Tyrese Haliburton injury update: Pacers star 'ready to go' vs Thunder in NBA Finals Game 7
Update: Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton injured in first quarter, exits NBA Finals Game 7 with leg issue
There is less drama surrounding whether Indiana Pacers point guard Tyrese Haliburton will play in Game 7 of the NBA Finals at 7 p.m. CT Sunday at the Paycom Center than there was in Game 6, but he still is dealing with a calf strain and still does need around-the-clock treatment.
Advertisement
Haliburton suffered the calf strain in Game 5 when he tried to drive past Oklahoma City's Chet Holmgren with 6:53 to go in the first quarter. He still played the rest of the game, but finished with just four points on 0-of-6 shooting. He had an MRI the next day that showed a calf strain, but underwent constant treatment and posted 14 points and five assists, helping the Pacers take a blowout victory 108-91 in Game 6. The Pacers had a 30-point lead going into the fourth quarter, so Haliburton didn't have to play any minutes and finished with with just 22 minutes and 52 seconds of action.
"I'm pretty much in the same standpoint I was before Game 6," Haliburton said Saturday at media availability. "A little stiff, a little sore, rather. Good thing I only had to play like 23 minutes. I've been able to get even more treatment and do more things. Just trying to take care of it the best I can. But I'll be ready to go for Game 7."
Pre-order commemorative book on Thunder's run to NBA Finals
REQURIED READING: How do OKC Thunder players view their own adversity compared to past NBA champions?
Advertisement
Haliburton talked at length Thursday night after Game 6 about the privilege of playing in an NBA Finals Game 7. It's the first time since 2016 that the Finals have gone to Game 7, which was the year LeBron James' Cavaliers came back from down 3-1 to beat the Warriors. Haliburton, a big LeBron James fan, remembers it vividly.
"I remember where I was," Haliburton said. "I remember what the game was, the energy of the game, being with my friends and watching it all together. There's a mixture of Cavs fans, a mixture of Warriors fans. I think that's probably one of the greatest games I've ever been able to watch as a basketball fan. That's what makes Game 7 so fun. I think that especially for people around my age, that is the peak Game 7. I'm excited to add to the storied history of Game 7s and add to the history of our game."
Haliburton said after Game 6 the reason he was so adamant about playing is that he didn't want to let his team down and felt like he'd regret not going to battle with them with the season on the line. His feelings haven't changed going into Game 7.
"We're a group of guys that get along really well and are trying to do something special," Haliburton said. "I think the expectations for this group from an external viewpoint coming into the year weren't very high. They weren't very high coming into the playoffs. They weren't very high going into the second round of the playoffs. They weren't very high going into the third round. They weren't very high now.
Advertisement
"I think we just have done a great job of just staying together. There's not a group of guys I'd rather go to war with. I'm really excited to compete with these guys in a Game 7, and it's going to be a lot of fun."
More: NBA Finals Game 7 is a different beast, but Lu Dort has shined in a Game 7 before
Sign up for the Thunder Sports Minute newsletter to access more NBA coverage.
This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Tyrese Haliburton injury update: Pacers star 'ready to go' for Game 7
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Palmeiras vs Chelsea: Club World Cup prediction, kick-off time, team news, TV, live stream, h2h, odds today
Chelsea and Palmeiras will face off for a spot in the coveted semi-finals of the Club World Cup. Chelsea go into the game on the back of beating Benfica 4-1 in extra time after the round of 16 tie was interrupted by a one-hour and 53-minute suspension due to lightning in the North Carolina game finally finished four hours and 38 minutes after kick off. With two wins sandwiching a defeat in the group stages, Chelsea have performed well in spells but are yet to set this year's tournament alight. Enzo Maresca side's one loss came at the hands of Brazilian opposition as they were run ragged by Flamengo in a game that also saw Nicolas Jackson sent-off. Palmeiras, another Brazilian side, are unbeaten in this year's tournament, winning once and drawing twice in the group stages and defeating rivals Botafogo 1-0 in the round of 16 in extra-time courtesy of a Paulinho goal. Date, kick-off time and venue Palmeiras vs Chelsea is scheduled for a 2am BST kick-off on Sunday, July 5, 2025. The match will take place at the Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Where to watch Palmeiras vs Chelsea Live stream: Viewers can watch the action live online via the DAZN website, which is free with a registration. Coverage will begin from 1am BST ahead of a 2am kickoff. DAZN is the global broadcaster of the new-look Club World Cup and will show all 63 matches of the competition. No subscription is required to watch the game, with the entire tournament available to their 'Freemium' members, which means you only need to sign up for a free DAZN account. Live blog: Follow all the action right here with Standard Sport's live blog! Palmeiras vs Chelsea team news Palmeiras XI: Weverton, Giay, Micael, Fuchs, Vanderlan, Rios, Martinez, Estevao, Allan, Torres, Roque Subs: Lomba, Oliveira, Naves, Benedetti, Rocha, Mayke, Veiga, Moreno, Evangelista, Anderson, Mauricio, Thalys, Lopez, Luighi, Paulinho Chelsea XI: Sanchez; Gusto, Chalobah, Colwill, Cucurella; James, Fernandez; Palmer, Nkunku, Neto; Delap Subs: Jorgensen, Penders, Slonina, Acheampong, Tosin, Sarr, Aneselmino, Essugo, Andrey Santos, Dewsbury-Hall, Madueke, George, Joao Pedro, Jackson, Guiu Palmeiras vs Chelsea prediction As the sole remaining English representative, Chelsea seem to be finding their feet at the right time and are showing signs of being serious contenders. Yes, they have already lost to Brazilian opponents in this competition and will be without their best midfielder in Caicedo, but they possess a superior attacking threat and so should prove to be too strong for Palmeiras. Chelsea are favourites, but don't expect the floodgates to open, as Palmeiras are expected to remain resolute. Chelsea to win, 2-1 Head to head (h2h) history and results This will be the second meeting between Palmeiras and Chelsea, with the Blues winning the final of the 2021 Club World Cup courtesy of a Kai Havertz's 117th minute in extra-time to secure a 2-1 win. Palmeiras wins: 0 Chelsea wins: 1 Draws: 0 Palmeiras vs Chelsea match odds Palmeiras to win: 13/5 Chelsea to win: 10/11 Draw: 15/8 Odds via Betfair (subject to change).
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
USA (U19) women's basketball turns in another defensive gem to beat Spain in semifinals
The World Cup finals matchup that's seemed destined from the start will indeed transpire. USA has guaranteed itself a medal and will face Australia on Sunday after taking down Spain 70-58 in the semifinals. After the first half was neck-and-neck until two minutes before halftime, the outcome was never in doubt and less close than the final score indicated. USA led 29-28 with 2:29 remaining in the second quarter before finishing the half on a game-high 9-0 run instigated by Jazzy Davidson. The nation's top-ranked incoming college freshman (USC) and Clackamas (OR) product hit a mid-range jumper off the dribble, scored in transition after stealing the ball, and drained a three in subsequent possessions to give the Americans a 36-28 lead with 1:22 remaining. Texas University rising sophomore Jordan Lee added a steal plus layup of her own to go up 38-28 with 27 seconds left, a lead they'd take into halftime. It was all USA from there until the game's closing minutes. USA surged to a 19-6 run in the first 5:13 of the third quarter to take the game's largest lead at 57-34. Neither team scored for nearly three minutes of the fourth quarter as USA led 64-42. Spain turned up the heat and chipped away down the stretch, but it didn't amount to much more than window dressing. Its lead got no lower than 14 points again until a second-chance bucket from Maria Anais Rodriguez with 32 seconds remaining cut it to 12. On the only off-night of the tournament from center Sienna Betts, an incoming freshman at UCLA and The Sporting News' National High School Player of the Year last season at Grandview (CO), the rest of Team USA had no trouble picking up the slack. And for what it's worth, Betts still made a positive impact, leading the Americans with seven rebounds and two blocks to go with four points and two assists before fouling out after 28 minutes of action. She finished second in plus-minus at +16. Doing the scoring were USA's other offensive stars, Davidson (15 points, two assists, four steals) and Montverde Academy senior Saniyah Hall (16 points, two assists, two steals), in addition to Lee (15 points, five rebounds, three assists, two steals). All three shot above 50% from the field and made at least one three, with Davidson hitting three in four attempts. Davidson bounced back in style from her lone off-night, in which she had two points, three assists, and four turnovers on 1-4 shooting in a 70-65 quarterfinals win over France. Lee has earned heavy starter's minutes as the team's glue and a defensive stopper on the perimeter, but hadn't been an offensive force for this team until the semifinals. That's despite being a particularly accomplished scorer during her high school career at St. Mary's (Stockton, CA) and in flashes as a freshman at Texas. Through the tournament's first four games, Lee averaged 4.0 PPG on 5-20 (25%) shooting. She had tournament-highs of nine points (50% FG), six rebounds, three steals, and three blocks against France, and enters the title game against Australia with a full head of steam on both sides of the ball. Another player who had a bounce-back performance in smaller doses was Addison Bjorn, a senior wing at Park Hill South (MO). Bjorn didn't play in the quarterfinals against France following