut with a disappointing 1-1 draw against Al Hilal of Saudi Arabia in their Club World Cup group-stage opener last week, so Alonso has been asking for time for this new project in these early days. Advertisement And, in less than a week, he has managed to show a very different side of himself to the club's supporters. In the run-up to that first game, Alonso had told reporters that the 'the rock and roll' was about to begin — and it's fair to say that some of that was on display at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Sunday. This win over Mexico's Pachuca was a significant result for several reasons… Numerically, because of the draw between Austria's Red Bull Salzburg and Al Hilal in the day's other Group H match, Madrid are in first place in Group H with a game to go. Symbolically, because it is the first victory of this new Madrid era and, therefore, the first for Alonso and summer signings Trent Alexander-Arnold and Dean Huijsen. And conditionally, because a red card to Raul Asencio in just the seventh minute complicated the situation. The team had to play with 10 men for more than 80 minutes in 92F (33C) temperature. 'It has a lot of merit,' Alonso told reporters post-match. 'I give it a lot of value, and I have congratulated the boys. We have to recognise their sacrifice.' Madrid not only improved from that opening match four days earlier but did so under the guidance of their new leader: Alonso himself. That's particularly important because the club expect a lot from their former midfielder, who is being given a leading role back at Madrid in every sense of the word. His voice, in terms of transfers and departures, is being heard more than predecessor Carlo Ancelotti's was in the previous four years, and his figure even appeared on the poster with which the club promoted this tournament on social media, alongside big-name players Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior and Jude Bellingham. A post shared by Real Madrid C.F. (@realmadrid) Alonso is another of this new Madrid's stars and although it is still early to draw better-or-worse conclusions, he began to show why on Sunday. His impact was visible from the line-up the Spanish giants named. Despite his assist against Al Hilal, Alonso benched Rodrygo, whose future at the club is up in the air, and opted to start Arda Guler in midfield. He also kept academy striker Gonzalo Garcia as a No 9 in the absence of Mbappe, who is expected to return against Salzburg in the third and final group game following an illness. The game's Plan A was swiftly disrupted by the red card to Asencio, sent off for bringing down Pachuca striker Salomon Rondon just outside the penalty area, but the reactions from the touchline personnel and the subsequent execution by those on the pitch saw everyone prove their worth. The most immediate change was to move Aurelien Tchouameni from midfield to the centre of the defence, and also alter how the rest of the team set up. 'Defending in such a low block was because we were one man down; you have to have humility to interpret that moment,' Alonso added. 'We want to understand what the game needs, show intelligence, and we did it.' Advertisement But something was still creaking. Alonso asked Alexander-Arnold to approach him to discuss improvements. 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