
Pacers, Thunder got to the NBA Finals fueled by doubters. A title will give 1 team the last laugh
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — In these NBA Finals, a team is four wins away from getting the last laugh.
Ask anyone on the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers if they're still fueled by doubters, and the answer is probably going to be an immediate 'yes.' Thunder star and NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander went 11th in his draft. Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton went 12th in his. Both sides have undrafted players in their rotation.
Here they are: The NBA Finals, which start Thursday night in Oklahoma City. The Thunder have, by far, the NBA's best record this season. The Pacers have the league's second-best record since Jan. 1, including playoffs. And both teams have rolled through the postseason, going 12-4 in the first three rounds.
'I'll continue to tell you guys in certain moments that it doesn't matter what people say, but it matters — and I enjoy it,' Haliburton said. 'I think the greats try to find external motivation as much as they can and that's something that's always worked for me.'
It's not like more motivation is needed. Not for the next couple of weeks, anyway. Indiana is chasing its first NBA title. Oklahoma City — technically — is also seeking its first; the franchise won a championship when it played in Seattle in 1979. These are teams that combined to win 49 games just three seasons ago, and now they're the last two standing.
'Staying true to who we are is the reason why we're here,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'We'd be doing ourselves a disservice if we changed or tried to be something we're not once we got here. We've had success doing so. If we want to keep having success, we have to be who we are. It's organic. It's nothing we have to think about or force. It's just who we are, no matter the moment.'
The Thunder are enormous favorites in the series, according to BetMGM Sportsbook, and understandably so. They're 80-18 including the regular season and postseason, plus went 29-1 in the regular season against the Eastern Conference and have more double-digit wins — 61 and counting — than any team in any season in NBA history.
'We've got a lot of work cut out for us,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. 'A lot of our guys have been through a lot of situations where they've been underdogs in the past. It's simply going to come down to us being able to play our game at the best possible level. We're going to need to take care of the ball because these guys turn people over at an historic rate, and we're going to have to make some shots.'
The Thunder want no part of hearing this series will be easy. The way Indiana — a No. 4 seed in the East — got through Giannis Antetokounmpo and Milwaukee in Round 1, a top-seeded Cleveland team in Round 2 and New York in Round 3 and never faced an elimination game has captured Oklahoma City's full attention.
'Their attack is very simple. The theoretical way to stop it is simple,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'In reality it's very difficult to do, as you can see from the way that they've really had their way with everybody. … They pump a 99 mph fastball at you. You can prepare all you want for that. When you're in the batter's box, it's different when it's time to hit it.'
Young Thunder
The Thunder are the youngest team to make the NBA Finals in 48 years, according to data provided by the league. With an average age of about 25 years and seven months, they're the youngest finalist since Portland in 1977.
That said, hearing about it is getting, well, old.
'Young or not, when you can learn from whatever situation you're thrown in, that makes you better,' Thunder guard Jalen Williams said. 'I think that's why we're here in this moment.'
Busy OKC
There will be a Game 1 in Oklahoma City on Thursday night — and a Game 2 on Thursday night as well.
At Paycom Center, there's Game 1 of the NBA Finals. And Devon Park, about a 15-minute drive away from the Thunder home floor, will play host to Game 2 of the Women's College World Series between Texas and Texas Tech that same night.
If the softball facility — which will be the site of games at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics — is filled, that means about 32,000 people will be watching championship games in Oklahoma City on Thursday.
Past finals
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There are four players on these teams with previous NBA Finals experience.
Indiana's Pascal Siakam averaged 19.8 points in six games with Toronto, helping the Raptors win the title in 2019. Oklahoma City's Alex Caruso averaged 6.3 points in six games with the Los Angeles Lakers, helping them past Miami in the bubble finals of 2020.
Indiana's Thomas Bryant got in one game of Denver's 2023 finals win over Miami, and the Pacers' Aaron Nesmith played for Boston in the Celtics' loss to Golden State in the 2022 finals.