an outstanding 17-minute stint against China in the round of 16, and it's unclear if it was health-related or a coach's decision. But she was back in the rotation on Saturday and gave a nice boost in 14 minutes, converting both shot attempts for four points, grabbing four rebounds, and recording two steals and two blocks. UConn guard and Long Island Lutheran alumni Kayleigh Heckel amassed six of USA's 18 steals to go with six points and three assists. A major positive omen for the Americans entering the championship is that they finally broke through from both the three-point line (7-16) and charity stripe (11-12). However, they still only scored 70 points, which isn't bad given Spain's outstanding defense but is far from what they're capable of. The reason? Turnovers, which have been a minor issue all tournament but far from a cause for concern until Saturday. Spain actually won the turnover battle 27-21, and that was the biggest key to holding the Americans to 70 points along with strong point-of-attack defense and help rotations in half-court situations. However, the Americans outscored Spain 22-18 in points off turnovers. Rodriguez led Spain with 14 points on 7-13 shooting and recorded six rebounds and two steals. Somtochukwu-Blessed Okafor had nine points and six rebounds in under 19 minutes. Marta Alsina registered nine points and four steals, and Shaila Nde led the team with seven rebounds and three blocks in only 20 minutes. USA enters the finals against Australia as a favorite, but not an overwhelming one. Australia beat France by nearly an identical score as the Americans (70-66) in group phase, but did struggle more with Hungary in the quarterfinals, winning 82-76 after USA routed Hungary 79-49 in group play. Australia has enough size to hang with USA if Betts isn't at her best. Most of Australia's roster stands right around six feet, give or take an inch. Both teams average exactly 53.0 rebounds per game, but USA has the edge in rim protection and inside-the-arc scoring. The Aussies space the floor out like none others, making 9.6 of 23.8 threes per game (40.3%). USA also has a major edge in the steals department (17.3 to 7.2 per game). Top players to watch on Australia include guard Bonnie Deas (12.2. points, 8.4 rebounds, 3.0 assists, 1.2 steals, 1.0 blocks), 6-foot-2 forward Sitaya Fagan (12.8 points, 6.6 rebounds, 1.2 steals, 46% FG), wing Madison Ryan, guard Monique Bobongie, forward Prasayus Notoa, forward Manuela Puoch, point guard Ruby Perkins, and wing Zara Russell. RELATED:


Hamilton Spectator
2 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Marcus Smart will sign with the Lakers after getting a buyout from Wizards, AP source says
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Veteran guard Marcus Smart will sign with the Los Angeles Lakers after receiving a contract buyout from the Washington Wizards, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press on Sunday. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the Wizards had yet to announce their buyout of Smart. The standout defender and two-way contributor excelled for the rival Boston Celtics for nine seasons before spending the past two years with Memphis and Washington. Smart will get a two-year, $11 million deal with the Lakers to join their supporting cast around Luka Doncic and LeBron James. Los Angeles filled its biggest offseason need earlier this month by signing center Deandre Ayton . Smart was the NBA's Defensive Player of the Year in 2022 for the Celtics, who reached the NBA Finals that season and made nine consecutive playoff appearances during his tenure. He is a three-time member of the All-Defense first team, and he was a regular starter for Boston in his final half-decade with the team before he was traded to the Grizzlies in 2023. Because of injuries, the 6-foot-3 Smart has played in just 54 games over the past two seasons since leaving Boston, and he averaged just 20 minutes per game last season when healthy. He played in only 15 games after joining the Wizards last February as part of a three-team trade involving Jake LaRavia, who signed with the Lakers in free agency this month. Smart has never averaged more than 13.1 points per game while playing in more than half of his team's games in a season, but the Lakers undoubtedly covet his defensive contributions to a roster already featuring strong scorers. Smart will have ample opportunity to play a significant role for the Lakers, who needed another strong point-of-attack defender after losing Dorian Finney-Smith to the Houston Rockets in free agency. Smart, Ayton and LaRavia are the major offseason additions to the Lakers, who lost in the first round to Minnesota last spring after their seismic midseason trade to acquire Doncic from the Dallas Mavericks. Los Angeles has managed to keep its core intact apart from Finney-Smith, even resigning backup center Jaxson Hayes. James picked up his $52.6 million player option to return for his record 23rd NBA season, but agent Rich Paul has been vocal about James' desire for the Lakers to be a serious championship contender in the upcoming season. ___ AP NBA: