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Thunder guard Alex Caruso explains his ‘erratic style' amid success with OKC

Thunder guard Alex Caruso explains his ‘erratic style' amid success with OKC

Yahoo17 hours ago

The post Thunder guard Alex Caruso explains his 'erratic style' amid success with OKC appeared first on ClutchPoints.
Oklahoma City Thunder guard Alex Caruso succinctly broke down his playing style, showcasing why he is a perfect fit on his team. The Western Conference champions were their usual selves in Game 2 of the NBA Finals, dominating a less talented opponent at home. The Indiana Pacers showed signs of life throughout the first half of this clash, but were gradually overwhelmed by the Thunder's overwhelming defense and diverse shotmaking. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander once again led the charge, this time with 34 points, eight assists, four steals, and a block.
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Caruso also was a star in his role, which has been the norm for the 2020 NBA champion during this postseason run. The 31-year-old scored 20 points as OKC pulled away for the 123-107 victory. The Thunder are not in the NBA Finals without Caruso, and the guard summed up his relentless play with an eye-opening comment in the postgame interview.
'I play a pretty erratic style, regardless if it's game one (of the regular season) or Game 2 of the finals. I just only have one gear. I don't know how to play at 75%.'
The Thunder will look to carry this momentum with them on the road
Kyle Terada-Imagn Images
It's encouraging that OKC did not fall prey to the same trend as the Milwaukee Bucks, Cleveland Cavaliers, and New York Knicks. All of those teams lost the first two games of their series to the Pacers, putting themselves in a situation where they had to win four out of five games against Indiana. Now, the series is even, with OKC having outplayed its Eastern Conference opponents for much of it, despite the shocking Game 1 loss. It's clear that the Thunder have the defensive personnel to give the Pacers fits at times.
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The Eastern Conference champions only scored 41 points in the first half and once again struggled with turnovers. Meanwhile, on the other end, Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren showed some growth after poor Game 1 performances. In addition, Caruso, Aaron Wiggins, and Isaiah Hartenstein were significant boosts off the bench. Hartenstein, in particular, saw significantly more time with Holmgren on the floor, which helped expand the lead for the Thunder.
Head coach Mark Daigneault made the bold move of starting Cason Wallace over OKC's starting center to keep up with Indiana's speed. However, through two games, Hartenstein has been a +19 in 39 minutes of play. Overall, order was restored on Sunday night, and the Thunder now will travel to Indiana in an attempt to take back home court.
Like the Denver Nuggets series, Gilgeous-Alexander and company know they must get at least one of these games on the road. Therefore, the role players, who had terrific performances tonight, like Caruso, will have to continue that form at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. One thing that the Thunder can for sure count on is that the backup guard's energy will be phenomenal; that's the standard he's set for himself, he's been completely living up to it.
Related: Thunder's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shouts out Aaron Wiggins' 'impressive' Game 2 performance
Related: Thunder's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander drops 'best fans' revelation that fueled Game 2 win

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With its season in balance, Thunder prove more clutch than Pacers to take Game 4 111-104, even series 2-2
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time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

With its season in balance, Thunder prove more clutch than Pacers to take Game 4 111-104, even series 2-2