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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/nba

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Winnipeg Free Press
21 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Mr. Clutch: Tyrese Haliburton keeps delivering in the ultimate moments for the Pacers
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — You are Tyrese Haliburton. You went to the Eastern Conference finals last year and got swept. You went to the Olympics last summer and didn't play much. You came into this season with high expectations and your Indiana Pacers got off to a 10-15 start. And on top of that, some of your NBA peers evidently think you are overrated. You got angry. 'I think as a group, we take everything personal,' Haliburton said. 'It's not just me. It's everybody. I feel like that's the DNA of this group and that's not just me.' The anger fueled focus, the focus became confidence, and the confidence delivered a 1-0 series lead in the NBA Finals. Haliburton's penchant for last-second heroics — one of the stories of these playoffs — showed up again Thursday night, his jumper with 0.3 seconds left going into finals lore and giving the Pacers a 111-110 win over the heavily favored Oklahoma City Thunder. The Pacers led for 0.0001% of that game. It was enough. 'When it comes to the moments, he wants the ball,' Pacers teammate Myles Turner said. 'He wants to be the one to hit that shot. He doesn't shy away from the moment and it's very important this time of the year to have a go-to guy. He just keeps finding a way and we keep putting the ball in the right positions and the rest is history.' Haliburton is 4 for 4 in the final 2 seconds of fourth quarters and overtimes in these playoffs, all of those shots either giving the Pacers a win or sending a game into OT before they won it there. The rest of the NBA, in those situations this spring: 4 for 26, combined. If Haliburton takes one of those beat-the-clock shots in the first three quarters of games in these playoffs, he's a mere mortal, just 1 for 7 in those situations. But with the game on the line, he's perfect. 'You don't want to live and die with the best player on the other team taking a game winner with a couple seconds left,' Thunder guard Alex Caruso said. No, especially when that best player on the other team is Haliburton. Just ask Milwaukee. Or Cleveland. Or New York. They could have all told Oklahoma City who was going to take the big shot and what was probably going to happen. Against the Bucks on April 29, it was a layup with 1.4 seconds left that capped a rally from seven points down in the final 34.6 seconds of overtime. Final score: Pacers 119, Bucks 118, and that series ended there. In Cleveland on May 6, it was a 3-pointer with 1.1 seconds left for a 120-119 win — capping a rally from seven points down in the final 48 seconds. At Madison Square Garden against the Knicks on May 21, a game the Pacers trailed 121-112 with 51.1 seconds left, he hit a jumper with no time left to force OT and Indiana would win again. All those plays came with a little something extra. His father, John Haliburton, got a little too exuberant with Giannis Antetokounmpo after the Bucks game and wasn't allowed to come to the next few games; the ban has since been lifted. Haliburton did a certain dance that the NBA doesn't like much after the shot against the Cavs. He made a choke signal, a la what Pacers legend Reggie Miller did against New York a generation earlier, after hitting the shot against the Knicks. But on Thursday, all business. These finals are a long way from over, and he knows it. Game 2 is Sunday night in Oklahoma City. 'Again, another big comeback but there's a lot more work to do,' Haliburton said. 'That's just one game. And this is the best team in the NBA, and they don't lose often. So, we expect them to respond. We've got to be prepared for that. We got a couple days to watch film, see where we can get better.' Haliburton is in his first year of a supermax contract that will pay him about $245 million along the way. He has the Olympic gold medal from last summer and surely will be a serious candidate to play for USA Basketball again at the Los Angeles Games in 2028. He's now a two-time All-NBA selection. And he's officially a certified postseason, late-game hero. Three more wins, and he'll be an NBA champion as well. The anger is gone. Haliburton was all smiles after Game 1, for obvious reasons. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. 'Ultimate, ultimate confidence in himself,' Turner said. 'Some players will say they have it but there's other players that show it, and he's going to let you know about it, too. That's one of the things I respect about him. He's a baller and a hooper and really just a gamer.' And in his NBA Finals debut, Haliburton reminded the world that's the case. 'This group never gives up,' Haliburton said. 'We never believe that the game is over until it hits zero, and that's just the God's honest truth. That's just the confidence that we have as a group, and I think that's a big reason why this is going on.' ___ AP NBA:


Toronto Star
3 hours ago
- Toronto Star
Pacers vs. Thunder: Tyrese Haliburton buzzer-beater stuns SGA, Oklahoma City in Game 1 of NBA Finals
