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Pacers-Thunder Game 7 showdown: Everything you need to know
Esports

Pacers-Thunder Game 7 showdown: Everything you need to know

by admin June 22, 2025



Jun 22, 2025, 08:00 AM ET

Game 7s are the moments where legends are made.

These are the games — with little margin for error and everything on the line — that go down in the annals of history, particularly at this stage of the playoffs when they are rare. Since the NBA-ABA merger at the start of the 1976-77 season, there have been only eight winner-take-all games to decide the NBA title.

Sunday night will see that number grow to nine, when the host Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers square off in Game 7 of the NBA Finals — the first time that the league’s championship round has gone the distance since 2016. That game is, at a minimum, on the short list for the greatest game in the history of the sport, with LeBron James leading the Cleveland Cavaliers back from a 3-1 deficit in the best-of-7 series to dethrone the 73-win Golden State Warriors on their home floor.

The Thunder have been waiting for their first title since they left Seattle for Oklahoma City 17 years ago. The franchise has left the SuperSonics’ history in the past. Still, after several near-misses — including an NBA Finals trip in 2012 and conference finals appearances in 2014 and 2016 — Oklahoma City had the seventh-most wins in NBA history (68) this season. It will be the fifth-best team, in terms of wins, in the history of the sport if the Thunder can claim this year’s title.

• Finals takeaways: Breaking down every game
• Kram: Seven plays defining series
• Youngmisuk: Fashion of the NBA Finals
• Shelburne: Clark/Haliburton friendship
• Collier & MacMahon: Carlisle’s evolution
• Paine: Five biggest Finals outliers

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, meanwhile, would put himself in rarified air if he’s able to win a championship after winning the scoring title and the league’s regular-season MVP award — something only Shaquille O’Neal, Michael Jordan and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar have done.

This is a moment the Thunder were expected to be in all season. The same cannot be said for their opponents, however, as a win for Indiana will cap what has to be one of the most unexpected runs to a championship in the NBA. The Pacers have completed one historic comeback in each of the four rounds of the playoffs, including star guard Tyrese Haliburton completing an unparalleled run of clutch shotmaking to go along with Indiana’s penchant for wearing down its opponents.

Coach Rick Carlisle, who led a similarly constructed Dallas Mavericks team to a title against a massive favorite in the James-led Miami Heat in 2011, has already won seven games in the Finals as an underdog, the most in NBA history.

Indiana would also earn its first NBA championship after making the Finals with Reggie Miller leading the way 25 years ago. It won a couple of ABA championships behind Hall of Famers Mel Daniels and Roger Brown in the 1970s.

The Pacers and Thunder will sit 48 minutes away from immortality when they take the court Sunday night. Only one thing is for certain: Whatever happens, the game will never be forgotten. — Tim Bontemps

Keys to the game | Impact players | Game 7 legacy
Matchups and adjustments | MVP Odds
History | Best bets | Expert picks

MORE: Schedule and news | Offseason guide

The biggest keys for the Thunder: Home-court advantage

Give the home crowd a reason to stay loud. The Thunder earned the right to host the most important game of the season by rolling to 68 wins and the best record in the league. The Paycom Center has been an awfully tough place for opponents to play this postseason.

The Thunder are 10-2 at home with nine double-digit wins, including victories by 30- and 32-point margins in elimination games the past two rounds.

The fans in Oklahoma City — a small market with only one big-league franchise — provide a true home-court advantage that Jalen Williams has compared to a high school football powerhouse, the kind of program that an entire town revolves around. The stands will be packed with folks wearing the same T-shirts by the time the layup lines begin. They’ll be loud, providing the Thunder “the wind behind our backs,” as coach Mark Daigneault puts it. — Tim MacMahon

The Pacers had 16 steals in Game 6, the most by any team in an NBA Finals game since the Celtics in 2008 (18) (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

The biggest keys for the Pacers: Controlled chaos

Limit turnovers and control the pace. It’s easier said than done against a defense as swarming as the Thunder’s, but the Pacers have been at their best when they’ve managed to win the turnover battle and stop Oklahoma City from getting out in transition.

