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Thunder beat Pacers to clinch first NBA crown

Thunder beat Pacers to clinch first NBA crown

Kuwait Times24-06-2025
OKLAHOMA CITY: The Oklahoma City Thunder crowned a dazzling season with an NBA title on Sunday, pulling away relentlessly in the second half to beat the Indiana Pacers 103-91 in game seven of the NBA Finals. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 29 points and handed out a career playoff high 12 assists and the Thunder's swarming defense finally proved too much for a Pacers team that lost talisman Tyrese Haliburton to a leg injury just seven minutes into the contest.
The underdog Pacers hung tough and held a 48-47 lead at halftime, but the Thunder out-scored them 34-20 in the third quarter and pushed the lead to as many as 22 points in the fourth. 'It doesn't feel real, so many hours, so many moments, so many emotions, so many nights of disbelief,' Gilgeous-Alexander said, his voice breaking 'It's crazy to know that we're all here.
'But this group worked for it, this group put in the hours and we deserved this.' Gilgeous-Alexander put himself among some of the game's greats as he earned Finals Most Valuable Player honors to go with his regular-season MVP and scoring title along with his first championship. The 26-year-old Canadian star becomes the first player since LeBron James in 2012-2013 to win both the NBA regular season MVP and Finals MVP in the same campaign. Jalen Williams scored 15 of his 20 points in the second half and Chet Holmgren added 18 points, eight rebounds, a steal and five of the Thunder's eight blocked shots.
A crowd of 18,203 at Paycom Center were given some tense moments as the Pacers chipped away at the deficit late, but 23 Indiana turnovers leading to 32 Thunder points were ultimately too much for the Pacers to overcome. The Thunder, who led the league with 68 regular-season wins, captured their first title since the club's controversial move to Oklahoma City in 2008, the franchise having won it all in 1979 as the Seattle SuperSonics.
After the Thunder failed in their first chance to close out the series in game six, Gilgeous-Alexander there was a measure of relief along with the jubilation. 'Feels amazing,' he said. 'So much weight off my shoulders, so much stress relieved. 'Wouldn't want to do it with any other group in the world,' he added. 'Feels so good to be a champion.' The Pacers, three-time American Basketball Association champions in the 1970s—remain in search of a first title since joining the NBA in the NBA-ABA merger.
Haliburton injured
Haliburton, already nursing a right calf strain when the Pacers won game six to force the first Finals game seven since 2016, had scored nine points—all on three-pointers—when he went down as he tried to drive past Gilgeous-Alexander. Haliburton's right leg gave out and he sprawled forward, slapping the court in pain and disappointment. Teammates gathered around him before he was helped off the court and to the locker room, supported and hopping on one leg with a towel over his head.
'What happened with Tyrese, all of our hearts dropped,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said, adding that Haliburton was in the locker room at halftime 'and he was very much a part of a group that believed that they could do this.' In his absence, the Pacers dug in. Down by three after the first quarter, they grabbed a 48-47 lead on Andrew Nembhard's step-back three-pointer with 4.3 seconds left before halftime. In a first half that featured 10 lead changes, the three-point shot was an early difference-maker for the Pacers, who connected on eight of 16 from beyond the arc in the first half, but had just three after the break.
The Thunder struggled early from long range, but Gilgeous-Alexander made his first three-pointer of the night with 8:16 left in the third, Holmgren followed with a trey and Jalen Williams added another—the quick 9-0 run giving Oklahoma City a 65-56 lead that set the stage for the rest of the game.
'We had 24 minutes to go get it—we had 24 minutes to finish our season,' Gilgeous-Alexander said of the Thunder's mindset coming out for the third. Carlisle said the Pacers just weren't good enough in the third quarter. 'That quarter was the killer,' he said, but he praised his team's effort in the fourth.
'There was no surrender,' Carlisle said. 'It was all defiant fight until the end.' Bennedict Mathurin led the Pacers with 24 points off the bench. Pascal Siakam and T.J. McConnell added 16 points apiece and Nembhard scored 15. But the famously resilient Pacers, who rallied from a 10-15 season start and authored a string of stirring comeback wins, finally came up short. — AFP
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Giannis down on Bucks dumping Damian Lillard
Giannis down on Bucks dumping Damian Lillard

