Caitlin Clark to return from injury for Fever-Liberty rematch Saturday
After missing three weeks with a quad injury, Caitlin Clark will return Saturday for the Indiana Fever against the New York Liberty, the team announced Friday. The Fever host the Liberty for the second time this season; Clark injured her quad during the first game, a 90-88 loss on May 24.
'She's working her way back, I feel like today was better than yesterday in terms of movement, balance,' coach Stephanie White said after practice Friday.
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White also said forward Sophie Cunningham is probable to return Saturday. Cunningham has been out since May 30 with an ankle injury.
Clark missed five games with the injury, the first of her professional career. Indiana has gone 2-3 in her absence, including two losses to projected lottery teams, Washington and Connecticut. The arrival of backup point guard Aari McDonald on a hardship contract helped stem the tide, but the Fever struggled to be competitive in their latest 77-58 defeat to Atlanta. Nevertheless, they have risen from eighth to seventh in the WNBA standings during this stretch.
'There was imaging done to tell that my leg is okay … so I can find confidence in that that we know we weren't able to find anything or see anything, and that was kind of my all clear,' Clark said. 'Then honestly, just sprinting. As you know, change of direction and sprinting in the game of basketball, that's the biggest part of it. So, feeling comfortable to be able to do those types of things and those types of movements. I've been doing that for a little bit now, and I feel really confident in that.'
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Clark's star status continues to drive ticket sales; according to data from Vivid Seats, tickets to Saturday's game against the Liberty are now 35 percent more in demand relative to the first Indiana game against New York, where Clark suffered her injury. As of publication, the average price for Clark's return is $276.
Saturday's game against New York is Indiana's penultimate Commissioner's Cup contest. The Fever need a win (and more results to go their way Tuesday) to pass the Liberty in the cup standings and earn the Eastern Conference bid to the final.
As the Fever shore up their rotation with the returns of Clark and Cunningham, they are expected to be without veteran DeWanna Bonner against New York, who has been away from the team for personal reasons. Indiana released McDonald from her hardship contract Friday, as the team now has ten active players without her.
In her four games this season, Clark is averaging 19.0 points and 9.3 assists per game while shooting uncharacteristically low from 3-point range and the foul line (31.4 percent and 75 percent, respectively). Cunningham has chipped in 6.5 points and 3.3 rebounds per game.
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This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
New York Liberty, Indiana Fever, WNBA, Sports Business, women's sports
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CNN
38 minutes ago
- CNN
Fever dream: Caitlin Clark and her teammates are still shocked – and inspired – by the circus following their team
Caitlin Clark says that she always dreamed of playing in the WNBA – and dreamed of playing in front of big crowds – but the seismic transformation she has inspired in women's basketball has still taken her by surprise. 'Being on the magnitude it is,' she told CNN Sports recently, 'is kind of hard to imagine.' During the Indiana Fever's first game of the new season in May, the excitement levels were at a fever pitch. Journalists covering the game against the Chicago Sky compared the energy both inside and outside of the packed 17,000-seat arena to a championship game, not the opener of a 44-game regular season. Her teammates dreamed it too, though many wondered if they'd ever experience it personally during their careers. During that home opener, Indiana's 37-year-old Dawanna Bonner became the WNBA's third-highest scorer of all time, but all the hoopla at Gainbridge Fieldhouse was something new. 'The atmosphere was insane,' Bonner explained to CNN Sports. 'I don't think I've ever played in front of that many people before, I was a little shellshocked. You see it on TV, but to be in it, it's like, 'Whoa!'' Since its inception in 1996, the WNBA alone was never able to fully support professional players, and Bonner spent 16 years supplementing her income from the Phoenix Mercury and the Connecticut Sun by playing in the Czech Republic, Spain, Russia, China, Israel, Hungary and Turkey. She said, 'To have all those fans screaming for you is a pretty cool experience, you've gotta get used to it!' Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell, 29, is now in the eighth year of her professional career and she's also having to adjust to the intensity of life at the epicenter of a women's sports revolution. 'It's an experience,' Mitchell chuckled, explaining to CNN Sports that the intensity isn't just confined to the court in front of packed arenas. 