The results are twofold. Not turning the ball over allows the Pacers to attempt more field goals instead of coming away with empty possessions and it stops the Thunder from getting easy transition baskets, which makes their offense thrive.

The Pacers want a chaotic game controlled in their favor, similar to Game 6, when Indiana was the team flying around the floor while Oklahoma City got stagnant trying to run an offense in the half court repeatedly. — Jamal Collier

Players who will swing Game 7

Oklahoma City Thunder

Alex Caruso is the only proven NBA champion on the Thunder’s roster, the veteran leader of this team and a player who was a dominant force in Oklahoma City’s previous Game 7 win against the Denver Nuggets.

Caruso wreaked havoc as the primary defender against three-time MVP Nikola Jokic that afternoon, a major factor in the 23 turnovers that the Thunder converted into 37 points. He was a plus-40 in 26 minutes.

He’s one of the toughest competitors in the NBA, a guy who lives for this type of highest-stakes situation. Caruso has had his fingerprints all over Oklahoma City’s playoff run so far. Count on that continuing in Game 7. — MacMahon

Indiana Pacers

The Pacers’ depth has been their strength throughout this playoff run and T.J. McConnell has stepped up with a fantastic performance in this series. His high-energy style for 19 minutes per game has provided a spark in each contest he checks into, and he’s averaging 11.3 points and 4.5 assists in the series on 54% shooting.

Haliburton played through a calf injury in a high-stakes Game 6 and was effective, but not as mobile as usual, which means the Pacers are going to need a variety of ball handlers to help keep their pace and run their offense.

McConnell almost certainly won’t win the Finals MVP with the efforts of Haliburton and Pascal Siakam coming up big for Indiana all series, but the way McConnell and the bench unit have energized the team — and outplayed their reserve counterparts from OKC — is a major reason the Pacers have an opportunity to win this series. — Collier

If the Thunder win Game 7, we’ll remember their title as _____.

Crossing the finish line for a historic season — and taking the first step in a potential dynastic run.

Oklahoma City profiles statistically as one of the most dominant teams of all time with the best regular-season point differential ever. The only champion to finish the season with more total wins than the Thunder’s 84, if Oklahoma City finishes the job, was the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls.

Oklahoma City is in this position with almost its entire core consisting of ascending talent.

Gilgeous-Alexander is an MVP who is just entering his prime. Williams is an All-NBA sidekick still in the relatively early stages of his development, as is Chet Holmgren, who has All-NBA and Defensive Player of the Year potential.

GM Sam Presti still has an unprecedented treasure chest of first-round draft picks to utilize to continue adding talent and perhaps eventually replace some core players if difficult payroll decisions result in departures.

This should be the first of many Junes when the Thunder is the focus of the basketball world. — MacMahon

play

1:30

Hibbert: Title would solidify Haliburton as a Pacers great

Roy Hibbert says Tyrese Haliburton’s legacy in Indiana would be cemented with a championship ring.

If the Pacers win Game 7, we’ll remember their title as _____.

The biggest upset in NBA history.

Indiana entered the playoffs as a No. 4 seed in the Eastern Conference. Its run through the East was filled with buzzer-beaters and thrilling comebacks as the Pacers defied the odds, and they still began the Finals facing the longest odds of a team in 20 years in the championship series.

They will not be the favorites in any of the seven games in this series, but it all sets Indiana up on the doorstep of one of the most unlikely championships in league history.

The Pacers don’t profile like a usual championship contender, but they’ve spent the playoffs disproving any notion that they are not. — Collier

The matchups and adjustments that will decide the champ

Historic home-court advantage

In 12 playoff games at the Paycom Center, the Thunder have a plus-20.6-point differential, which is the second-largest margin of victory in home-court playoff history (minimum 5 games played), behind the 1995-96 Utah Jazz’s plus-20.7.

Oklahoma City’s only playoff losses at home were in Game 1 against Indiana and Game 1 against the Nuggets, and they led in both of those contests until the final seconds.

The occasional shooting woes that have plagued Oklahoma City in the playoffs haven’t been an issue at home. The Thunder have made just 29.9% of their 3-point attempts on the road in the playoffs, vastly underperforming their expected mark of 36.5%, according to GeniusIQ. But at home, they’ve made 37.5% of their 3s, a perfect match for their 37.5% expected 3-point mark.

