logo
After underdog Pacers extend NBA Finals against Thunder, it's 'one game for everything'

After underdog Pacers extend NBA Finals against Thunder, it's 'one game for everything'

Yahoo4 days ago

If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission. Pricing and availability are subject to change.
INDIANAPOLIS — Half-drank Gatorades and hardly-sipped protein shakes were sprawled across the carpet where the champagne stains would've been setting in. Glazed eyes and long stares could not be hidden by protective, celebratory goggles. Their hands fiddled, occasionally running through braids or massaging the disappointment from their chins; they're another few nights away from their final chance to hot potato the Larry O'Brien.
The Oklahoma City Thunder, having entered Thursday's Game 6 of the NBA Finals with a 3-2 lead, ended the night framing the opportunity that Sunday is. Thursday's shot was long gone.
Advertisement
History, coaches, Alex Caruso — the only player on either side that's closed out a Finals — can attempt to illustrate how difficult wrapping a series of this magnitude is. But OKC can't truly feel that weight until it's surrounded, Gainbridge howling from every direction. Until its descent upon the Thunder's title hopes leads to role player roll call; O-bi Top-pin was chanted like the national anthem by the third quarter.
Until it's forcibly sent home to devise a new plan, the next one for the kill.
'Closing out in the Finals is different than a playoff game because it's the end of the season,' said All-Star Jalen Williams, a minus-40 in OKC's 108-91 loss to the Pacers. 'You play for so long that it just has more weight to it. Obviously, you want to win a championship. You don't want to feel like it was all for nothing.'
Uncharacteristic. Coach Mark Daigneault rarely underscores a word shot toward him in a question, but this one he isolated.
Advertisement
MUSSATTO: Thunder subject to whims of NBA Finals Game 7 after Game 6 no-show at Pacers
Pacers outplay Thunder 'for most of the 48 minutes'
It was the best way — perhaps the only way — to describe OKC's three-quarter decay, one of the only instances during this dream season where it's sat its starters in the fourth quarter for the wrong reasons. Indiana led by 30 entering the final period.
'They outplayed us for most of the 48 minutes,' Daigneault said plainly. 'That's the story of the game. They went out there and attacked the game.
'It was disappointing. It was collective. It wasn't one guy.'
Advertisement
Nor was Indiana's effort. The Pacers were ravenous. Desperate. The urgency consumed the Thunder, which succumbed to this compounding pounding midway through the third quarter.
Indiana forced 21 turnovers to OKC's 10. The Pacers had nine more assists. They shot 12 more 3-pointers, making seven more than OKC. The Thunder scored 60 points through three quarters, its fewest points before the fourth in any game this season.
That the Thunder trailed by just three after 12 minutes felt astonishing. Indiana emerged from its first timeout on a 22-7 run. Its true fury had yet to manifest.
The dogged spirit of T.J. McConnell. The replenished abilities of Tyrese Haliburton. The fortitude of Pascal Siakam. The explosiveness of Obi Toppin.
Advertisement
CARLSON: Thunder needs Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to play like the MVP again to win NBA title
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - JUNE 19: The Oklahoma City Thunder look on from the bench during the fourth quarter against the Indiana Pacers in Game Six of the 2025 NBA Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on June 19, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana.
T.J. McConnell carves up Thunder defense again in NBA Finals
McConnell continued to make his own fortune. This 6-foot-1 shot caller who breached the paint without appointment. He whistled past revered defender Cason Wallace like a harmless janitor. In an eight-point game, he slipped underneath center Isaiah Hartenstein's reach, the Tom to his Jerry, for an inexcusable offensive rebound.
That feeling that comes when MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander sizes up from 17 feet out, the inevitability of his jumper — McConnell wielded that like an Infinity Stone. Up nearly 30 with mere minutes to play, he remained merciless, picking off careless backcourt passes from remnants of OKC's Summer League squad.
Advertisement
Game 6 was no fumble. The Thunder's grip never quite resembled anything more than a slick grasp coated in butter. Enough burying plays that the film sessions that follow could be franchised and stretched further than Fast and The Furious.
Gilgeous-Alexander had eight turnovers, five of them by half, complete with 21 points on 7-of-15 shooting. McConnell even stole jumpers mid-air. Chet Holmgren missed an uncontested alley-oop.
OKC's window in the third, when it finally strung together enough stops to crawl back, went unanswered. Its first score didn't come until there was 6:59 to play in the period. Its idea of generating 3s were Lu Dort's spot-up 3s, not always volunteered.
Haliburton, questionable with a calf strain entering Thursday before tallying 14 points and five assists, lunged toward the sideline to make one of the most memorable plays in the building's history.
Advertisement
With less than a minute left in the first half of Indiana's bludgeoning, Haliburton batted away a pass from Williams. He and Pacers legend Reggie Miller nearly came face to face when he finally chased down the ball, keeping it in play to split Williams and Dort with a spiral to Siakam.
5 TAKEAWAYS: Tyrese Haliburton, Pacers pummel Thunder to force Game 7 of NBA Finals
Jun 19, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) drives to the basket against Indiana Pacers forward Pascal Siakam (43) and guard Ben Sheppard (26) in the third quarter during game six of the 2025 NBA Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images
SGA, Thunder 'can learn our lessons' from Game 6 loss
Siakam's cinematic rise summoned Frank Sinatra's voice on vinyl somewhere. His off-arm wrapped around Williams to ensure punishment. On this game-defining poster slam, Siakam cocked his arm back with the might of Jordan Belfort — I'm not leaving, his mid-air moment screamed. Not yet.
Advertisement
Not until these fighting Pacers secured a fitting final shot against the largely favored Thunder. Who would these Pacers be if not in it? Capable of enforcing two of the worst middle quarters of OKC's season to keep their own alive. The team with a roach's resourcefulness and a cat's number of lives.
As often as the Thunder has welcomed new experiences, this one seemingly weighs like a mass. Strenuous to lug around the ambition of a 17-year-old franchise. Carrying the organization's previous demons on its shoulder. Altering the breathing habits of a city that's never been closer to this altitude.
Oklahoma City received one final crash course on urgency. One last taste of blood with the capability of hopping back up, the smelling salt that is its back on the wall. Quicker than the team filed onto the second bus, the Thunder realized it won't get another.
'We can learn our lessons,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'We have one game for everything, for everything we've worked for, and so do they. The better team Sunday will win.
Advertisement
'One game for everything you ever dreamed of. If you win it, you get everything. If you lose it, you get nothing. It's that simple.'
Joel Lorenzi covers the Thunder and NBA for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Joel? He can be reached at jlorenzi@oklahoman.com or on X/Twitter at @joelxlorenzi. Sign up for the Thunder Sports Minute newsletter to access more NBA coverage. Support Joel's work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at subscribe.oklahoman.com.
More: Where does Thunder scoring drought rank in NBA Finals history? Inside the Game 6 numbers
NBA Finals schedule: Thunder vs. Pacers
All times are Central
Advertisement
This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: OKC Thunder's dream season now comes down to 'one game for everything'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cooper Flagg is ready to do whatever the Mavs ask
Cooper Flagg is ready to do whatever the Mavs ask