'The media, the constant eyes, some of the eyes you least expect. I've been in the league a while, so this is kind of new for me. I knew it would get here eventually. I didn't expect the impact, but it's such a positive and beautiful way.' Even the younger players, like 24-year-old Lexie Hull, appreciate that the explosion in the popularity of the women's game could not have been taken for granted. 'I was talking to Caitlin in the locker room, and we said, 'How lucky are we to lace up our shoes and do this for a living, as a job?'' Hull told CNN. 'The amount of people who come out every night and support us and cheer for us, it's pretty surreal.' Some of those young fans are now dreaming of following their idols into the league. Eleven-year-old Kamryn Thomas and her friend Merridy Kennington and their moms drove 300 miles to see Clark and the Fever play in Atlanta against the Dream. 'I think both of our dreams is to be in the WNBA,' Kamryn said confidently, while Merridy said that Clark is doing more than just inspiring them: 'I just feel that watching her makes me better and better.' Excitement in women's basketball might seem normal to such young fans, but their parents have told them that it wasn't always this way. 'I've explained to her that I grew up playing college basketball and it was never like this,' said Stephanie Thomas. 'Caitlin Clark has delivered something to women's sports that I don't think anybody else could deliver, and I think she's got a lot of women excited to see the future of their athlete daughters.' This moment in women's sports is long overdue, and everybody touched by it seems to recognize that things will never be the same again. Hull said she spent four years playing basketball and studying for a degree at university, assuming that she'd get a regular job at the end of it. 'I didn't think I'd be playing basketball every day,' she explained to CNN Sports. 'This is (now) a real option for girls, they can have these dreams in first and second grade, being a basketball player is now a legitimate goal to have. I just can't imagine what the sport is going to look like when players have been playing with that goal in mind for 15 years.' While some WNBA players might struggle to say that the rapid transformation of their sport is down to one player, the ticket prices for recent Fever games make Clark's impact hard to deny. TickPick reported a 71% decrease in ticket value when she was injured on the sidelines, while Sports Illustrated reported prices plummeting from $393 down to just $7. 'I like to think our team is here for her,' Mitchell said. 'So, whatever she does, she keeps changing the world, and we're here to support it.' Clark herself says she can't imagine where things might go from here. She can remember being the young fan looking up with wide eyes and big dreams and she understands the responsibility that she carries now. 'I try to make as much time as I can to sign an autograph because that can really impact somebody's life. Maybe they're going to put that up in their room and look at it every day and have something to dream about, it's not something I take lightly at all,' the superstar guard said to CNN. 'A lot of people didn't believe that women's sports would be in the moment that it is today. It's going to continue to grow and I'm lucky to be a part of it. I think, really, the sky's the limit.'


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
You're Invited to an Udderly Ridiculous Cow Wedding - CNN 5 Good Things - Podcast on CNN Audio
Krista Bo 00:00:00 Hey there, if the headlines have been weighing you down lately, I've got five stories to help lift you up. Cheryl Haskett 00:00:06 We were like, we have no idea how this is gonna go. This could be absolute chaos or it could be the most magical thing ever. Krista Bo 00:00:14 'You are cordially invited to relive the world's first cow wedding. We'll also share why a high school graduate can now afford to go to college. Plus, some feel-good shout-outs to all the fathers out there. From CNN, I'm Krista Bo, and this is 5 Good Things. Krista Bo 00:00:34 'An Indiana-based dentist isn't just filling in cavities. He's also filled in a spot at the U.S. Open Golf Tournament this week. Matt Vogt has played alongside some of the biggest names in golf at a course that's just half an hour away from where he grew up, the Oakmont Country Club outside of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Matt Vogt 00:00:52 It would be an incredible accomplishment or an incredible thing to be doing if it were anywhere in the country. But for us to be back here at Oakmont. It's just a place that means so much to me. I'm incredibly grateful. Krista Bo 00:01:01 'The 34-year-old self-proclaimed math and science geek has been golfing since high school, but he stopped taking the sport seriously after he quit his college golf team. Matt Vogt 00:01:11 'It's very special. I hope to represent a lot of different groups of people this week, you know, Pittsburgh, Oakmont, the dentists of the world, make my patients