ESPN host on John Haliburton taunting Giannis: 'Punish him... You have to make a stand'
As predicted by IndyStar columnist Gregg Doyel, most of the talk nationally the morning after the Pacers' thrilling Game 5 win over the Bucks isn't about the game itself, but rather the postgame incident afterward.
Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo got into a confrontation with Tyrese Haliburton's dad, John, after the elder Haliburton walked onto the court and waved a towel with the Pacers point guard's image in the face of the two-time MVP.
John Haliburton and Antetokounmpo had to be separated, and he and Tyrese later apologized for the incident.
"Me and my pops have talked about that," Tyrese Haliburton said in his postgame news conference. "I don't agree with what transpired there from him. I think basketball is basketball and let's keep it on the court. I think he just got excited, saw his son make a game-winner and came on the court. We had a conversation. He needs to just allow me to play basketball and stay over there, I'll come to him to celebrate. I don't think my pops was in the right at all there. Unfortunate what happened at the end there."
John Haliburton was also contrite, taking to social media to apologize.
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"I sincerely apologize to Giannis, the Milwaukee Bucks and the Pacers organization for my actions following tonight's game," he posted on X. "This was not a good reflection on our sport or my son and I will not make that mistake again."
Some don't think he should even have the opportunity to make the mistake again.
On ESPN's "Get Up!" Wednesday morning, host Ryan Clark went in on John Haliburton, saying he should be banned from attending games.
"I believe he should never be allowed to be at another basketball game," Clark said. "He shouldn't be allowed... he shouldn't be able to come to the suite. Punish him. If you're going to go on the court, if you're going to be big and bad, if you're going to put yourself above the game, don't come to the game. Ever. You have to make a stand, so no one else does this."
TNT's "Inside the NBA" crew was a little more measured in their condemnation, though mostly agreed John Haliburton was in the wrong.
"What's his dad doing on the court? He's not supposed to be on the court. He's an idiot and if don't you think that, you're an idiot, too," Charles Barkley said.
With Kenny Smith adding: "Because you pay for a ticket, it doesn't entitle you to be on the court."
Shaquille O'Neal wasn't so moved: "I don't care. It comes with the territory," saying Antetokounmpo should have ignored John Haliburton. "I played 19 years; it happened plenty of times. It comes with the territory... Don't be a punk and whine about it."
Indiana coach Rick Carlisle said he and members of the Pacers spoke with John Haliburton after the game, but it's unclear at this point what, if any, type of punishment will be handed down either by the Pacers or the NBA.
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New York Times
23 minutes ago
- New York Times
Pacers keep betting on themselves this season — and keep winning
OKLAHOMA CITY — The phones in Indiana remained quiet through the first week of February. The Pacers knew what they had, even if the rest of the basketball world hadn't caught on yet. The future of the team could have been up in the air. After a 10-15 start to the season, the Pacers were on fire, but a January hot streak sparked versus a mostly cushy schedule. For months, they had heard about how their Eastern Conference finals run the previous spring was fluke-ish, a product of injuries to the rest of the NBA. The organization stared at a daunting financial situation, by its standards, for the 2025-26 season. Advertisement The Pacers could have tried to save money. They could have deemed themselves good but not good enough to topple the three teams that stood far ahead of them in the East at the time of the trade deadline. They could have angled more toward the future. But they knew what they had, even if others doubted how high they could climb. No matter how Indiana's season ends, whether a 1-0 NBA Finals lead turns into the first non-ABA title in franchise history or trends in the opposite direction, this will be the legacy of the 2025 Pacers. At every level of the organization — in the locker room, on the coaching staff, in the front office — they have believed they are good enough. They lose 15 of 25 to begin the season, and they bounce back. They fall down big seemingly without enough time remaining to make a comeback, and they win a first-round playoff game. Then they do the same in Round 2. And again in Round 3. And one more time to kick off the finals. Tyrese Haliburton's new Pumas, which he jokingly credited for his dagger to clinch Game 1 on Thursday, need an adventurous win probability chart stamped onto them, the type with a steep upward slope at the very end, the symbol of this Pacers season. The Pacers, no matter the situation, continue to bet on themselves. And they continue to prove themselves correct. Teams swooned over center Myles Turner leading into the trade deadline. Turner is the rare rim-protecting 3-point marksman, an intuitive fit on any roster, someone who could help on both sides of the ball without disrupting a group's ecosystem. The 29-year-old will be a free agent this summer. If the Pacers pay him even the low end of his market value without making any other edits to the roster, they will go into the luxury tax for the first time since 2005. This would be new. But the Pacers refused to engage with other front offices on Turner. They believed they were good enough to make a run impressive enough to justify whatever expenses could be next. Advertisement Other front offices checked in on Andrew Nembhard, the man who glitzed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander out of his sneakers on a stepback 3-pointer late in Game 1. The Pacers were better with Nembhard on the court all season, and their turnaround coincided with his return from injury in early December. Because of his contract structure, which includes a low salary this year that jumps to $18 million in 2025-26, dealing him could have presented one way to get off long-term money. But Indiana swatted away any mention of his name. Nembhard was too important. And the Pacers, they believed, were not frauds. Far from it. They were not trading Nembhard. They weren't trading Turner. They weren't depleting their depth, one of the main catalysts of their magical spring. They opted to hold on to Obi Toppin, another player on an eight-figure salary they could have sent elsewhere for financial reasons. All Toppin has done to justify the move — or lack thereof — is race for transition buckets and drain 3-pointers. He nailed five during the first game of the finals. The narrative of both teams in the finals, the Pacers and the Oklahoma City Thunder, has surrounded trades. The Pacers traded for Haliburton in what will go down as an all-time heist. They were clever enough to use 2023 cap space to sign Bruce Brown to an intentionally bloated contract, then use that large salary to flip Brown for Pascal Siakam, another dandy of an exchange. They identified Aaron Nesmith in the deal that sent Malcolm Brogdon to Boston and used space to absorb Toppin without giving up any players or consequential draft picks. The Thunder are built on trades, too. They acquired Gilgeous-Alexander in the Paul George deal. They selected Jalen Williams with a draft pick they got in the same trade. They flipped Josh Giddey for defensive menace Alex Caruso. They have stockpiled draft picks like no franchise ever. Advertisement But sometimes, the best moves are ones of omission. Sometimes, the smartest trades are the ones organizations choose not to make. The Thunder, for example, could have messed with their core midseason to add a veteran, such as Brooklyn Nets sharpshooter Cam Johnson. They opted not to, banking on continuity and a close-knit locker room, which they could ride to the end of the season. The Pacers have the same band together, too, a similar squad to the one that went to the conference finals last season, but one with even more familiarity. The names might be the same, but this is a better team than it was a year ago. It's more physical defensively. Nembhard and Nesmith engulf perimeter threats. And the more time guys have spent together, the more telepathy has reigned supreme, whether on their blink-of-an-eye fast breaks, their constant cutting or their hot-potato ball movement. The front office believed in the players. And the players had their backs. 'You come into the year with all the talk around how (going to the Eastern Conference finals) was a fluke,' Haliburton said. 'You have an unsuccessful first couple months, and now it's easy for everyone to clown you and talk about you in a negative way. And I think as a group we take everything personal as a group. It's not just me. It's everybody.' This is a spite run. The Pacers go down 14 with 2:51 to go, only for Nesmith to sink jumper after jumper and for them to win. They trail by 15 in the fourth quarter of a finals game and push the Thunder into paralysis. Nembhard shimmies into a 3. Haliburton lifts for victory. They start 10-15 and recognize life will be different once Nembhard returns — and once Haliburton, after a slow start to the season, forms into a one-man offense. They trek through the trade deadline insistent this year's team is cohesive enough to play deep into the spring, even as the conversation everywhere other than Indiana is about a supposedly guaranteed conference finals between the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers, whom the Pacers, of course, handled in only five games. The Pacers have trailed all year. It's deterred neither their players nor decision-makers. Now, they're receiving the payoff. (Photo of Myles Turner: William Purnell / Getty Images)

Indianapolis Star
an hour ago
- Indianapolis Star
Doyel: Tyrese Haliburton's historic 2025 NBA playoff run has been borderline impossible
OKLAHOMA CITY – The statistics are as preposterous as the shots Tyrese Haliburton keeps hitting, one impossible rainbow after another, none of it making sense – not the stats, not the shots – as Haliburton and the 2025 Indiana Pacers continue to write their storybook postseason march into the 2025 NBA Finals, and perhaps beyond. Perhaps all the way to NBA immortality. Haliburton is there already, authoring an individual postseason run we've never seen before. And before you do that thing people do and criticize – accuse someone of being a prisoner of the moment – ask yourself: When have you seen anything like this? Better yet, ask someone who's seen more basketball than you and me combined, Mark Boyle, the voice of the Pacers since 1988. Boyle was sitting courtside at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on April 29 as Haliburton blew past Giannis Antetokounmpo in the final second of Game in the first round. Haliburton's high-arcing scoop shot fell, and so did the Bucks in five games. Re-live the Pacers unbelievable run to the 2025 NBA Finals with IndyStar's commemorative book Boyle was courtside in Cleveland on May 6 when Haliburton dribbled past Cavs defender Ty Jerome into the lane, then darted back and launched a 30-footer over his outstretched hand to win Game 2 of the Eastern Conference semifinals. Boyle was at Madison Square Garden on May 21 when Haliburton did something similar to Knicks center Mitchell Robinson in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, going into the lane and then turning around and dribbling back behind the key for a 23-footer at the buzzer. The shot bounced high off the rim as MSG exploded in happiness, then fell through the basket as the building went silent and the game went to overtime, where the Pacers won. And Boyle was at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City on Thursday for Game 1 of these NBA Finals, when Haliburton dribbled Thunder defender Cason Wallace to the right before pulling up for a 21-footer that won the game with 0.3 seconds left. It's absurd, what we're watching. When have you seen anything like this? That's what I'm asking Boyle, after first asking about the pressure of having to say something memorable, something extemporaneous, in the instant after every one of these Haliburton shots. Boyle shrugs about the pressure – he's been calling Pacers games for 37 years; whatever he says, he says – but he's not shrugging about the ride Haliburton is taking the Pacers, and the rest of us, through the 2025 NBA playoffs. 'I've seen things like this – but not at that volume,' Boyle says. 'In other words, Reggie (Miller) did some things, but Tyrese has done in a span of what – a few weeks? – he's done four things at minimum. I don't want to diminish anything Reggie did, or anything any of the greats ever did, but in my personal experience I have never seen anything like this because of the frequency and the short window.' We've not even gotten to the stats yet, the numbers, that prove what we're watching isn't just fun or rare … but borderline impossible. Nor have we asked OKC defender Alex Caruso what it's like to be on the other side of this. Let's do both now. You were promised the preposterous, and here it comes: In the 2025 NBA playoffs, on shots in the final five seconds with a chance to tie the game or take the lead, everyone in NBA not named Tyrese Haliburton is 3-for-16. Tyrese Haliburton is 4-for-4, according to ESPN. You were promised the absurd, and here it comes: This season alone, including the regular season and playoffs, Haliburton has attempted 15 shots to tie or take the lead in the final two minutes. He has made 13. For context, consider something. You're aware Oklahoma City's Shai Gilgeous-Alexnader was named NBA MVP this season, right? It's like this: SGA has attempted seven such shots all season – final two minutes, to tie the game or take the lead – and made exactly none of them. He's 0-for-7. And Haliburton is 13-for-15? I'm asking Boyle about it, and he's nodding. 'To put that into perspective,' he says, 'there are guys playing professional basketball – which means, great players – who could stand on a foul line in an empty gym and not hit 13 of 15.' At this very moment Saturday, the day before Game 2, Paycom Center is mostly empty. The players are here, along with an international group of reporters, but the fans are gone. The place is mostly quiet. I'm asking Thunder guard Alex Caruso about this playoff run by Haliburton. Specifically, Alex: Can you remove yourself from the equation as his opponent, and just appreciate what we're all watching? 'Sure,' Caruso says. 'Yeah – I mean, he's a competitor. I know how good of a player he is. I've got respect for that, and through this run through the playoffs he's made some big shots and big plays. That's who he is.' Haliburton has now hit a last-second shot to beat three of the four teams the Pacers have seen in the playoffs – Bucks, Cavs and Thunder – and his buzzer-beater at New York would've won that game had his toe been outside the 3-point arc. Either way, the shot forced overtime, where the Pacers won. The poor guy charged with defending Haliburton in the final six seconds Thursday night of Game 1, Wallace, was asked if he was aware of that history this postseason. 'Yeah,' he said Saturday. 'That's what we told ourselves because we have seen it. We just didn't want to let it happen to us.' You were promised the impossible, and here it comes: In the last 20 postseasons, there have been seven comebacks where the eventual winning team had a win probability of less than one-fourth of 1 percent. The Pacers have three of those wins – all this postseason. And that doesn't include Game 1 against the Thunder, when 'all' the Pacers did was rally from a 15-point deficit in the final 9½ minutes, and a nine-point hole with 2:52 left., Their win probability at that point was a robust 2.3%. Look at those four victories, and do the math. Well, here, Tom Haberstroh from Yahoo! Sports did it for you: The odds of one team pulling of all four of those comeback ever – to say nothing of doing all four within six weeks – is 1 in 17 billion. One in 17 billion. Your chance of winning the Powerball lottery is 1 in 300 million. Which means you're 57 times more likely to win, say, $200 million than the Pacers were to win those four games during this postseason. And to win those four games, it has taken a team effort clearly. Another statistic: In 33 minutes of 'clutch time' this postseason, the Pacers have committed just two turnovers. Down 10 points in the final seven minutes of Game 1 on Thursday night, the Pacers committed zero turnovers the rest of the way – and this was after they'd committed 25 turnovers in the first 41 minutes. Takes a team to win those four games and overcome those 1-in-17 billion odds. But also, it take Haliburton. Because those were the four games where Haliburton hit his shot in the final second, or at the buzzer. Haliburton hasn't talked much about the run he's one, and I'll be honest: We're not asking him about it. This feels like a no-hitter or even a perfect game we're watching. Who wants to be the one to jinx it? But Haliburton was asked Saturday about the NBA Finals, and these playoffs, in general. 'I'm just cherishing this moment,' he was saying Saturday, 'and just really enjoying what I'm doing right now.' Here was Pacers center Myles Turner, Thursday night, after Haliburton's latest game-winner. 'He's a baller and a hooper and really just a gamer,' Turner said. 'When it come to the moments, he wants the ball. He wants to be the one to hit that shot. He doesn't shy away from the moment. 'He just keeps finding a way … and the rest is history.' Find IndyStar columnist Gregg Doyel on Threads, or on BlueSky and Twitter at @GreggDoyelStar, or at Subscribe to the free weekly Doyel on Demand newsletter.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander calls Kobe Bryant his favorite basketball player ever
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander calls Kobe Bryant his favorite basketball player ever Doing a side-by-side comparison, you can see the similarities between Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Kobe Bryant. The pump-fakes. The footwork. The mid-range infatuation. The MVP winner once dared to say Bryant was 'Michael Jordan on steroids.' You can see Gilgeous-Alexander play eerily similar to Bryant. As the Oklahoma City Thunder are in a 0-1 series deficit against the Indiana Pacers in the 2025 NBA Finals, the roster fielded trivia-like questions throughout Saturday's practice. One included Gilgeous-Alexander's admiration for Bryant. He talked about his basketball impact. While they never crossed paths when Bryant was alive until his 2020 death, he's carried his baton as the NBA's best shooting guard with three straight 30-plus point campaigns. "He is probably my favorite player of all time. Never got the chance to meet him, to answer your question," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "Not only me, kids all across the world, his influence has gone through the roof, and it's like I said, he'll be remembered forever because of the competitor and the basketball player he was. Yeah, hopefully somewhere close to that as a basketball player one day. He is a special talent, special person, and God rest his soul." Entering a must-win Game 2, Gilgeous-Alexander will likely need to replicate his 38-point Game 1 performance for the Thunder to inch closer to a championship. The Pacers have proven to be an admirable foil. They won't be a pushover like many expected before the NBA Finals started.