INDIANAPOLIS — Oklahoma City did to Indiana what the Pacers have done to everyone else all playoffs and season long. Indiana led by seven entering the fourth quarter in a game where it had largely been in control but it could never quite pull away. Then, with its season hanging in the balance, Oklahoma City played at its peak. The Thunder defense held the Pacers to one bucket from the floor in the final five minutes of the game, while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander took over and scored 15 points in the fourth quarter. 'We got stagnant, their second shots were a big problem,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said postgame, referencing the four offensive rebounds the Thunder had in the fourth quarter. Advertisement The result was only the second clutch game the Pacers lost this postseason, a 111-104 Thunder win that ties the series up at 2-2. What has been a highly entertaining, well-played Finals will see Game 5 Monday night in Oklahoma City. It also feels like a series that is going to go seven games. The Pacers have focused their defense this series on denying Gilgeous-Alexander the ball, then when he does get the rock and drives they make it hard to get his teammates involved and get their offense flowing. They did that in Game 4. The problem was that SGA took on the challenge and scored 35 on the night. This is the loss Indiana will regret if it does not win the series, on the night the Thunder were just 3-of-17 from beyond the arc (Indiana was 11-of-36, just 30.6%, but they still outscored OKC by 24 from beyond the arc). While Pacers fans in the building (and online) want to complain about foul calls the Thunder shot just five more free throws than the Pacers, and that was bolstered by some intentional fouling at the end. Advertisement Thunder coach Mark Daigneault made the first big adjustment of the series, returning to the double-big starting lineup of Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein, which had been effective throughout the Western Conference postseason. It didn't work — for the first time this series it was Indiana getting off to the fast start leading 20-12 behind fast starts from Pascal Siakam and Myles Turner (the Thunder starting five was -2 for the night). Indiana had the ball moving a step ahead of Oklahoma City's rotations and it was getting great looks. Indiana was also knocking down its jumpers (only six of their first 24 points came in the paint). Advertisement Despite the hot start by the Pacers and some cold shooting from 3 by the OKC, the Thunder were hanging around, and at the end of a high-scoring first quarter, the Pacers were only up one, 35-34. Midway through the second quarter, Obi Toppin was hit with a flagrant foul on Alex Caruso for what was a non-basketball play (but might have been just a hard playoff foul in another era). Hartenstein had a few words for Toppin after that, but nothing came of it. Toppin drew a flagrant himself on Lu Dort later in the quarter. Indiana led 60-57 at the half and the difference was 3-point shooting: The Pacers were 7-of-19 from 3, while the Thunder were 1-of-10. The Thunder were 6-of-21 on shots outside the paint in the first half. Advertisement In the third quarter, the Pacers played like sharks smelling blood in the water — the crowd could sense it, their defensive pressure seemed to ramp up and the shots kept falling. Indiana led by 7 after three and Pacers fans were ready to celebrate being closer to an NBA title than the franchise had ever been. Then came the Thunder's fourth quarter and everything is even again.

With its season in balance, Thunder prove more clutch than Pacers to take Game 4 111-104, even series 2-2
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time19 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

With its season in balance, Thunder prove more clutch than Pacers to take Game 4 111-104, even series 2-2

INDIANAPOLIS — Oklahoma City did to Indiana what the Pacers have done to everyone else all playoffs and season long. Indiana led by seven entering the fourth quarter in a game where it had largely been in control but it could never quite pull away. Then, with its season hanging in the balance, Oklahoma City played at its peak. The Thunder defense held the Pacers to one bucket from the floor in the final five minutes of the game, while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander took over and scored 15 points in the fourth quarter. Down 7, facing a 3-1 series deficit... OKC DELIVERED A MASTERCLASS IN THE 4TH QUARTER. 'We got stagnant, their second shots were a big problem,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said postgame, referencing the four offensive rebounds the Thunder had in the fourth quarter. The result was only the second clutch game the Pacers lost this postseason, a 111-104 Thunder win that ties the series up at 2-2. What has been a highly entertaining, well-played Finals will see Game 5 Monday night in Oklahoma City. It also feels like a series that is going to go seven games. The Pacers have focused their defense this series on denying Gilgeous-Alexander the ball, then when he does get the rock and drives they make it hard to get his teammates involved and get their offense flowing. They did that in Game 4. The problem was that SGA took on the challenge and scored 35 on the night. SGA COMES UP HUGE IN GAME 4 ⚡️🚨 35 points. 15 in the 4th. 3 steals. THE #KiaMVP DELIVERS IN A MASSIVE MOMENT FOR OKC! This is the loss Indiana will regret if it does not win the series, on the night the Thunder were just 3-of-17 from beyond the arc (Indiana was 11-of-36, just 30.6%, but they still outscored OKC by 24 from beyond the arc). While Pacers fans in the building (and online) want to complain about foul calls the Thunder shot just five more free throws than the Pacers, and that was bolstered by some intentional fouling at the end. Thunder coach Mark Daigneault made the first big adjustment of the series, returning to the double-big starting lineup of Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein, which had been effective throughout the Western Conference postseason. It didn't work — for the first time this series it was Indiana getting off to the fast start leading 20-12 behind fast starts from Pascal Siakam and Myles Turner (the Thunder starting five was -2 for the night). SIAKAM THROWDOWN! He's got 10 points and FOUR steals in the 1st quarter 😲 Indiana had the ball moving a step ahead of Oklahoma City's rotations and it was getting great looks. Indiana was also knocking down its jumpers (only six of their first 24 points came in the paint). Despite the hot start by the Pacers and some cold shooting from 3 by the OKC, the Thunder were hanging around, and at the end of a high-scoring first quarter, the Pacers were only up one, 35-34. Midway through the second quarter, Obi Toppin was hit with a flagrant foul on Alex Caruso for what was a non-basketball play (but might have been just a hard playoff foul in another era). Hartenstein had a few words for Toppin after that, but nothing came of it. Obi Toppin was charged with a Flagrant 1 foul on this play. Toppin and Isaiah Hartenstein received double technicals after review. Toppin drew a flagrant himself on Lu Dort later in the quarter. Lu Dort received a flagrant 1 for this foul on Obi Toppin (via @TSN_Sports) Indiana led 60-57 at the half and the difference was 3-point shooting: The Pacers were 7-of-19 from 3, while the Thunder were 1-of-10. The Thunder were 6-of-21 on shots outside the paint in the first half. In the third quarter, the Pacers played like sharks smelling blood in the water — the crowd could sense it, their defensive pressure seemed to ramp up and the shots kept falling. Indiana led by 7 after three and Pacers fans were ready to celebrate being closer to an NBA title than the franchise had ever been. Then came the Thunder's fourth quarter and everything is even again.