proud, amateurs, mid-amateur golfers, so it's surreal. Krista Bo 00:01:23 'He's currently ranked 2,120th in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, last time we checked. Last Monday, Matt finished eight under par during the Open's grueling 36-hour final qualifying stage, dubbed "Golf's Longest Day," where hundreds of golfers competed for a spot in the third major of the PGA Tour season. Krista Bo 00:01:43 The Oakmont course is notoriously hard, and it has a special place in his heart because he used to caddy there for six years as a kid. He did get knocked out of the tournament yesterday, but just being there is a win in and of itself, if you ask me. Matt Vogt 00:01:56 I hope to inspire others to let them know that it's never too late, or there's no reason you can't pursue your dreams at any point in your life. Other people might think it's foolish or a waste of your time. If you want to do something and it's important to you, you can do it. Krista Bo 00:02:13 'Talk about a pasture-perfect romance. At a small farm in rural Ontario, Canada, two Scottish Highland cows named Muriel and Rhett tied the knot in what the farm's billing as the world's first cow wedding. They said, 'I'm Moo' at Udderly Ridiculous Farm Life, a quirky award-winning agritourism spot known for goat yoga, alpaca picnics, and now cow weddings. The name says it all. Cheryl Haskett 00:02:39 And the clip is off. Krista Bo 00:02:43 'Cheryl Haskett runs the spot with her husband, Greg, who's a third-generation farmer. Cheryl Haskett 00:02:50 I am a Chief Everything Officer here, from poop clean up to guest experience, to all things in between. So Muriel was my Mother's Day accidental purchase to myself. And then I realized, you know what, muriel needs a boyfriend and I went on a search for a boyfriend. Krista Bo 00:03:07 Rhett ended up being the lucky bull. Cheryl says sparks flew immediately. Cheryl Haskett 00:03:12 Sometimes Muriel would walk past the pasture that he was in and he would just come bounding to the gate and the two of them would stop and they would nuzzle each other. And I'm like, I am a good cow matchmaker. This is my new resume piece. Krista Bo 00:03:26 So guests started suggesting a wedding, and Cheryl leaned all the way in. Cheryl Haskett/wedding officiant 00:03:30 Bovenity chapter 4 verse 7, love is patient, love is kind, it does not trample others grass, it does not chew cud in anger. Krista Bo 00:03:41 With her flower crown, painted hooves, and white skirt, Muriel walked down the aisle after her flower family of goats to meet the love of her life, dressed in a kilt at the gate. Cheryl Haskett/wedding officiant 00:03:52 By the powers vested in me, by the holy order of the sacred romance, I now pronounce the two of you cow and bull. You may lick noses. Krista Bo 00:04:03 'The cow-ple had their first dance and went straight to the honeymoon suite, while the guests enjoyed an alpaca social hour. Cheryl Haskett 00:04:10 We're hoping in, you know, nine and a half, ten and a half months that maybe we'll have a baby shower. That would be our best hope to continue this little love story along. Krista Bo 00:04:20 This wedding was udderly ridiculous, and Cheryl says that's exactly the point. Cheryl Haskett 00:04:26 We were like, we have no idea how this is gonna go. This could be absolute chaos or it could be the most magical thing ever. And it came to be just a moment of joy and laughter. And you could see that on our guest faces and that's what we aim to do. Krista Bo 00:04:46 'A rescue dog made it home safely after her 100-plus-mile journey by land and sea. Okay, so back in April, Amber, a five-year-old retriever cross mix from Qatar, escaped from her foster home in the UK the day after she arrived. Everything you're about to hear is according to Sam Collins. He's the co-founder of a UK-based animal rescue that helped find a home for her. Krista Bo 00:05:09 'So when Amber bolted, she first had to clear the home's eight-foot fence. But trust me, that's not the crazy part of the story. For weeks, she was spotted around the area, but after a month went by, reliable sightings stopped. She was next spotted 30 miles southwest on the coast of England. From there, the adventurous Amber doggy-paddled a full mile through the sea to Brown Sea Island, a wildlife haven where dogs aren't usually welcome. Krista Bo 00:05:36 She spent three days on the island, where a local left out some food and water for her. But when she tried to swim back to the mainland, she got caught in some strong currents. That's when a passing boat saw her. Instead of panicking, Amber swam up to the boat and held onto the ladder until one of the men jumped in to help push her onto the boat. Krista Bo 00:05:55 'Thanks to a small scar on her nose and some social media posts about her, the rescue group confirmed it was her. Amber is now safe, healthy, and will stay with her foster family for at least a couple weeks -- on a leash, of course. After her incredible journey, Sam says she'll be placed next in a five-star forever home. Krista Bo 00:06:14 'After his high school