Miami Herald

timean hour ago

  • Miami Herald

Cooper Flagg is ready to do whatever the Mavs ask

Cooper Flagg has enormous shoes to fill, trying to carry the mantle of the likes of Dirk Nowitzki and Luka Doncic in Dallas, but the NBA draft's No. 1 pick is willing to do whatever is asked of him to help the Mavericks continue their recent success. And head coach Jason Kidd, who was the No. 2 pick by Dallas in the 1994 NBA Draft, is ready to challenge the Duke alum. 'I think it's a versatile position, doing a lot of different things,' Flagg said of his expectations on the court at his introductory press conference Friday in Dallas. 'I think with the team, looking at the roster, we can play a really good brand of positionless basketball, with a lot of guys that can do a lot of different things. So I think that'll be one of the biggest strengths, and trying to play to that and just doing whatever I can to help the team win.' Kidd is also looking forward to the versatility that Flagg brings. 'I don't look at the position. I want to put him at the point guard,' Kidd told reporters Friday. 'I want to make him uncomfortable and see how he reacts, being able to run the show, being able to play the two, play the three -- he's comfortable playing that but we want to push, and I think he's going to respond in a positive way.' Kidd called out Flagg's maturity as the teenager fielded questions with all eyes on him. 'Just sitting here listening to him, isn't it incredible? I mean we're talking about an 18-year-old who has all the right answers and is talking about working out after this,' Kidd said. 'Just his poise, he's going to be successful for a long time. He likes to work, he's not afraid to work. ... I'm very blessed and the Mavs are very blessed to have him be a part of the family.' Joining a team with NBA Finals aspirations and the likes of Kyrie Irving, Daniel Gafford, PJ Washington and Dereck Lively II puts the Newport, Maine native in the unusual position of being a top pick on a team that's ready to win it all now. Flagg considers that a blessing. 'A lot of people in this position or this situation aren't granted this opportunity,' Flagg said, 'so I just feel really blessed and grateful for the situation I've been given and I'm just looking forward to being a sponge, you know, just getting down here excited to just learn, soak it all in and learn from the guys that are older have been through it all before.' Kidd is eager to put Flagg to work. 'I'm excited about giving him the ball against the Lakers and see what happens,' he said. 'Let's get it started right off the bat.' Field Level Media 2025 - All Rights Reserved

