logo
NBA Finals 2025: From Loud City to Pacers Nation, get to know OKC and Indianapolis

NBA Finals 2025: From Loud City to Pacers Nation, get to know OKC and Indianapolis

Yahoo05-06-2025
Oklahoma City and Indianapolis are about to get to know each other well.
That'll happen when your basketball teams go at it in the NBA Finals.
With the games scheduled across two-plus weeks, there's lots of time for those of us in the Big Friendly to get familiar with the Circle City. We, of course, are similar in our love of big-time professional basketball, but our cities, our fan bases and more are different.
Advertisement
Let's speed up the learning curve.
We are Loud City. They are Pacers Nation.
We are Thunder Up. They are Yes 'Cers.
We are The 405. They are The 317.
We are hated in Seattle. They are hated in Baltimore.
We changed the name. They did not.
More: How original Paul George trade between OKC Thunder, Pacers created unlikely NBA Finals
They are Herb Simon and the Irsay family. We are Clay Bennett and his band of merry owners.
They are the Indy 500. We are the Land Run.
They are the lead car. We are a force of nature.
They are Indianapolis Motor Speedway. We are Devon Park.
We are Jocelyn Alo. They are Caitlin Clark.
Advertisement
They are the NCAA. We are USA Softball.
We are the 2028 Olympics. They are the 2028 Olympic swim trials.
They are college basketball. We are college football.
We are Blake Griffin, Sam Bradford and Joe Carter. They are Oscar Robertson, Zack Martin and Oscar Charleston.
We are 'Kelvin Sampson is so great.' They are 'Kelvin Sampson can kick rocks.'
More: What impresses OKC Thunder coach Mark Daigneault most about Pacers, NBA Finals foe?
Indiana Pacers fans celebrate outside of Gainbridge Fieldhouse after the Pacers defeated the New York Knicks, 125 - 108, in game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference finals, on Saturday, May 31, 2025, in Indianapolis.
We are the Oklahoma Monarchs and the Oklahoma City Comets. They are the Indianapolis Clowns and the Indianapolis Indians.
They are Victory Field. We are Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark.
Advertisement
We are Scissortail Park. They are White River State Park.
They are Central Canal. We are Bricktown Canal.
We are Cattleman's. They are St. Elmo.
They are the Children's Museum. We are the Oklahoma City Memorial & Museum.
We are Devon Energy and Continental Resources. They are Eli Lilly and Salesforce.
They are railroads. We are oil rigs.
We are David Holt. They are, well, no one has a mayor cooler than us.
We are Vince Gill. They are John Cougar Mellencamp.
We are Flaming Lips. They are Lily & Madeleine.
We are Color Me Badd. They are Babyface.
More: How did OKC Thunder get back to NBA Finals? Timeline from Paul George trade to now
Fans cheer during a watch part at Paycom Center for game 3 of the Wester Conference Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Minnesota Timberwolves in Oklahoma City, on Saturday, May 24, 2025.
They are David Letterman. We are Bill Hader. (OK, he's from Tulsa, but he's a big Thunder fan, so we'll allow it.)
Advertisement
They are Vivica A. Fox, Joyce DeWitt and Mike Epps. We are Olivia Munn, James Marsden and Kristin Chenoweth. (Again, she is from Broken Arrow but a huge Thunder fan.)
They are 'Hoosiers.' We are 'Oklahoma!'
We are Ralph Ellison. They are Madam C.J. Walker.
We are the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee (Creek), and Seminole. They are the Miami and the Delaware.
We are the Stockyards and cowboys. They are Municipal Gardens and corn.
We are the Oklahoma State Capitol. They are the Indiana State Capitol.
And during the NBA Finals, there's one more thing that all of us will come to discover.
One of us will be home to the 2025 NBA champ.
Advertisement
The other won't.
More: OKC Thunder vs Indiana Pacers matchup breakdown. Who has the edge?
Jenni Carlson: Jenni can be reached at jcarlson@oklahoman.com. Like her at facebook.com/JenniCarlsonOK, follow her at @jennicarlsonok.bsky.social and twitter.com/jennicarlson_ok, and support her work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today.
This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: NBA Finals 2025: Your guide to OKC, Indianapolis before Thunder-Pacers
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Larry Bird knew he still had it after hitting 20 shots in a row in his 60s: "I can still play a little"
Larry Bird knew he still had it after hitting 20 shots in a row in his 60s: "I can still play a little"