graduation last month, 18-year-old Mykale Baker made a quick stop at the Burger King he works at in Dacula, Georgia, to get some food for his family. Mykale Baker 00:06:24 So I walked in and it was only three employees here. So, and like, they were busy, drive through was backed up, there were a lot of orders on the screen. So I was just like, I can just help y'all. Krista Bo 00:06:35 'So he decided to clock in and help out. Maria Mendoza was one of the customers in the drive-thru. Her daughter goes to the same school as Mykale, but they didn't know each other. Maria Mendoza 00:06:44 When I saw him, it's like my eyes locked into Mykale, and my whole world froze for a minute. And it was just like me and him just there. And that was, I was so impressed. Krista Bo 00:06:56 She posted a video of him working at the fast food restaurant wearing his graduation medals and asked TikTok to do their thing. The next day, it had over a million views. That's when her daughter suggested she should make a GoFundMe for Mykale. Maria met up with Mykale and his mother at the same Burger King and told him the news. Maria Mendoza/TikTok video 00:07:13 So, I did a GoFundMe for you, and so far it has raised over $6,000. Here we go. Over $6000. I told you it was worth it. Mykale Baker 00:07:27 I'm surprised and I feel very grateful to everybody that supported me, especially to Maria for setting up the GoFundMe and posting the TikTok because it had changed my life dramatically. Maria Mendoza 00:07:39 Aw, you're welcome. You're gonna make me cry. Krista Bo 00:07:43 Mykale said he was planning to take a gap year or join the military to save up for college, but the GoFundMe has since raised over $230,000. Mykale Baker 00:07:52 Now I get to go to college, now I don't have to take the gap year. And then potentially open up my own mechanic shop. Krista Bo 00:07:59 Mykale clocked in to lend a hand and clocked out with a brighter future. Grace 00:08:05 My dad's one of the funniest people I know, but he also gives really good advice when you least expect it. LaMont 00:08:12 I can honestly say that being a dad is amazing, it is one of the best feelings in the world. Krista Bo 00:08:19 Tomorrow's Father's Day, so we asked you to share what you love about your dad and what you loved about being a dad. Get your tissues ready. The love fest is after the break. Kat 00:08:31 My name is Kat Cox, I live in Austin, Texas, and I wanted to tell you something good about my father, Butch. One of my favorite things he ever taught me was when somebody asks, how's it going, he says, better every minute. You know, he has a positive outlook on life. Krista Bo 00:08:47 We asked you to share what your favorite dad advice was, and boy, did you deliver. I'll go first. So my dad, Kevin, would always remind me to stop worrying over things that I can't change. It's great advice. I can say I always follow it, but I should. So thanks, dad. Grace 00:09:04 When I went away to school, I was having a really hard time. Some days, then he would just send me little messages. But one little message that stuck with me was: take it day by day. You don't have to do the most every day, but each day you get a chance to do the best. And I think that's a really great life lesson that I've taken with me. Donna 00:09:22 Besides the stunning example of the way my father led his life, the thing I remember about him most is he said that people want to help if you just give them a chance. That's always stuck with me. Tim 00:09:36 Hi there, this is Tim from Washington, D.C. Every day when I used to get out of the car with my brothers and sisters, he would stop us, look us in the eye, and say, be the leader, not a follower. Short and simple, but it stuck with me all the way through to today. So I wanna thank my dad for that beautiful piece of advice. Krista Bo 00:09:52 We figured some dads might wanna weigh in on this love vest and share what being a dad means to them. Justin 00:09:59 'I am a father of an almost two-year-old, and I want to instill kindness, not cruelty, and humbleness, not entitlement. LaMont 00:10:09 I just try to, you know, instill things like hard work and controlling what you can control. Try your hardest every day and definitely have manners. I think being respectful is something that can really get you far in life. Brian 00:10:25 No matter what it was going to take and no matter what it was gonna cost, I was gonna give my kid, I didn't even know it was a girl yet, I was going give my kids the best life I could, better than I could ever have expected for my own life. Alex 00:10:40 'I have two kids, 24-years-old and 18-years-old. I don't really give them a lot of advice. I do try and act out what my dad did for me and that's really kindness and a love of people and acceptance for where they're at. Josh 00:10:56 There is no greater parental bliss than seeing your child light up with pure elation simply upon seeing their parent's face. Every day brings another opportunity to share new experiences and once again see the world with childlike wonder. Krista Bo 00:11:17 All right, that's all for now. Join us tomorrow for the next edition of One Thing. Two transgender service members share how President Donald Trump's military ban has impacted their lives. Krista Bo 00:11:28 Five Good Things is a production of CNN Audio. This episode was produced by Eryn Mathewson and me, Krista Bo. Our senior producers are Felicia Patinkin and Faiz Jamil. Matt Dempsey is our production manager. Dan Dzula is our technical director. And Steve Lichteig is the executive producer of CNN Audio. We get support from Joey Salvia, Haley Thomas, Alex Manaserri, Robert Mathers, Jon Dianora, Leni Steinhardt, Jamus Andrest, Nichole Pesaru, and Lisa Namerow. Krista Bo 00:11:55 Special thanks to Samantha Lindell, Patrick Snell, and Wendy Brundige. And thank you especially for listening. If you like the show, please consider giving us a good rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify or sharing it with a friend. It's the best way to spread the good vibes. Take care. Till next time.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Pacers on turnover battle in Game 3: Part 2
Oklahoma City rallies to tie the series at 2-2 after trailing for nearly the entire second half Imagn Images Getty Images I do wonder if Rick Carlisle will continue to look for creative ways to get more safe pairs of hands on the floor. Through 19 games, Carlisle has played Tyrese Haliburton and T.J. McConnell together for 80 total minutes. That includes the final three minutes and 26 seconds of the second quarter on Wednesday, which the Pacers won 13-9 while not turning the ball over. Overall, the Pacers are plus-32 in the 80 minutes the two point guards have shared the floor, with 51 assists to 25 turnovers. Don't read too much into that: The Pacers have shot 50 free throws in their time together, indicating they share the floor a lot in late-game situations where the Pacers need free-throw shooting and ball-handling on the floor. Moreover, Andrew Nembhard picked up his third foul of Game 3 with more than five minutes remaining in the second quarter, resulting in Carlisle needing to find ways to get to the end of the half. The Pacers would be too defensively compromised to ride with the two guards together for too long. Still, in a series in which turnovers are so important, I wonder if Carlisle would dare sacrificing some defensive versatility and offensive spacing in order to keep the Thunder from turning them over and running the other way. Getty Images The Pacers won the turnover battle on Wednesday, a huge reason they won Game 3. The Thunder turned the ball over on just 11.7 percent of possessions during the regular season. Only one other team, the Boston Celtics, was below 13. On average, the Thunder's opponents turned the ball over 17 times per game to their own 11.7. Having five more possessions than your opponent based on that stat alone, as you might have guessed, is very meaningful. The Pacers are a low-turnover team themselves, but we have seen moments in which the Thunder have turned them into a bunch of bumblers — the 19-turnover first half in Game 1 and the seven-turnover first quarter in Game 3 spring to mind. In general, Tyrese Haliburton is the ultimate cheat code in this respect, a point guard who fuels a fast offense while not coughing the ball up often. He has help in the starting lineup, with Andrew Nembhard and Pascal Siakam both solid handlers for their position. Getty Images There was so much talk before Game 3 of the 2025 NBA Finals about how Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton needed to be more aggressive for the Pacers to win this series against the Oklahoma City Thunder. But solving the stifling Thunder defense needed more than a mindset shift. It's not that simple at this level. It's the NBA Finals, and these teams are more prepared for these games than any they've ever played in their lives. Basketball players will never get more awareness, resources and focus than they do between games 2 and 3 of the finals. This is the optimal time to show you can solve a puzzle, not just flip a switch. That's what Haliburton, with the help of Pacers coach Rick Carlisle, did in Wednesday's 116-107 home win to take a 2-1 series lead. Read more below. GO FURTHER How Pacers nurtured an aggressive Tyrese Haliburton to seize control of NBA Finals Getty Images You have to wonder if the Thunder will respond to Tyrese Haliburton's breakout game by changing how they matchup guarding Haliburton's pick-and-roll. The Thunder have been willing to 'next' him when in drop coverage, having the help defender switch onto him when he drives over the screen instead of the big. He is able to beat that coverage by either passing faking the nexter away or just snaking back to go downhill. The Thunder do this mostly to protect Isaiah Hartenstein when he is in drop coverage, but it still allows Haliburton to get downhill and that's the biggest thing the Thunder defense wants to take away. They can either avoid this by having Hartenstein guard up to the screen level like Chet Holmgren does, having him switch or just limiting his minutes