Thunder cruise to commanding Game 2 win over Pacers to even NBA Finals
The Thunder defeated the Pacers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals.
OKLAHOMA CITY — This has been Oklahoma City's formula all season: Lose one game, respond in the next.
That's exactly what the Thunder did in Game 2 of the NBA Finals.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 34 points, Alex Caruso added 20 off the bench and the Thunder beat the Indiana Pacers 123-107 on Sunday night to tie these finals at one game apiece.
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Jalen Williams scored 19, Aaron Wiggins had 18 and Chet Holmgren finished with 15 for the Thunder. It was the franchise's first finals game win since the opener of the 2012 series against Miami.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander attempts a shot during Game 2 of the NBA Finals on June 8. AP
Tyrese Haliburton looks to pass during Game 2 of the NBA Finals on June 8. NBAE via Getty Images
'We did some things good tonight. We did some things bad,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'We've got to be able to get better and be ready for Game 3.'
Tyrese Haliburton scored 17 for Indiana, which erased a 15-point, fourth-quarter deficit in Game 1 but never made a push on Sunday. Myles Turner scored 16 and Pascal Siakam added 15 for the Pacers, the first team since Miami in 2013 to not have a 20-point scorer in the first two games of the finals.
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Game 3 is Wednesday at Indianapolis, in what will be the first finals game in that city in 25 years.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander drives with the ball during Game 2 of the NBA Finals on June 8. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
'A bad first half, obviously, was a big problem,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. 'And we just played poorly. A little better in the second half. But you can't be a team that's reactive and expect to be successful or have consistency.'
Gilgeous-Alexander's first basket of the night was a history-maker: It gave him 3,000 points on the season, including the regular season and playoffs. And later in Game 2, he passed New York's Jalen Brunson (514) as the leading overall scorer in these playoffs.
But the real milestone for the MVP came a couple hours later, when he and most everybody else on the Thunder got a finals win for the first time.
Alex Caruso looks to shoot during the Thunder's Game 2 win June 8. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Andrew Nembhard tumbles to the court with the ball during Game 2 of the NBA Finals on June 8. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
A 19-2 run in the second quarter turned what was a six-point game into a 23-point Thunder lead. It might have seemed wobbly a couple of times — an immediate 10-0 rebuttal by the Pacers made it 52-39, and Indiana was within 13 again after Andrew Nembhard's layup with 7:09 left in the third — but the Thunder lead was never in serious doubt.
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'They did a good job being disruptive,' Siakam said. 'They got out in transition. … They were super aggressive, which is what they do.'
With the noise level in the building often topping 100 decibels — a chain saw is 110 dB, for comparison purposes — the Thunder did what they've done pretty much all season. They came off a loss, this time a 111-110 defeat in Game 1, and blew somebody out as their response.
Including the NBA Cup title game, which doesn't count in any standings, the Thunder are now 18-2 this season when coming off a loss. Of those 18 wins, 12 have been by double digits.
'That's a long 48 hours when you lose Game 1 like that, coming into Game 2,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'The guys did a great job of just focusing on what we needed to do to stack to a win tonight. That's how we got it.'

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