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Larry Bird knew he still had it after hitting 20 shots in a row in his 60s: "I can still play a little"

Larry Bird knew he still had it after hitting 20 shots in a row in his 60s: "I can still play a little" originally appeared on Basketball Network. Nothing ever stopped Larry Bird from retiring when he decided that he was done with basketball in 1992. Though he remained in the NBA as a coach and later as a team executive, Bird never felt the itch to suit up and play again. Unlike other retired former NBA stars, Bird was very much at peace with his departure from the game. He had no hang-ups, even though he was prompted to call it quits because of chronic back pain. However, Bird realized that his hot hand hasn't diminished one bit. It's worth mentioning that he was already in his 60s when he randomly decided to pick the ball up after an Indiana Pacers practice and discovered that he still had it. "I'm having a good time, I have the time to enjoy working outside, golfing, fishing, staying busy with various business and personal projects," the Boston Celtics legend told The Boston Herald in 2021. "I pretty much put the basketball down when I retired, but I did hit 20 shots in a row after a game practice a couple of years ago in my street clothes, so I am thinking I can still play a little," the Hall of Famer fondly revealed. Bird has a witness As it turns out, no lies were detected in Bird's story. Former Pacers star shooting guard Paul George once confirmed it. In fact, it was one of George's favorite Larry Legend moments during his time with the Pacers. Just like how Bird described it, George said the NBA icon was in street clothes that day. To this day, PG13 is still in disbelief at how a 60-something Bird could sink long-range shot after long-range shot. What's even more epic is that Bird just walked out like nothing happened after making those shots in front of the team. "One of my all-time favorite stories of Larry; it was after practice, right?" PG once recounted. "We're shooting, and he's like walking out of the gym, about to leave. I've never seen him play. I've never seen him shoot. I always had this vision of him from YouTube videos and old clips like that. But the ball rolls over to him. He's in slacks. He's in a button-down. He got his loafers on." "So, he picks the ball up, and I'm sure he probably hasn't shot the ball in like, I don't know, years at this point. Shoots that motherfu*ker, cash, and then just smooth walked out, bro," then Pacers star added. Bird's greatness is timeless What Bird did inside the Pacers' practice facility that day only goes to show that his greatness is timeless. While some of his contemporaries were already out of shape, Larry Legend could still casually drain jump shots without any practice or warm-up. At present, Bird was welcomed back by the Pacers and is working with the team as a consultant. He is already 68 years old, but it wouldn't be a shock to hear another story about him showing up in the gym, picking up a basketball and hitting long-range like it is the middle of the story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Aug 17, 2025, where it first appeared.

Social media hit Ilona Maher takes women's rugby onto new plane
Social media hit Ilona Maher takes women's rugby onto new plane

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Social media hit Ilona Maher takes women's rugby onto new plane

Ilona Maher transcends women's rugby, giving it a profile outside of the sport in the way that Mia Hamm did for women's football. Now the stage is set at the women's World Cup in England for the American to spark even more interest. The 29-year-old phenomenon has attracted over eight million followers on social media, not only through her sporting exploits but also for her promotion of body positivity. She played a pivotal role in the USA women's team winning a first ever Olympic medal, beating Australia in the third-place playoff in Paris last year. On the back of that achievement, Maher featured in Sports Illustrated's swimsuit edition and appeared in the US version of hit TV show "Dancing with the Stars", finishing runner-up. The Maher-fuelled improvement of the USA team attracted the attention of American investor Michele Kang who donated $4 million to help develop the USA Women's Rugby Sevens Team over four years. In another sport, Kang owns the Lyon women's football team, the eight-time European champions. Maher's days in Paris were not just spent playing rugby but also attracting even more followers with her pithy social media posts. She compared life in the Athletes' Village to a reality TV show, in one humorous posting saying she was there "looking for love", to which her friend replies: "No you are here to play rugby." In more reflective mode in Paris, she told the Bleacher Report one of her goals was trying to reassure "girls" that playing sport did not take away their "girliness". "What we're trying to show is the beauty that in sports you can be a badass on the field, you can be a beast on the field, but also be a beauty," she said. "It's really important for me because I want girls to see what their body is capable of. "It's not just to be looked at, objectified, but it's strong and it's fast, and it's brilliant." Maher, who through her body positivity push has become a brand ambassador for a deodorant and a skincare product she co-founded, revels in her global popularity and being "America's sweetheart." "I love when people call me that because I feel like I'm maybe not the image you would have of a sweetheart in some sense of the word,' Maher told CNN in January this year. "I'm honoured." - 'Tone down' - Maher, who hails from Vermont, may be extrovert and cheerful but she keeps her ego in check by showing appreciation to those women sports stars who paved the way for her. Hamm, her fellow American and a groundbreaking football superstar of the 1990s and early noughties, a two-time Olympic and World Cup winner, features high on the list. "I remember in our gym we always had a poster of Mia Hamm, and that was always cool to look up to her," Maher told the Bleacher Report. Closer to home, though, she is part of a tight-knit family unit, with her father Michael, a keen rugby player who introduced her to the sport, Netherlands-born mum Mieneke and sisters Olivia and Adrianna. Elder sister Olivia has a considerable social media presence herself. From her father Ilona not only learned about rugby but also a crucial life lesson when he defended her at a softball event. One of the other dads complained that Maher's pitches were unhittable but he was put in his place by Maher senior. "I think that was the first moment of being told to never tone it down," she told CNN. "Because that dad over there … wanted me to tone myself down so that it could be easier for (his daughter). "But that's not the world, is it? The world isn't going to tone down for you." Instead Maher has upped the ante and the fruits for women's rugby have been plentiful as New Zealand legend Portia Woodman-Wickliffe told AFP. "Having someone from America with that American market who is very confident, loves rugby, loves supporting women's bodies, someone as vocal as that is amazing for us," Woodman-Wickliffe said. "We need to capitalise and follow her as much as we can." pi/gj

Lakers jersey history No. 4 — Adrian Dantley
Lakers jersey history No. 4 — Adrian Dantley

USA Today

time4 hours ago

  • USA Today

Lakers jersey history No. 4 — Adrian Dantley

Through the 2024-25 season, the Los Angeles Lakers have had a total of 506 players suit up for them, going back to their days in Minneapolis. Some were forgettable, some were serviceable, some were good and a select few were flat-out legendary. As the Lakers approach their 80th season of existence (they were founded back in 1946 as the Detroit Gems in the National Basketball League), LeBron Wire is taking a look at each player who has worn their jersey, whether it has been a purple and gold one or the ones they donned back in the Midwest during their early years. Here's a look at a player who some may not know once played for the Lakers — Adrian Dantley. Dantley had a stellar individual stint at the University of Notre Dame, not exactly a school known for its basketball program. In three years there, he averaged 25.8 points and 9.8 rebounds a game, and he peaked at 30.4 points a game as a sophomore. When he was a freshman during the 1973-74 season, the Fighting Irish were the team that ended the University of California, Los Angeles' 88-game winning streak. The Bruins were led by legends such as center Bill Walton and forward Jamaal Wilkes and were coached by the iconic John Wooden. Just after his college career ended, Dantley earned an Olympic gold medal with the United States. He was taken with the No. 6 pick in the 1976 NBA Draft by the Buffalo Braves. Early in his second NBA season, he was traded to the Lakers. The Lakers were trying to build a championship team around Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and he didn't do too badly. In one and a half seasons with them, he averaged 18.3 points a game while shooting 51.5% from the field. But L.A. was simply too unbalanced to get over the hump. It had Dantley, a 6-foot-5 forward, and Wilkes, who was 6-foot-6, starting at the forward spots, and neither was able to support Abdul-Jabbar defensively or on the boards. With Magic Johnson coming on board as a rookie in 1979, the Lakers traded Dantley to the Utah Jazz for the talented but troubled Spencer Haywood. In Utah, he truly started to blossom — he would average 29.6 points a game in seven seasons with the Jazz and lead the NBA in scoring twice. He then played two seasons and change with the Detroit Pistons before getting traded to the Dallas Mavericks midway through the 1988-89 campaign. No matter where he went, Dantley made an impact with his immense scoring skills. Despite his less-than-ideal height as a small forward, he had an excellent low-post game, and he was also a free throw magnet who shot 81.8% from the charity stripe for his career.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store