Heat reaches agreement to bring back Davion Mitchell ahead of free agency. Here are the details
Heat reaches agreement to bring back Davion Mitchell ahead of free agency. Here are the details

Miami Herald

timean hour ago

  • Miami Herald

Heat reaches agreement to bring back Davion Mitchell ahead of free agency. Here are the details

Davion Mitchell's time with the Miami Heat will continue. After arriving to the Heat in the Feb. 6 Jimmy Butler trade, Mitchell turned in one of the best sustained stretches of his NBA career in the final months of this past season. Mitchell will now have an opportunity to try to continue that impressive stretch in a Heat uniform, agreeing to a new deal worth $24 million over two seasons to return to Miami, league sources confirmed to the Miami Herald on Saturday. The contract does not include any options, with the money fully guaranteed. With NBA teams allowed to begin negotiating with their own impending free agents this past Monday after the NBA Finals ended, the Heat was able reach an agreement with Mitchell before league-wide free-agent negotiations are allowed to begin this upcoming Monday at 6 p.m. Mitchell was set to become a restricted free agent, but agreed to his new contract with the Heat before hitting the open market. This is the biggest contract of Mitchell's NBA career. Mitchell, who turns 27 on Sept. 5, made $6.5 million this past season in the final year of his rookie-scale contract after getting drafted with the ninth overall pick in 2021. Under his new contract, Mitchell is expected to be on a salary of about $11.5 million this upcoming season and a $12.5 million salary for the 2026-27 season. After arriving to the Heat on Feb. 6, Mitchell averaged 10.3 points, 2.7 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 1.4 steals per game while shooting 50.4% from the field and 44.7% on 3.1 three-point attempts per game in 30 regular-season appearances (15 starts). Mitchell averaged just 6.3 points, 1.9 rebounds and 4.6 assists per game while shooting 43.4% from the field and 35.9% on threes in 44 appearances for the Toronto Raptors prior to being traded to the Heat this past season. Mitchell carried that late-season momentum into the postseason, totaling nine points on 3-of-4 shooting from three-point range in overtime of the Heat's playoff-clinching win over the Atlanta Hawks in the play-in tournament on April 18. Mitchell's efficient outside shooting with the Heat proved to be a revelation, as he entered this past season as a 32.7 percent three-point shooter over his first three NBA seasons. That reputation led to opponents consistently leaving Mitchell open from three-point range, but he took advantage by shooting 37 of 76 (48.7%) on wide open threes (defined by the NBA as when the closest defender is more than six feet away) with the Heat last regular season. But Mitchell's calling card is still his on-ball defense. Known as 'Off Night' for his ability to shut down opposing teams' top scorers, Mitchell's point-of-attack defense immediately helped the Heat. The Heat allowed 3.4 fewer points per 100 possessions with Mitchell on the court compared to when he wasn't playing after the February trade. With Mitchell returning, the Heat's current salary-cap breakdown includes 14 players on standard contracts with partially guaranteed or fully guaranteed salaries for next season: Bam Adebayo ($37.1 million), Tyler Herro ($31 million), Andrew Wiggins ($28.2 million), Terry Rozier ($24.9 million of $26.6 million salary currently guaranteed), Mitchell ($11.5 million), Kyle Anderson ($9.2 million), Haywood Highsmith ($5.6 million), Nikola Jovic ($4.4 million), Kel'el Ware ($4.4 million), Kevin Love ($4.2 million), Jaime Jaquez Jr. ($3.9 million), Kasparas Jakucionis ($3.7 million), Pelle Larsson ($978,000 of $2 million salary currently guaranteed) and Keshad Johnson ($2 million). If Duncan Robinson bypasses the early-termination option in his contract, he would become the 15th Heat player on that list and put the Heat at the 15-man regular-season limit for an NBA standard roster ahead of the start of Monday's league-wide free-agent negotiations. Robinson has until Sunday at 5 p.m. to decide on his early-termination option. In this scenario, the Heat could waive Robinson by the July 8 deadline to guarantee his full salary for next season or make a trade to open room on its standard roster.

Kevin Garnett blames Achilles injuries in the NBA on players not being in great shape: "They are not in the shape to play at this pace in the NBA"
Kevin Garnett blames Achilles injuries in the NBA on players not being in great shape: "They are not in the shape to play at this pace in the NBA"

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kevin Garnett blames Achilles injuries in the NBA on players not being in great shape: "They are not in the shape to play at this pace in the NBA"

Kevin Garnett blames Achilles injuries in the NBA on players not being in great shape: "They are not in the shape to play at this pace in the NBA" originally appeared on Basketball Network. Hall of Famer Kevin Garnett commented on the alarming number of Achilles injuries in the NBA this season. Three superstar players, all eerily wearing the zero jersey number, suffered Achilles tears during the 2025 NBA Playoffs, including Indiana Pacers star guard Tyrese Haliburton, whose injury happened in Game 7 of the 2025 NBA Finals. Overall, seven players tore their Achilles tendon, the most in a single season in the NBA. Advertisement According to Garnett, he believes the theory that there is a relation between an Achilles tear and having a calf strain before the Achilles injury because the two body parts are related. "We don't think that today's NBA players, they do play at a fast rate, but I don't think they're in tip-top shape," said Garnett. "I don't think the league is in the type of shape that you need to be in the type of shape to play at this pace. I think they think that, and if anybody knows the body, your calves are your breaks. The one thing that supports the calves is your Achilles. So if your calf is the first thing to shut down, you have to think about how things are built." KG urges players to strengthen their calves by doing calf raises According to the Achilles tendon connects the calf muscles to the heel bone and helps move the feet and ankle. Advertisement It starts in the middle of the calf and goes down to the heel. It is the largest and strongest tendon in the human body. Although it can resist large tensile forces, it's not indestructible, especially when players aren't doing much to strengthen it. "I heard the other day some trainers was talking about the lack of calf raises for some of the players to end their workout, bro, we used to end a workout, especially on leg day, with calf raises. This is how I'm speeding up. This is how I'm stopping. This is my whole wiggle. If you calves ain't here, add on top of whenever I finish I gotta be athletic enough to finish, right?" "Strengthen your fu–in calves. Do the fu–ing calf raises every day," advised KG. Garnett's claims were validated in a recent article While Garnett is no doctor, he made some valid points in his analysis. In a recent ESPN article, a physical therapist from the University of Delaware named Karin Gravare Silbernagel talked about how today's athletes focus on upper leg strength. Because of that, their lower leg also needs to keep up. Advertisement "At this point, we need to start thinking about the calf and Achilles in the same way," she said. "Do we have enough strength ... to be able to tolerate the sport that we're doing? The lower leg is lagging behind some of the other things that we do." As to the connection between calf injuries and Achilles tears, she said there is no clear proof linking the two injuries. But as KG said, the Achilles tendon is attached to the calf. "We don't necessarily see them going from having a calf strain and then rupturing the Achilles," Gravare Silbernagel added, "but they're all attached." NBA commissioner Adam Silver also said recently that the league is tapping AI to analyze player data to prevent or at least minimize the risk of players suffering the same fate as Dame, JT, and Hali. Advertisement Related: Adam Silver plans to use Artificial Intelligence after the NBA's injury surge: "Ingest all video of every game a player's played in to see if we can detect some pattern" This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jun 28, 2025, where it first appeared.

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