Other than Williams, every member of the Thunder’s rotation has shot better from distance at home. — Zach Kram

According to GeniusIQ, Pascal Siakam defended Jalen Williams for 13 half-court matchups in Game 6. (Photo by Zach Beeker/NBAE via Getty Images)

An unfamiliar low-scoring game

Don’t expect a lot of points Sunday because, historically, Game 7s in the Finals have been low-scoring affairs. The past five ended 93-89, 95-88, 83-79, 81-74 and 90-84, respectively. Not since 1988, when the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Detroit Pistons 108-105, has a team reached triple digits in a Finals Game 7.

It’s unclear which team that sort of game will favor because neither has played many like it all postseason. The Pacers haven’t won a playoff game with fewer than 108 points, but they just turned in their best defensive effort of the postseason, allowing only 91 points in Game 6.

The Thunder, meanwhile, are just 1-6 in the playoffs when they’ve scored 110 points or fewer. But OKC does have one low-scoring win — 92-87 in Game 4 against the Nuggets — and should be more accustomed to grind-it-out games.

The Thunder have held their opponents below 100 points six times in the playoffs, five of them at home. But Oklahoma City hasn’t done so once against Indiana in the Finals. — Kram

The turnover battle

The 2025 playoffs have been defined by turnovers. Overall, teams that commit fewer turnovers than their opponents have a record of 58-21 (.734). Given Oklahoma City led the league in avoiding turnovers and forced the second most on a per-possession basis, the Thunder both drove and benefited from that trend. Against Western Conference opponents, Oklahoma City won the turnover battle in 14 of 16 games.

But Indiana has been able to flip the script in the Finals.

After stealing Game 1 despite 25 giveaways, the Pacers had the turnover edge in their Game 3 and Game 6 wins and played the Thunder to a draw in Game 4. Thursday was the biggest outlier. Oklahoma City’s 10-turnover deficit was twice as big as in any other playoff game.

Rare Saturday edition of The F5:

– Charting the location of liveball turnovers in the Finals
– Q&A with @MiikeDLR about what makes a good Thinking Basketball video https://t.co/YlJOkAUagR pic.twitter.com/GQ3u5JvJvJ

— Owen Phillips (@owenlhjphillips) June 21, 2025

McConnell’s ability to turn routine efforts to bring the ball up into costly steals has been a key factor in Indiana doing to the Thunder what Oklahoma City has done to teams all season. Owen Phillips of the F5 Newsletter noted Saturday that the Thunder have committed 10 turnovers in this series before getting the ball past the 3-point line, as compared to just one for the Pacers.

As for the importance of home court for Game 7, however, Indiana has averaged 21 turnovers in three games at Paycom Center, as compared to 13.7 in three home games. If that split continues, the Pacers will face an uphill battle Sunday. — Kevin Pelton

MVP contenders

If Oklahoma City manages to win Game 7 and claim the championship, the only realistic option on the Thunder is an obvious one: the league’s regular-season MVP, Gilgeous-Alexander (minus-225).

Williams (plus-1300) has had some great moments in this series, including his 40-point explosion in Game 5, but it isn’t close enough to seriously tip the scales away from SGA in the event OKC is victorious.

Gilgeous-Alexander has the iconic sequence in the series to date with his fourth-quarter closeout in Game 4, and his stats across the board are superior.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 21 points and 8 turnovers in Game 6, tied for the most miscues in a Finals game in the past 40 years. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

If the Pacers win, however, the race is wide-open — and very likely will come down to how Game 7 itself plays out, and who has the biggest impact. The most likely scenario is that it will, like in the Eastern Conference finals, come down to a choice between the two Indiana stars, Haliburton (plus-1500) and Siakam (plus-300).

Haliburton, playing through a calf strain, has led the team in assists and had the game-winning bucket in Game 1 and a stellar performance in Game 3. Siakam, on the other hand, is leading the Pacers in points and rebounds, while averaging four assists and over a steal and a block.