even more. If they are going to stick with Hartenstein in drop, the Thunder may consider taking Lu Dort off of him more so that he can be in the help position. That means putting one of the guards on Haliburton and telling Dort to aggressively rotate over when they want to 'next' Haliburton. As important as it is to keep Haliburton away from the ball, which Dort does so well, the Pacers have proven they will find a way to get it to him. So perhaps their best bet is to focus on steering him where they want instead. So if that's their play, now the question is how Andrew Nembhard gets more involved as the primary initiator again. Haliburton took so much off of his plate in Game 3 because it was so easy for him to get downhill. If the Thunder are able to get Haliburton in motion and then take away his downhill turn, then that's going to mean Nembhard is running second side action plenty more in Game 4. Getty Images By Shakeia Taylor and James Jackson Could Friday the 13th spell out luck for this year's NBA champion? There have been only three NBA Finals matchups on Friday the 13th, but two of the last such winners (2003 Spurs, 1997 Bulls) were crowned champions. Another reason tonight is crucial for the Thunder? Avoiding a 3-1 hole. Teams to take a 3-1 lead in the finals have taken the title 97.4 percent of the time. We all remember that one exception to the rule. Getty Images With each thrilling win, and with each step they take closer to achieving the first NBA title in franchise history, the Indiana Pacers are slowly testing our ability to consume and analyze the game of basketball. For so long, we've been conditioned to look at champions and great teams a certain way, with a certain formula and infrastructure. There has to be at least one superstar. There has to be a second star, capable of reaching All-NBA levels. There has to be a supporting cast around two or three players capable of making big plays and big shots at the same time. Even the 2011 Dallas Mavericks, for all of their talk about equal opportunity glory, featured Dirk Nowitzki, and his 2011 playoff performance qualified as one of the best individual runs in the history of the league. Should the Pacers turn their current 2-1 NBA Finals lead over the Oklahoma City Thunder into a championship, they could be the most unique champion since the 2004 Detroit Pistons. Read more on Indiana below. GO FURTHER We thought the Indiana Pacers were underdogs. But this team is a juggernaut In the end, the box score only shows 10 points for T.J. McConnell, but he put together a huge performance in Game 3. The Pacers were +12 in his 15 minutes. But he wasn't alone in making a big impact off the bench. Bennedict Mathurin scores 27 points in 22 minutes, and the Pacers outscored the Thunder by 16 points with him on the floor tonight. Obi Toppin played 28 minutes off the bench and the Pacers were plus-18 in those minutes as well. Massive performance from the Pacers bench. Getty Images After winning Game 3 to take a 2-1 series lead the Pacers aren't celebrating or looking ahead. Their goal is to remain focused from game to game. 'That's the challenge before us right now, is to maintain,' coach Rick Carlisle said. 'It's got to be a killer edge to beat these guys. We're going to be an underdog in every game in this series. It was 10 and a half in the first two games, five and a half last night, then tomorrow. It's a daunting challenge. Anything less than a total grit mindset, we just don't have a chance.' And to Pascal Siakam, who's been in the Finals before, each game has the same level of significance. 'To me, they all feel the same in a way like how important it is and the intensity that you feel when you're on the court, no matter what the score is, whatever happens,' Siakam said. 'It's physical. It's tough, gritty. It's really, really hard. You feel every single possession out there when you're on the floor.' Getty Images Tk K.: And this is why I knew that Game 1 loss would hurt more than just the single loss. Again, we're in a stressful position of having to win or face an uphill battle of coming back from down 3-1. Considering less than 20 teams have done that, it's not a position you want to put yourself in. Anthony A.: Indiana is not 2025 Denver. OKC continues to brag about winning a zillion games by double digits, but you know what? It means they're not used to playing a full 48 minutes of pressurized basketball against an equally physical opponent. They don't have the stamina and it's showing in the 4th quarters as Indiana has outscored them by 27 points so far.\ Nathan P.: May have to wait a bit longer for the OKC 'dynasty' we were hearing was all but inevitable a couple weeks ago. Greg S.: Now we get to see just how good (or not good) the Thunder coaching staff really is. Pressure is on. How does OKC adjust to a team that is beating them at their own game? Will be an intriguing Game 4. Getty Images It is difficult to call someone like Chet Holmgren, who is so central to what the Oklahoma City Thunder do, an X-factor. But, for the rest of the series, this fits. When Holmgren plays well, as he will need to in tonight's Game 4, the Thunder usually win. When Holmgren struggles, as he did down the stretch of Game 3, the door is ajar for the Thunder to lose. He's their true litmus test. Because OKC generally knows what it will get from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams, a good Holmgren game truly makes the Thunder difficult to beat. You saw both sides of that in Game 3. When Holmgren dominated the first quarter, OKC flirted with a double-digit lead. When Holmgren couldn't get it done on either end of the floor in the fourth quarter, the Indiana Pacers took the game over. The Oklahoma City Thunder need good Chet in Game 4. It may be their easiest path to victory. Getty Images When the Thunder announced a lineup change prior to Game 1, there were initial questions raised about the timing and reasoning, especially after the SGA/JDub/Dort/Chet/Hartenstein pairing had been so successful during the regular season and playoffs. This isn't to say Cason Wallace is the reason why Oklahoma City has lost two of the three games he's been a starter. But major decisions like this have trickle-down effects — substitution patterns, matchup choices and overall rhythm and flow. In Games 1 and 3, Daigneault's second-most used lineups outside his new starting group are a -31.3 and a -30.3, respectively. We're talking about a team that won 68 games during the regular season facing a fourth seed. That's simply not going to cut it at this stage, especially as Indiana has reveled in their depth and fluidity. When you hear Daigneault speak about Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle, there's a certain level of reverence and respect — and understandably so. But at times, it almost feels like he's questioning his own abilities when juxtaposed next to his opponent. Making further changes at this juncture, for example, putting swapping Wallace and Hartenstein, could be risky in itself. But if the Thunder have any hope of evening the series and potentially saving their season, they'll need to rediscover their identity — on their own terms. Getty Images When the Oklahoma City Thunder left the court at Gainbridge Fieldhouse Wednesday night, as an arena erupted in celebratory glee behind them, they walked into a 2-1 deficit in the NBA Finals. What was supposed to be a coronation for the team that has dominated this season, with 68 wins and its Most Valuable Player in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, may end up crowning the Indiana Pacers instead. The Thunder now find themselves at an inflection point in this series, and in their arc. It is one that emerging perennial contenders have found themselves in before. It can be a bump on the way to glory or a sign it might be delayed. Read more below. GO FURTHER Thunder face moment of truth entering Game 4: 'You got to go in and play for your life' Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams combined for 50 points on 18-for-38 shooting in Game 3, but their 10 turnovers helped lead to Oklahoma City's loss. One key adjustment might be a simple one: screen better. Andrew Nembhard, Aaron Nesmith and Indiana's other stoppers often made themselves unscreenable in Game 3. Their ability to stay attached to the Thunder guards disrupted Oklahoma City's normal offensive flow. When the Pacers pick up full-court, as they usually do, the Thunder need to do a much better job of alleviating that pressure early. That's one reason why it could help them to play Isaiah Hartenstein more in Game 4. He's their best screener and could free up the guards to have cleaner performances. Maddie Meyer / Getty Images I already mentioned the Thunder's struggles with 2-point shooting in today's story, but let me throw one other funky NBA Finals stat at you: The Thunder have won all three first quarters, by a total of 23 points over the first three games ... and have lost all three fourth quarters, by a total of 27 points over the first three games. That helps explain why the Pacers have a 2-1 series lead despite being only ahead for nanoseconds in the individual games. It also shines a favorable light on another controversial decision: Changing the starting lineup before Game 1. The beginning of games hasn't been Oklahoma City's problem.; it's everything after that. In fact, the five-man unit now starting games — with Cason Wallace in Isaiah Hartenstein's place — has a whopping +27.6 Net Rating in the postseason. The former starting group's is just at +4.7. How do the Oklahoma City Thunder surprisingly find themselves down 2-1 to the Indiana Pacers in the NBA Finals? I can give you two versions of the story, both of which are equally valid. On one hand, there is the sheer fact of a more energetic Indiana side repeatedly outhustling, outscrapping, outrunning and ultimately outlasting Oklahoma City in Game 3. Call it 'energy' or 'playing with force' or whatever euphemism you want to use, but the tape doesn't lie. Rewatching the game on Thursday, the Thunder looked like a team on the last game of a four-games-in-five-nights trip. They