Obi Toppin, Isaiah Hartenstein hit with technicals after scuffle in tense NBA Finals moment
Obi Toppin, Isaiah Hartenstein hit with technicals after scuffle in tense NBA Finals moment

New York Post

time25 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Obi Toppin, Isaiah Hartenstein hit with technicals after scuffle in tense NBA Finals moment

Emotions got high between two former Knicks on Friday night. Obi Toppin and Isaiah Hartenstein got into it during the Thunder's 111-104 Game 4 win in the NBA Finals after Toppin committed a hard foul on Oklahoma City guard Alex Caruso. Toppin, 27, received a flagrant 1 after stiff-arming Caruso to the ground while the 31-year-old was driving in for a layup midway through the second quarter. Advertisement 3 Indiana Pacers forward Obi Toppin (1) shoves Oklahoma City Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein (55) during the first half of Game 4 of the 2025 NBA Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on June 13, 2025. Kyle Terada-Imagn Images Hartenstein, 27, rushed over to confront Toppin shortly after the play, with the pair having to be held back by referees after the Brooklyn native shoved the Thunder center. After the officials eventually broke up the altercation, both Toppin and Hartenstein were issued technicals following a review. Advertisement 3 Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton and NBA referee Josh Tiven hold back Indiana Pacers forward Obi Toppin during the first half of Game four of the 2025 NBA Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Kyle Terada-Imagn Images Toppin, who was drafted by the Knicks with the No. 8 pick in the 2020 NBA Draft, was dealt to Indiana for two future second-round picks ahead of the 2023-24 season. Both were teammates on the Knicks during the 2022-23 season during Hartenstein's first of two seasons with the team. The Knicks ultimately let Hartenstein walk during last year's free agency, when he signed a three-year deal worth $87 million with the Thunder, a contract that he believed ended up working out for both sides. Advertisement 3 Isaiah Hartenstein rebounds the ball during the game against the Indiana Pacers during Game Three of the 2025 NBA Finals on June 11, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NBAE via Getty Images 'It was smart,' Hartenstein said before a game between the Knicks and Thunder in January. 'I think it was for both parties, it was perfect. I'm in a situation here where it's going really good. They got a great center, one of the best centers in the league. 'So I think for both parties it was perfect. Knowing Leon Rose, he'll always find something. He's been doing a great job, so he made the right adjustment.' Despite the Knicks only offering Hartenstein a four-year contract worth $72 million, the big man insisted that he did not leave solely for the money. Advertisement 'I think I'm getting the ball a little bit more now. In the league, you just have to find your roles and every situation your role is different,' he said. 'Kind of New York it was [different]. My usage went up more at the end, but I was just trying to figure out a role and that was playing defense, rebounding, getting Jalen [Brunson] open, getting other guys open looks. 'And so I think you just have to adjust to the role. Here, the role is getting the ball a little bit more.' Hartenstein finished the win with two points, two assists and six rebounds as the Thunder tied up the series at two games apiece. Toppin dropped in 17 points with seven assists in the Indiana loss. Game 5 will be held in Oklahoma City on Monday night.

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