The one true wild-card selection, depending on how he plays in a Pacers victory, is reserve guard McConnell (plus-10,000), who has had a fabulous series. It’s unlikely he will win the award, given that Siakam and/or Haliburton are all but assured of a big game if Indiana wins, but McConnell has had a big impact throughout the series as the leader of the Pacers’ second unit. — Bontemps

More on MVP odds

History of Game 7

From ESPN Research

  • This is the 20th Game 7 in the NBA Finals in league history.

  • It is the first Game 7 in the Finals since 2016, when the Cavaliers defeated the Warriors to complete the only 3-1 comeback in Finals history.

  • Home teams are 15-4 in Game 7 of the Finals.

  • Each of the past eight Game 7s in the NBA Finals have been decided by single digits and 15 of the 19 Game 7s in the NBA Finals have been decided by single digits.

  • The average margin of victory in Game 7 of the NBA Finals is 6.9 points, the smallest margin among all Finals games.

The underdogs:

  • Since seeding began in 1984, only one team seeded fourth or lower won the NBA title. It was the 1995 Houston Rockets, who were a 6-seed.

  • The Pacers won 18 fewer games than the Thunder in the regular season. That would be the largest upset in terms of regular-season wins in an NBA Finals in league history.

  • The Pacers had a PPG differential 10.6 points lower than the Thunder. That would be the largest upset in terms of PPG differential in an NBA Finals in league history.

  • The Pacers have 10 wins as an underdog this postseason, tied for the most by any team in a single postseason in the past 35 seasons.

Best bets

Andrew Nembhard over 14.5 total points and assists (-120). While Haliburton was able to play well Thursday, he is still dealing with a calf strain and might be limited. Nembhard took on a larger role in Game 6, notching a series-high 17 points with four assists (21 P+A), and I expect him to be called upon again in Game 7.

Nembhard averaged 12.5 points and 5.0 assists (17.5 P+A) in the first two games of the series, both in Oklahoma City, and the Pacers will likely need him to at least match those numbers in Game 7. — Andre Snellings

Jalen Williams over 22.5 total points (-125). Williams was in his scoring bag going into Game 6, averaging 31.0 points with at least 26 in each of the prior three contests. He got off to a strong scoring start in Game 6 with 16 points in the first half before the team got blown out in the third quarter. I look for Williams to bounce back in Game 7, playing at home, and generate another high-scoring effort. — Snellings

More bets for Game 7

Game 7 expert picks

Zach Kram: Thunder

Kevin Pelton: Thunder

Andre Snellings: Thunder

Ohm Youngmisuk: Thunder

Chris Herring: Thunder

Marc Spears: Thunder

Jeremy Woo: Pacers

Neil Paine: Thunder

Final tally:
Thunder 7, Pacers 1





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NBA Finals 2025: What to know ahead of Pacers-Thunder championship matchup
Esports

NBA Finals 2025: What to know ahead of Pacers-Thunder championship matchup

by admin June 2, 2025


The Oklahoma City Thunder spent Christmas night in Indianapolis in a bittersweet mood.

They woke up on Christmas at home, with their families, and opened presents with their children before a late afternoon flight for a short road trip, which was positive. But they also were annoyed, whether they admitted it publicly or not, that 10 teams were playing five games on the NBA’s marquee day — and they were spectators.

They’d won a league-best 57 games the season before and had one of the top players in the league, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the previous season’s MVP runner-up whom the NBA perhaps should’ve been featuring on its highest-profile day. The Thunder also were 23-5 at that point and on an eight-game win streak — and not playing on Dec. 25 was looking kind of ridiculous.

Their hosts for a pedestrian non-national-television game on Dec. 26 were the Indiana Pacers. The Pacers had rolled their eyes four months earlier when the schedule read that they weren’t playing on Christmas Day, despite making the Eastern Conference finals the season prior. It was the 20th consecutive year the Pacers had been deemed not worthy of a Christmas game.

In retrospect, this was an ironic moment in the season: The two teams that eventually would meet in the NBA Finals were together on the headline day for the league; they were just living the lives of small-market underdogs.

From the play-in tournament to the NBA Finals, ESPN has you covered throughout the postseason.

• Conference finals: Preview | Picks
• Shelburne: Inside the Dorture Chamber
• Collier: What’s fueling Haliburton’s run
• Holmes: Are playoffs too physical?
• Pelton: Ranking every possible Finals matchup
• Herring: Playoff MVPs through two rounds

They ended up staging a terrific game that everyone would be thrilled to see repeated over the next two weeks.

The Pacers, still overcoming early-season injuries and malaise, were just a .500 team at the time, but they led the Dec. 26 contest for most of the way, and by as much as 16 points, even though star guard Tyrese Haliburton was held to just four points.

But the Thunder, relentless in their precision, turned the ball over only three times and cut off Indiana’s classic game plan of crushing the opponent’s mistakes. Gilgeous-Alexander tied his career high with 45 points, 16 of them coming in the fourth quarter, including a cold-blooded 3-pointer with just under a minute left with Bennedict Mathurin in his face. OKC prevailed 120-114.

It would’ve been a tremendous showcase game had it been afforded the spotlight. Instead, it’s just an interesting footnote to the factoid uncovered by Yahoo Sports that the Pacers and the Thunder are the first teams to make the NBA Finals without playing on Christmas since 2007.

The league had its reasons and justifications: The Christmas 2024 slate produced several awesome games and tremendous television ratings, and it was a triumph for the NBA. But that didn’t mean it wasn’t a mistake. These were always two of the best teams in the league this season, and they’ve proved it over the past six weeks during very similar dueling playoff runs.

Brilliant point guards, exceptional depth, harassing defenses, killer transition play, shrewd game plans, varying stars, harrowing finishes, demonstrations of resilience, overall dominance.

Call them small market, predict low ratings, mock the respective cities’ nightlife or the travel challenges or even the championship-hungry fans all you want.

Underestimating the Thunder and Pacers has been a losing ideology all season long.

The matchup of the season was there all along and right there on Christmas, even, hiding in plain sight. — Brian Windhorst

Our NBA insiders are setting the stage for the NBA Finals — Game 1 will tip off Thursday at 8:30 p.m. ET (ABC) — including breakdowns of how each team got here, the most important matchups and how each team can win it all.

Road to the NBA Finals | Last time they met
Biggest questions | Matchup to watch
How they win it all

MORE: Schedule and news | Offseason guide

Road to the Finals

Following one of the most dominant regular seasons in NBA history, the 68-win Thunder passed a stress test against a proven championship team in the second round of the playoffs. Otherwise, they made quick work of the Western Conference bracket.

After sweeping the Memphis Grizzlies in the first round, Oklahoma City blew a double-digit lead in the series opener against three-time MVP Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets and faced a 2-1 deficit after three games. The Thunder viewed the adversity as an opportunity.

“I knew that they were going to bring greatness out of us,” Thunder reserve Alex Caruso, the lone player on the roster with a championship ring, said the day before Game 4 in Denver.

“Denver is a smart team, an experienced team. I know that this is the challenge that’s going to push us to be great.”

play

1:27

David Dennis Jr.: Pacers haven’t seen a defense like OKC’s in the playoffs

David Dennis Jr. explains why the Pacers will have a “jarring” realization in the NBA Finals when it comes to the Thunder’s defense.

Led by MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the Thunder closed out tight wins in the next two games, answering questions about their ability to execute in clutch situations after cruising to double-digit wins in 54 of their regular-season victories. Oklahoma City blew out the Nuggets in Game 7, with Gilgeous-Alexander recording 35 points in a 32-point win.

Oklahoma City needed only five games to finish off the Minnesota Timberwolves in the West finals, capping that series with a 30-point victory. It was the Thunder’s fourth win by a margin of 30 points or more during this playoff run — the most by any team in a single postseason, according to ESPN Research.

As brilliant as Gilgeous-Alexander is offensively, averaging 29.8 points and 6.9 assists per game this postseason, defense drives the Thunder’s dominance. Oklahoma City had the top-ranked defense during the regular season and tightened the screws even more during the postseason, lowering its defensive efficiency to 104.7 points allowed per 100 possessions. The Thunder have forced 18.0 turnovers and converted them into 23.8 points per game during the playoffs, both increases over their league-leading regular-season numbers (17.0, 21.8).

Five Oklahoma City players — Caruso, Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, Cason Wallace and Luguentz Dort — have averaged more than a steal per game in the playoffs, while Chet Holmgren has averaged 2.0 blocks per game. The Thunder’s defense is a remarkable blend of relentless pressure, swarming help, elite playmaking and togetherness.

“Fifteen puppets on one string,” Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards said, describing Oklahoma City’s defensive chemistry. — Tim MacMahon

It might have been easy to overlook the Pacers at the start of the postseason, but after an exciting run as an underdog through the Eastern Conference field, they won’t be so easily dismissed anymore.

The Pacers won 50 games and entered the playoffs as a No. 4 seed, but a slow start to the season masked their true contender qualities. It wasn’t apparent when they dispatched new rival the Milwaukee Bucks in five games in the first round, but when they made a 64-win Cleveland Cavaliers team look ordinary the Pacers announced their ascent from young up-and-comer to conference elite.

“They’re up here, guys,” Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson said, raising his hand toward his head for emphasis, after his top-seeded team was eliminated from the conference semifinals.

“I know from the data, I know from watching film, they’re up here and they can sustain it. I give them so much credit for being able to sustain that type of intensity for so long.”

play

1:48

How did the Pacers dominate the Knicks in Game 6?

Quentin Richardson and David Dennis Jr. detail how the Pacers eliminated the Knicks in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals.

It set up a matchup in the Eastern Conference finals with Indiana’s greatest rival, the New York Knicks, the same franchise the Pacers beat in their only other trip to the Finals in 2000. Indiana’s elite offense — led by Tyrese Haliburton, who has had a star-making playoff run, averaging 18.8 points 9.8 assists and 5.7 rebounds in the postseason to go along with a few huge clutch shots; Pascal Siakam, who was named conference finals MVP after putting up three 30-point games in the series; and coach Rick Carlisle, a champion with the Dallas Mavericks in 2011, who Haliburton has termed a “savant” — overwhelmed the Knicks in six games.

The Pacers have posted the second-best offensive efficiency in the playoffs at 117.7 points per 100 possessions. They have a deep bench and play fast for a full 48 minutes, which has allowed them to pull off three of the most improbable comebacks in playoff history during this run. They were down by seven in the last 40 seconds of Game 5 in the first round against the Bucks. They trailed again by seven in the final 50 seconds of Game 2 in the second round against the Cavaliers. And in Game 1 against the Knicks, they were down 14 with 2:51 remaining. Indiana came back to win each game.

“It’s how we orchestrated this team,” said Pacers center Myles Turner, the longest-tenured player on the team. “It’s not the flashiest, sexiest team. We just get results.” — Jamal Collier

Last time they met

The Thunder — who went 29-1 against the Eastern Conference, the best interconference record in NBA history — won both head-to-head meetings this season, but their victory at Indianapolis on Boxing Day required a fourth-quarter comeback. Down four with 3:42 to play after a 7-0 Pacers run, Oklahoma City ripped off eight consecutive points to take control, with Jalen Williams scoring half of them. Gilgeous-Alexander was still the standout with 45 points on 15-of-22 shooting, including four 3-pointers in five attempts, plus a perfect 11-for-11 night at the foul line.

There was little such drama when the Thunder hosted Indiana on March 29. Oklahoma City opened up a 22-point lead after three quarters. The Thunder knocked down 17 3-pointers, including six from Lu Dort and five off the bench from Isaiah Joe. — Kevin Pelton

How many times will this Oklahoma City core get to this stage?

The NBA is at the peak of parity, preparing to crown a new champion for the seventh straight season, but the Thunder have dynasty potential. This is the second-youngest team (average age: 25.6 years) to advance to the Finals, trailing only the Portland Trail Blazers’ 1976-77 championship team, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. A deep Thunder roster is built around a 26-year-old MVP in Gilgeous-Alexander, a 24-year-old All-NBA selection in Williams and a 23-year-old potential future Defensive Player of the Year in Holmgren. Plus, general manager Sam Presti has accumulated 13 first-round picks over the next seven drafts. Oklahoma City’s last Finals team — which featured MVPs Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden — is a case study in future success never being guaranteed in the NBA. But the Thunder enter the Finals as a heavy favorite, and it’s easy to envision them becoming June regulars. — MacMahon

The Thunder lead the league in defensive rating in both the regular season and the postseason. (Photo by Zach Beeker/NBAE via Getty Images)

Can Indiana win a strength vs. strength battle?

The Thunder’s defense will easily be the toughest challenge for the Pacers to solve — a healthy, swarming juggernaut unit with youth and speed that can match and, perhaps, thrive in Indiana’s up-tempo style. The Pacers have benefited from seemingly catching each of their playoff opponents by surprise with their speed, putting the other team on its heels and forcing it into uncharacteristic styles and mistakes. Indiana will enter the series with more experience, and Carlisle will continue to try to find a way to dictate the terms of the series as his team has in each of the previous three rounds. But the gap between the top of the West and the East has seemed wide for most of the season, which is why Oklahoma City enters the series as heavy favorites. The Pacers have thrived in their underdog role all postseason. Can they find a way to pull off one more massive upset? — Collier

Matchup to watch for the series

Tyrese Haliburton vs. Luguentz Dort

Tyrese Haliburton is averaging 18.8 points per game this postseason for the Pacers. Luguentz Dort was named to the NBA All-Defensive first team this season for the Thunder. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

The All-NBA guard against the first-team All-Defense stopper. Haliburton is the engine who makes the Pacers go, but he hasn’t worked that way against Dort. Over the past two seasons, Haliburton averaged just 12 points per game against the Thunder, his fewest against any opponent, and he attempted shots at a lower rate when guarded by Dort than any other defender, according to GeniusIQ tracking.

If the Thunder can slow Haliburton like they have in the regular season, and thereby gum up the works of Indiana’s offense, this series won’t last very long. If Haliburton can solve Dort’s physical defense and keep the Pacers humming, however, Indiana has a chance to shock the world and upset the title favorites. — Zach Kram

How the Thunder can win it all

By doing what they’ve been doing throughout the regular season and playoffs. A Finals win would complete a historic season for Oklahoma City, which posted the best point differential ever in the regular season (plus-12.9 PPG) and has the best for any team heading into the Finals (plus-10.8) since both the Cleveland Cavaliers and Golden State Warriors in 2017.

More specifically, the Thunder will win this series as long as they continue controlling the turnover differential, which has proved to be a key stat throughout the playoffs. Oklahoma City is simultaneously forcing far more turnovers than any other team (18.0 per game) while averaging fewer on offense than any team that advanced past the first round (11.6). That advantage of 6.4 per game would be the highest for a team that played multiple series since the league began tracking team turnovers in 1973-74. — Pelton

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

How the Pacers can win it all

Indiana’s path to the Larry O’Brien Trophy involves three steps.

First, the Pacers can’t lose the turnover battle by as drastic a margin as every other Thunder opponent. There are encouraging signs here: Haliburton ranks as one of the lowest-turnover guards in the league, and Indiana ranked third in both the regular season and postseason in lowest turnover rate. Taking care of the ball will limit Oklahoma City’s demoralizing, game-breaking transition sequences.

Second, the Pacers need to win the 3-point battle by a wide margin. Again, there’s reason for hope here, as Indiana leads all playoff teams with a 40.1% 3-point mark, while Oklahoma City’s shooters have collectively struggled (33.6% this postseason).

And finally, the Pacers have to win close games. The Thunder are sufficiently dominant that they should expect a blowout win or two in the Finals; they’ve won at least one game by 30-plus points in every series so far. But if Indiana can win the non-blowouts, an upset is possible. The Pacers are 7-1 in clutch games in the playoffs. — Kram



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  • Deckbuilding Game Based On Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn Saga Is Available At Amazon

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Welcome to Laughinghyena.io, your ultimate destination for the latest in blockchain gaming and gaming products. We’re passionate about the future of gaming, where decentralized technology empowers players to own, trade, and thrive in virtual worlds.

Recent Posts

  • Texas Govt. Signs Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Into Law

    June 23, 2025
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    June 23, 2025

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