played with little pace, were beaten to nearly every loose ball and completely ran out of gas at the end. Of particular note was that the Thunder's best player was guilty on many of these fronts. Perhaps it's not surprising that Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was worn out by the end after a 42-minute stint where he was repeatedly attacked on defense while the Pacers picked him up full court on offense. What's a bit more shocking is how out of sorts the MVP looked even at the beginning. Eight seconds into the game, he picked up a frustration foul shoving away Andrew Nembhard. Minutes later, he already seemed exhausted. Read more below. GO FURTHER Thunder struck with a midrange shooting slump at the wrong time in NBA Finals Getty Images The Pacers are not the team to go super large against. They play too fast, run too much, to justify a couple of 7-footers sharing the floor. Clearly, the Thunder have noticed that — but it's surprised me how far they are taking the strategy. Oklahoma City was hyper successful with Isaiah Hartenstein and Chet Holmgren sharing the court up until the Finals. But Cason Wallace entered the starting lineup for Hartenstein to begin the series. In three games against the Pacers, the duo has played only 10 minutes together. The irony, of course, is that the Knicks' most significant lineup adjustment during the Eastern Conference Finals, which they lost to Indiana in six games, was a change to their starting lineup that swapped a center, Mitchell Robinson, in for a wing, Josh Hart. The Knicks went double-big from Game 3 on, in part to add rim protection to a lineup that was lacking it. At times, they destroyed on the boards. In other moments, Robinson especially appeared exhausted, trekking back and forth against possibly the fastest team in the league. The Thunder don't need the extra rim protection. Both Holmgren and Hartenstein can anchor a defense. But it's still a surprise how little those two have played together in this series. They didn't run alongside each other for a second of Game 1. During the regular season, lineups with those two feasted on the offensive boards, where the Pacers struggle. They outscored opponents by 13.5 points per 100 possessions. Even if it means Hartenstein defending Siakam, which could make the Thunder more prone to fast-break buckets, I wonder if we see more of the Thunder's double-big lineups — if only because it's led to so much success before. Getty Images Here were the final Shai Gilgeous-Alexander fourth quarter numbers on Wednesday night: three points, 1-3 shooting, one assist and one turnover. It wasn't a spectacularly bad 10 minutes from him. It was just quiet, relatively unaggressive and the Thunder lost that subsection of the game by 11 points, losing control of the series in the process. The question posed to him during Thursday's media session: Was he worn down? "I'm not too sure," he said. "I don't think so. It's a physical game. We've had plenty of physical games. We've had games like that where I've been great late, games where I've stunk late. I don't think it was anything out the blue, anything I hadn't seen before." One of the emerging theories within this series has been about Indiana's breakneck pace and ability to fatigue its opponents. The Thunder blew a large fourth quarter lead in Game 1 and faded down the stretch of Game 3, losing the fourth quarter 32-18. Nobody within the Thunder admitted to a level of fatigue, but it's clear they felt an extra level of physicality and sustained aggression from the Pacers once the series shifted to Indianapolis, including the Pacers' pick-up point on Gilgeous-Alexander. "They were higher in the pick-and-rolls," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "They were above the screen. When you come off it, you got to go backwards. It goes back to (the) little bit more force (they had). If we're more aggressive in the pick-and-roll and setting it up, then we get a better angle. Things like that usually comes down to who throws the first punch. I think that's what that was." Jerry West has four Game 4 Finals games where he scored 35 or more points: 45 in 1966, 38 in '68, 40 in '69 and 37 in '70. Steph Curry is third with three games of 35-plus points (38, 37, 43) and Shaquille O'Neal had two, scoring 36 each time. Michael Jordan has the most points in a Game 4, 55, against the Suns in 1993. Kobe Bryant never surpassed the 35-point mark in a Game 4 in his career. Though, he did have one very special Game 4, as told by David Aldridge and Marcus Thompson. GO FURTHER Kobe Bryant's coming-out party in Indiana dashed the Pacers' title hopes 25 years ago Getty Images A key role in Oklahoma City's late-game woes? Experience. This postseason, the Thunder already have half as many clutch-time losses (four) as they did during the regular season, during which they ranked last in clutch-time minutes (66). If the Thunder win the title, they'd become only the fourth team since 1997 to rank last in clutch-time minutes en route to a championship (2014 Spurs, 2015 Warriors, 2017 Warriors).