An 'overrated' Tyrese Haliburton is the NBA's most underrated superstar
As Cleveland Cavaliers fans showered Indiana Pacers point guard Tyrese Haliburton with "overrated" chants at the free-throw line midway through Game 2 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series, Cavs star Donovan Mitchell attempted to quiet the crowd, as if he knew what the consequences could be.
This tells us all we need to know about how the NBA feels about Haliburton. Though he was voted as "the league's most overrated player" by an anonymous panel of his peers, according to The Athletic, there is — and should be — real fear about what he is capable of doing to opponents, even the East's No. 1 seed.
Advertisement
True to form, Haliburton scored seven points in the final 84 seconds of Game 2, including a last-second, game-winning 3-pointer, to complete an improbable comeback and give his team a 2-0 lead in the series.
"Now that that label's there, it's going to be every time we play somebody," Haliburton said in the aftermath of the chants. "Every time on the road it'll probably follow me until the next poll comes out, and we'll see if I'm No. 1 again, but for me I just control what I can, man, and, yeah, overrate that."
It is important to note that only 13 respondents to The Athletic's player poll actually voted Haliburton "overrated." It could have been the entirety of the Milwaukee Bucks. As Indiana defeated the Bucks on its way to the inaugural NBA Cup championship game in 2023, Haliburton mocked Damian Lillard's "Dame Time" celebration. He piled on as the Pacers eliminated Milwaukee in the first round of the 2024 playoffs.
Advertisement
Lillard was a made man, a future Hall of Famer; Haliburton was not ... yet.
Maybe the New York Knicks or Brooklyn Nets voted for Haliburton. They have also engaged in wars of words with Haliburton in recent seasons. While nobody has publicly explained exactly why a contingent of NBA players feels so negatively about Haliburton, Hall of Fame point guard Tim Hardaway Sr., whose son plays for the Detroit Pistons, may have offered the best explanation on the "Gil's Arena" podcast.
"If I go back and put on my s*** and suit up, I wanna go f*** up Haliburton," he said. "I wanna go f*** him up. He talks so much s***. I wanna go back and bust his motherf***ing a**. ... He thinks he all that."
Newsflash for Hardaway and his fellow haters: Haliburton might be all that. Quietly, at least in comparison to his personality, he is going about the business of scripting his own Hall of Fame legacy.
Advertisement
Through five seasons, Haliburton has averaged 17.5 points (on 48/39/86 shooting splits), 9.2 assists, 3.5 rebounds and 2.1 combined steals and blocks in 33 minutes a game. The list of players who have averaged an 18-4-9 over the course of their careers: Oscar Robertson, Magic Johnson, Isiah Thomas, John Wall and Trae Young. And, believe it or not, Haliburton has been by far the most effective shooter of that bunch.
Should the Pacers make a second straight surprise run to the conference finals, Haliburton would join Robertson, Johnson and Thomas (three of our Point Gods) as the only ones among them to make it that far in the playoffs on multiple occasions. Only Robertson and Johnson did it in their first five seasons.
Haliburton has raised his game in the postseason, averaging an 18-6-11 — playoff numbers matched only by Magic. Granted, Haliburton is not on Magic's level, but there also is no comparing their supporting casts. Pascal Siakam is Haliburton's co-star. Everyone from Myles Turner to T.J. McConnell is a quality role player for the Pacers, but they are hardly Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, James Worthy and the Showtime Lakers.
Advertisement
We have to start wondering what Haliburton would be capable of on a more dynamic team. The Pacers might be one piece away from more serious contention. As is, they are on the verge of upsetting a 64-win team in the second round. The team they beat in last year's second round could be waiting for them in the conference finals, and from there? Who knows, especially given the injuries that are mounting.
When Haliburton has been on the floor in these playoffs, the Pacers have scored 121.4 points per 100 possessions — better than the league's best offense this season and among the greatest offenses ever. They are even better in the clutch, scoring a ridiculous 1.58 points per possession in these playoffs. They were also among the most efficient crunch-time offenses in the regular season. Haliburton is the reason.
He sees the floor as well as anyone not named Nikola Jokić. His scoring efficiency forces defenses to make a choice: defend him 1-on-1, where he can beat anyone off the dribble, or help, allowing his playmaking to flourish. The ability to excel at both is often what unlocks the final stage of stardom.
Advertisement
Haliburton has been targeted as a defender, and maybe that is another reason why some NBA players feel he is "overrated." He has also struggled for extended stretches of the past two regular seasons. After looking like an MVP candidate for the first few months of last season, his averages dipped significantly following a hamstring strain. Same goes for the start of this season, as he faced mental health struggles.
It is probably no coincidence that those stretches sandwiched a disappointing individual effort at the Olympics and coincided with the vote for "the league's most overrated player." His performance ever since has taught us a different lesson: Tyrese Haliburton may be the NBA's most underrated superstar.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
12 minutes ago
- USA Today
Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers NBA Finals odds, tips and betting trends Game 2
Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers NBA Finals odds, tips and betting trends | Game 2 | June 8 The Oklahoma City Thunder will take on the Indiana Pacers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals. The Thunder are a double-digit favorite against the Pacers when the Thunder and the Pacers square off. The Thunder are favored by 11 points. The matchup's point total is set at 227.5. Thunder vs. Pacers betting odds NBA odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Friday at 3:29 a.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. Spread: Oklahoma City -11 Oklahoma City -11 Total: 227.5 227.5 Moneyline: Oklahoma City -581, Indiana +429 Pacers at Thunder odds, spread, & more Prediction Pick ATS: Thunder (- 11) Thunder (- 11) Pick OU: Over (227.5) Over (227.5) Prediction: Thunder 122 - Pacers 107 The Thunder have won 66 of the 79 games they were listed as the moneyline favorite this season (83.5%). When it has played as a moneyline favorite with odds of -581 or shorter, Oklahoma City has a record of 28-2 (93.3% win percentage). Based on this contest's moneyline, the Thunder's implied win probability is 85.3%. The Pacers have entered the game as underdogs 33 times this season and won 16, or 48.5%, of those games. Indiana has played as an underdog of +429 or more once this season and lost that game. The Pacers have a 18.9% chance to win this game based on the implied probability of the moneyline. The Thunder put up 120.5 points per game, 5.4 more points than the 115.1 the Pacers give up. When Oklahoma City puts up more than 115.1 points, it is 40-14 against the spread and 47-7 overall. Indiana is 38-33-1 against the spread and 48-24 overall when it scores more than 107.6 points. Oklahoma City's record is 51-12-2 against the spread and 61-4 overall when it gives up fewer than 117.4 points. The Thunder are the NBA's fourth-ranked scoring team (120.5 PPG), while the Pacers rank 17th in points per game allowed (115.1) in the league. Indiana is the NBA's seventh-ranked offense (117.4 PPG), while Oklahoma City is the third-ranked defense (107.6). The Thunder have out-scored their opponents by a total of 1055 points this season (12.9 points per game on average), and the Pacers have put up 183 more points than their opponents on the year (2.3 per game). Oklahoma City has an average implied point total of 118.5 this season, which is 0.5 points lower than its implied total in Sunday's game (119). So far this season, Oklahoma City has put up more than 119 points in 46 games. The 119.6-point average implied total on the season for Indiana is 11.6 more points than the team's 108-point implied total in this matchup. How to watch Thunder vs. Pacers Game day: Sunday, June 8, 2025 Sunday, June 8, 2025 Game time: 8 p.m. ET 8 p.m. ET TV channel: ABC ABC Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Arena: Paycom Center Paycom Center Live stream: Watch this game Fubo Watch this game Fubo NBA League Pass: The most live games plus NBA TV. Sign up today Watch the NBA on NBA League Pass!
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Magic Johnson Brings Back NBA Playoffs Claim After Pacers' Win
Magic Johnson Brings Back NBA Playoffs Claim After Pacers' Win originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Indiana Pacers have been the little engine that could throughout this year's NBA playoffs. They finished a modest fourth place in the Eastern Conference during the regular season, but over the last several weeks, they have turned into a growing nightmare. Advertisement They upset the Cleveland Cavaliers, who had won 64 games, in the second round of the playoffs, and they then brushed past the New York Knicks, who had just knocked off the defending NBA champion Boston Celtics. Coming into the NBA Finals against the mighty Oklahoma City Thunder, Indiana wasn't given much of a chance. But the legendary Magic Johnson warned that the Thunder "should be worried" about Indiana in a post on X on Wednesday. Sure enough, the team erased a 15-point fourth-quarter deficit and took Game 1 of the championship series on a game-winning jumper by Tyrese Haliburton. Johnson took to X afterward to remind everyone of the Pacers' prowess on the road in the postseason this year. "Remember what I said… the Pacers beat every team they've faced on the road during the Playoffs and they kept that streak going tonight against OKC!" Johnson wrote. Game 1 of the finals continues a pattern of the Pacers coming from behind in the final minutes to steal a game on the road early in a series. Indiana Pacers' point guard Tyrese Haliburton© Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images They came back after being down 119-112 with less than a minute left in Game 2 versus Cleveland to win on a 3-pointer by Haliburton just before time expired. Advertisement Then, in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals, they bounced back from a double-digit deficit with less than three minutes left in the fourth quarter and forced overtime on a buzzer-beater by Haliburton that bounced high off the rim and went through the net. They then prevailed in overtime by three points. Now, after Thursday's shocking win over the Thunder, the Pacers winning their first NBA championship is a distinct possibility. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Former Flyer Obi Toppin helps Pacers comeback, win Game 1
A former University of Dayton men's basketball star helped the Indiana Pacers stun Oklahoma City in Game 1 of the 2025 NBA Finals. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] Obi Toppin came off the bench and scored 17 points for the Pacers. Tyrese Halliburton's buried the game-winning jumper with less than a second to go in a 111-110 victory. Advertisement The Pacers lead the Thunder, 1-0, in the best-of-seven series. Game 2 will be Sunday night in Oklahoma. TRENDING STORIES: Oklahoma City led by as much as 15 points in the fourth quarter as the Pacers turned it over 25 times, including 19 in the first half. Indiana scored 66 second-half points, including 35 in the fourth quarter. Toppin scored 11 of his 17 points in the second half. 'I feel like we can win every single game. If we lose a game, it's really our fault and mistakes,' he said. Toppin said the Pacers have work to do on some things after the 19 first-half turnovers. 'We got a win in the Finals and got three more to go,' he added. Advertisement NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led Oklahoma City with 38 points. 'We had control of the game for the most part,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'Now, it's a 48-minute game. And they teach you that lesson more than anyone else in the league — the hard way.' Game 2 will be Sunday, June 8, at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City at 8 p.m. The Associated Press contributed to this story [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]