Kuwait Times

time04-07-2025

  • Kuwait Times

Giannis down on Bucks dumping Damian Lillard

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Thunder lock SGA as Mavs, Rockets add depth to bolster NBA title hopes
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Kuwait Times

time02-07-2025

  • Kuwait Times

Thunder lock SGA as Mavs, Rockets add depth to bolster NBA title hopes

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Haliburton joins NBA stars with torn Achilles tendon
Haliburton joins NBA stars with torn Achilles tendon

Kuwait Times

time24-06-2025

  • Kuwait Times

Haliburton joins NBA stars with torn Achilles tendon

NEW YORK: Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton has suffered a torn right Achilles tendon, the team confirmed on Monday, and was set to undergo surgery after becoming the latest star stricken by a severe injury in the NBA playoffs. The 25-year-old American point guard went down Sunday in a game-seven loss to Oklahoma City in the NBA Finals and is at risk of missing the entire 2025-26 campaign. The Pacers said in a statement that Haliburton would have surgery on the tendon on Monday in New York by Dr. Martin O'Malley. The injury is similar to one which cost NBA star Kevin Durant a full season after being hurt in the 2019 NBA Finals. Haliburton joined a grim roll call of players who have suffered ruptured Achilles tendons in this year's playoffs that includes Boston's Jayson Tatum and Milwaukee's Damian Lillard. All three players are uncertain for next season. Haliburton played despite a calf strain in the NBA Finals in hopes of bringing the Pacers their first NBA title, but Oklahoma City won 103-91 for its first title. Durant played for Golden State on a calf strain before going down with a torn Achilles tendon six years ago in the finals against Toronto. 'Damn man... smh (shaking my head) too familiar,' Golden State's Draymond Green posted on social media after Haliburton went down. The Pacers star fell to court without being touched as he tried to drive to the basket just over seven minutes into the first quarter of the winner-take-all contest in the best-of-seven championship series. 'What happened with Tyrese, all of our hearts dropped,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said after the game. 'But he will be back. I don't have any medical information about what may or may not have happened, but he'll be back in time, and I believe he'll make a full recovery.' Haliburton had been averaging 17.7 points and an NBA-best 9.0 assists a game in the playoffs, which ended with Oklahoma City beating Indiana 103-91 to win the NBA title. With three stars possibly lost for next season due to torn tendons in the playoffs, and the title game potentially turning on a major injury, the topic of reducing the 82-game per club regular season was set for the spotlight once again. NBA commissioner Adam Silver spoke upon the issue earlier this month after Tatum and Golden State's Stephen Curry suffered major playoff injuries. Silver said the NBA provides more playoff rest days than in prior seasons and said there is 'no data' to suggest fewer regular-season games would produce fewer injuries. 'I'm not sure it's a function of the regular season,' Silver said. 'There's a certain cadence to the playoffs. If anything, there's more space in the playoff games than when you and I grew up in the NBA. We used to frequently play playoff games back-to-back on the weekends. 'Having said that, we, of course, look at it very closely.' Silver said the NBA competition committee will next meet in July at Las Vegas. Denver Nuggets star Aaron Gordon spoke up about what some players call 'fatigue-based injuries' in the playoffs after the load of a full season. 'Part of what we do is look at every form of data that we can get our hands on. That includes minutes played, injuries, and whatever impact we see that back-to-backs are having on players — not just measured by injuries, but also measured by production on the floor,' Silver said. 'We're going to continue to look at it. I don't think there are any magic bullets here. In fact, injuries are considered down this playoffs from what has been historically.' The NBA starts a new 11-year media rights deal worth $76 billion next season. 'Money is part of it, there's no question about it. We're a business,' Silver said. 'But having said that, I don't really see the benefit to reducing the number of games. 'People used to say you should reduce the number of games because it will lead to reduction in the number of injuries. There's absolutely no data to suggest that.' — AFP

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