Count the Indiana Pacers out at your peril. Not a team that should be supported by the faint-hearted, the Indiana Pacers stole an NBA Finals game on Thursday night in one of the most unimaginably larcenous ways. Trailing for all but less than half a second, the Pacers stunned the Oklahoma City Thunder — no, they stunned the entire basketball community — with an unlikely 111-110 win that will go down as one of the Finals shockers of all time. Tyrese Haliburton's 21-foot jump shot with three-tenths of a second on the clock capped yet another shocking rally by the Pacers, who have now won five times in these NBA playoffs after trailing by as many as 15 points. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Ho hum, say the Pacers. 'Basketball's fine, winning's fun for us,' Haliburton said in a post-game on-court television interview. 'We just figure it out.' Figure it out they did, sending an Oklahoma City crowd into the night in stunned silence and wrestling away home-court advantage in the best-of-seven series that resumes Sunday night. They were being bludgeoned and overwhelmed by the Thunder for most of the night, and there was nothing to suggest the Pacers had a comeback in them. Indiana committed an NBA Finals-record 19 turnovers in the first half (25 in the game) and seemingly had no answers for the Thunder. Hamilton's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was doing his thing — all he did was scorch the Pacers for 38 points with his usual array of offensive tricks — and the Thunder were cruising. But it is in the DNA of this Indiana team: They stick around and stick around, never willing to cede defeat, and find a way to steal a victory. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Haliburton, who had been held in check most of the night by a suffocating Thunder defence, went the length of the court after a missed shot and drilled the game-winning jumper, the only time the Pacers led for the entire game. Nba Analysis NBA Finals preview: Everything you need to know about two teams that love to play fast The Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers have been the two best teams in the league since It left Thunder fans slack-jawed, and their best player philosophical. 'Basketball's up and downs, it was what it is,' Gilgeous-Alexander said after the game. 'Just have to be better for the next game … It's not rocket science. We lost Game 1, just gotta be better.' The Thunder defence didn't give the Pacers an inch to operate for most of the game: long arms, active hands, preternatural anticipation. They showed all the things that made them the best defensive team in the league through a 68-14 regular season. 'Staying true to who we are is the reason why we're here,' Gilgeous-Alexander said before the series began. 'We'd be doing ourselves a disservice if we changed or tried to be something we're not once we got here. We've had success doing so. If we want to keep having success, we have to be who we are. It's organic. It's nothing we have to think about or force. It's just who we are, no matter the moment.' The moment certainly wasn't too big for them. And certainly not too big for the 26-year-old Gilgeous-Alexander. He didn't have one of his most efficient offensive games. But matched up most of the night against Canadian Olympic teammate Andrew Nembhard, Gilgeous-Alexander was 14-for-30 from the field and finished with 38 points. He and Nembhard were locked in a physical contest, jostling and trading shoves after one fourth-quarter collision. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Nba Whether ratings are good or not, Thunder-Pacers could be a series true basketball fans enjoy OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — It's No. 25 Indiana vs. No. 47 Oklahoma City in the NBA Finals. Dort to Dort One of the wild cards for the Thunder is going to be Montreal native Lu Dort. He's the team's best perimeter defender and will have to guard multiple Pacers, but adding some offensive punch would make him even more important for Oklahoma City. He took care of both aspects in Game 1. Dort had a game-high four steals and made five of nine three-pointers. Coming into the Finals, Dort was shooting about 30 per cent from three-point range throughout the playoffs. Siakam is a problem One of the things Pascal Siakam has learned is how to identify mismatches and exploit them. He did it well in the opener, attacking a series of smaller defenders on his way to a 19-point outing. The Thunder went small in their starting lineup — replacing seven-foot Isaiah Hartenstein with six-foot-four forward Cason Wallace — and that provided Siakam with a matchup he could attack. Just like the Thunder feared. 'Great versatility on both ends of the floor,' Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault said of Siakam. 'Offensively he can play in the pick-and-roll game as a handler, setter. He's an isolation player that can go get them a high-quality shot, he can get fouled, he can post smaller matchups. He's kind of a matchup problem, quite frankly, on that end.' Aurora's Nembhard finished with 14 points for Indiana, while Montreal's Bennedict Mathurin missed four of five shots and had five points.


Winnipeg Free Press
5 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Inside the Comeback: How the Pacers pulled off a stunner in Game 1 of the NBA Finals
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The game plan was the obvious one. Just chip away, the Indiana Pacers said, because there was no other option that would have made any sense at that point. They were down by 15 with 9:42 remaining. They were turning the ball over about once every three possessions, couldn't stop Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, and had the Oklahoma City crowd in a deafening fury. 'We just said, 'Hey, let's just keep chipping away at the rock,'' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. 'Got to keep pounding the rock and just chip away and hang in.' With 0.3 seconds left, there was no more rock left to pound. Not for Game 1, anyway. Tyrese Haliburton scored with that much time left and the Pacers stunned the Oklahoma City Thunder 111-110 in the opener of this year's NBA Finals on Thursday night. A look inside the comeback: The run The Pacers outscored the Thunder 32-16 in that final 9:42, with only six players getting used for those final minutes and all of them figuring into the scoring column. Obi Toppin took two shots. Both were 3-pointers. Both connected. Myles Turner and Andrew Nembhard each scored eight points to lead Indiana during the flurry. Aaron Nesmith led the Pacers with four rebounds in that stretch. And Haliburton provided the exclamation point with the jumper at the end. 'I've worked my entire life to get to this stage, so there's no holding back,' Turner said. The collapse The Thunder shot 4 for 16 in that closing stretch. Gilgeous-Alexander was 2 for 4; everyone else on the Thunder combined to shoot 2 for 12. The MVP had 10 points; everyone else on the Thunder combined for six. The reasons for all that? 'A little bit of everything,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'They made some plays. On some of those plays they made some shots. They got a couple that you wish you'd get back. We had bonus fouls, which were costly. Then offensively we didn't move the scoreboard as well as we could have. So you just add all that up and that's how you get that sort of comeback.' The reactions There was no choke sign from Haliburton, no celebratory dance, just a bunch of hugs with teammates and a big hug with his father John Haliburton in the hallway near the Pacers' locker room afterward. The Pacers, coach Rick Carlisle said, haven't engaged in a ton of raucous postgame victory laps during this playoff run. 'This is going to be a long journey and a lot going on,' Carlisle said. 'So, we're just going to have to keep our eye on the ball and keep focusing on one another.' The big plays Here were some of the key moments: — Carlisle subbed in five new players — Haliburton, Nembhard, Nesmith, Toppin and Turner — with 9:42 left and Indiana trailing 94-79. — Turner hits a 3-pointer with 7:47 left, cutting the lead to 96-88 and forcing an OKC time-out. — Toppin and Turner made 3-pointers on consecutive possessions (Turner keeping the second one alive with an offensive rebound) to get Indiana within 98-94 with 6:16 left. — Gilgeous-Alexander's two free throws with 2:52 left pushed the Thunder lead to 108-99. Nesmith and Nembhard connected on back-to-back 3s, and Indiana was within thee with 1:59 left. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. — The Pacers got a stop with 11 seconds left and didn't call time, having taken advantage of a challenge stoppage 11 seconds earlier to map out scenarios. The clock kept running and Haliburton hit the winner with 0.3 seconds left. The final word 'I don't know what you say about it but I know that this group is a resilient group and we don't give up until it's 0.0 on the clock.' — Haliburton. ___ AP NBA: