Thunder vs. Pacers live updates: NBA Finals Game 7 play-by-play, score, analysis and more

Despite losing Tyrese Haliburton for the game in the first quarter, the Pacers aren’t backing down.

Pascal Siakam leads Indiana with 10 points while Andrew Nembhard has added nine.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander leads the Thunder (and all scorers) with 16. He also had seven assists.

It’s been a tight battle so far, as neither team has led by more than five points.

Indiana has made more 3s than OKC, but also has nine turnovers compared to only five for the Thunder.

Tyrese Haliburton’s father told ABC’s Lisa Salters that Haliburton suffered an achilles injury in the first quarter. He did not confirm the exact injury and said he was surrounded by family in the locker room.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

Not since 1988 has a team scored 100 points or more in an NBA Finals Game 7. In the five Finals to reach a Game 7 since 1988, only three of the 10 teams have even cracked 90 points. That’s because these games are bogged down by fatigue and more than two weeks of teams growing used to one another’s punches and counterpunches. We’re seeing that play out tonight as well, as the Pacers go into halftime leading 48-47. Oklahoma City is shooting 4-of-18 from 3-point-range, while the Pacers are 8-of-16 from deep.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

Oklahoma City’s scouting report changes entirely with Tyrese Haliburton out of the game for Indiana, and I wonder how much confusion it might cause the Thunder as they suddenly must account for Andrew Nembhard and T.J. McConnell becoming the primary ballhandlers for the Pacers.

The Thunder are so deep defensively that they should be able to adjust on the fly, but Indiana is using rotations it rarely relied on, and it might be more difficult to defend for a team hard-wired to expect the Pacers to play a certain way.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander leads the Thunder with 12 points.

Pascal Siakam has eight for Indiana.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

Thunder reserve guard Cason Wallace is not a household name like his teammates, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, or Jalen Williams, but has been one of his team’s best players nearly one-and-a-half quarters into Game 7.

He already has three steals, with two in the Pacers’ backcourt, totally disrupting their ability to get into their offense. And when Indiana thought it had a mismatch with Pascal Siakam backing Wallace down on the low block, Wallace didn’t give up any room and eventually forced a scoreless possession. He’s been suffocating on defense.

The Thunder lead 34-32 with 7:14 left in the first half.

Guards Cason Wallace and Alex Caruso are wreaking havoc off the bench for OKC, combining for six steals.

The Pacers have six turnovers compared to the Thunder’s one.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

Bennedict Mathurin’s rest on the bench lasted only half a minute, as Indiana needs his microwave scoring ability more than ever with Tyrese Haliburton out of the game. Mathurin, of course, was a hero of Game 3, scoring 27 points in 22 minutes, but has been quiet ever since. He has five early points here.

The Pacers say Haliburton will not return due to a lower right leg injury.

Even after the shock of the Tyrese Haliburton injury, the Pacers aren’t going away just yet. Indiana leads 28-27 with roughly 10 minutes left in the second quarter.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

Even with Haliburton out of the game for the final 4 minutes of the opening quarter, Indiana stayed with the Thunder to trail only by three.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led Oklahoma City with eight points and Alex Caruso scored six off the bench. Haliburton had scored a game-high nine points before exiting with his injury. Considering how improbably Indiana has won games during this postseason, would anyone necessarily count them out to still win this?

Reporting from Oklahoma City

Backup Pacers point guard TJ McConnell has been Indiana’s secret weapon throughout these Finals, changing the outcomes of several games with his contributions in bursts.

Yet with Tyrese Haliburton in the locker room undergoing medical attention on what appears to be a right leg injury, Indiana now needs McConnell to be a difference-maker for likely the rest of the game. Can he sustain his pestering defense for the next three quarters? It’s no hyperbole to say that Indiana’s title hopes partially hinge on it.

After trying to make a play off the catch, Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton seemed to hurt his leg and hit the ground in pain. He slammed his hand down on the court multiple times.

Tyrese Haliburton sustains an injury during the first quarter against the Oklahoma City Thunder.Justin Ford / Getty Images

The entire Pacers’ bench got up to surround Haliburton after a timeout.

Haliburton entered the game dealing with a right calf injury.

The first Pacer off the bench tonight was Bennedict Mathurin.

Mathurin has been underwhelming this series, scoring only 17 points combined over the last three games after a 27-point outburst in Game 3.

Can Indiana get another big scoring performance from Mathurin? He’s the type of role player who can swing a game.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

It’s difficult to overstate how loud this arena has been, and yet Tyrese Haliburton has already quieted it three times with each successive 3-pointer he has hit to put Indiana ahead, 14-10, forcing an Oklahoma City timeout.

Each shot has been from 24 feet or further, and each one has led to an audible “ooh,” like the air ever so slightly being let out of a balloon.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

Paycom Center looks to be 98% Thunder fans, with only very small pockets of Pacers fans visible in their yellow shirts sticking out from the rest of the arena in Thunder blue.

The Pacers lead 11-6 with under 8 minutes to go.

Game 7s are usually defensive struggles and that seems to be the case so far.

The last game of the NBA season has officially tipped off!

Either the Pacers win their first championship in franchise history or the Thunder will win their first title since arriving in Oklahoma City.

Hopefully, the 20th Game 7 in NBA Finals history is a classic.

The Thunder’s home court advantage is potent — OKC is 10-2 at home in these playoffs. That easily could have been 12-0 save for some last-second heroics (Aaron Gordon’s 3-pointer with 3 seconds left for Denver; Tyrese Haliburton’s pull-up with 0.3 left in Game 1 of this series).

It’s much more than the record: The Thunder have a +20.7 net rating at home, compared to a -6.2 net rating on the road (where they are 5-5). Thunder players openly discuss how they feed off their raucous crowd, and this becomes most noticeable on defense — the Thunder’s defensive rating is 12.7 points per 100 possessions better at home this postseason.

Reporting from Oklahoma City

How will the Indiana Pacers defend MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander?

In Game 6, the Pacers forced SGA into one of his worst games of the postseason, holding him to only 21 points while forcing 8 turnovers.

Indiana stopped sending a full-court press at Gilgeous-Alexander, taking away some of his driving lanes, while also double-teaming him more aggressively in the halfcourt.

How successfully the Pacers defend the MVP will go a long way in determining who wins Game 7.

Players for both team show up to Paycom Center in their best.

Luguentz Dort. Logan Riely / NBAE / Getty Images

Jarace Walker.Logan Riely / NBAE / Getty Images

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.Logan Riely / NBAE / Getty Images

Jalen Williams.Logan Riely / NBAE / Getty Images

Here are some quotes from the players immediately after Game 6:

“One game for everything you ever dreamed of,” Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said of Game 7 on Sunday. “If you win it, you get everything. If you lose it, you get nothing. It’s that simple.”

“It’s so, so, exciting. As a basketball fan, there’s nothing like a Game 7,” Tyrese Haliburton said. “There’s nothing like a Game 7 in the NBA Finals. Dreamed of being in this situation my whole life. So, to be here is really exciting.”

“You could ask every team in the NBA. Every team would take this opportunity to take this chance,” Chet Holmgren added. “We’re no different. It’s on us to go out there and make the most of it.”

“There’s not a lot of Game 7s that happen. So, to have this opportunity to play in a Game 7 with this team is a blessing and wouldn’t want to do it with any other team,” Obi Toppin said.

Read the full story here.

Talking with officials from the teams and within the league before tipoff, there is a general consensus: Everyone is carefully watching how relaxed the Thunder — the second-youngest team ever to make the Finals, and which cruised through the regular season only to be pushed to the limit by Indiana — come out and play tonight.

Oklahoma City has Game 7 experience during these playoffs already, having advanced out of the second round by beating Denver on their home court, but few expected this particular series to go this long.

There’s a phrase that’s ubiquitous in Indiana. You see it on chalkboard signs outside of bars. You hear it from fans, coaches and players. It was emblazoned on T-shirts at Game 3 of the NBA Finals. It’s even the slogan for the state’s basketball Hall of Fame.

In 49 other states, it’s just basketball. But this is Indiana.

It was in 1925, after all, that the inventor of basketball, James Naismith, watched a state high school tournament and declared Indiana “the center of the sport.”

Now, 100 years later, between a stunning Indiana Pacers run to the finals and the exploding popularity of the Indiana Fever, Naismith’s observation has never been more true.

Read the full story here.

At 4-foot-11, Kristin Chenoweth is still making it to the NBA Finals.

The award-winning actress, singer, Oklahoma native, Oklahoma Hall of Fame inductee and unabashed Thunder fan is performing “The Star-Spangled Banner” before Game 7, the NBA announced.

This is the 20th Game 7 of an NBA Finals in league history, and only four road teams have ever won. Indiana is trying to join these teams among the visitors who have pulled it off:

1969: Boston Celtics over Los Angeles Lakers

1974: Boston Celtics over Milwaukee Bucks

1978: Washington Bullets over Seattle SuperSonics

2016: Cleveland Cavaliers over Golden State Warriors

Reporting from Oklahoma City

League-mandated pregame press conferences with coaches don’t typically elicit much interesting material — especially after an NBA Finals that has stretched nearly three weeks.

Yet Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle appeared furious before tipoff of Game 7 when he ignored his opening question and instead said that “all I’m thinking about right now” was a video he had seen today that showed buses in Oklahoma City’s colors with “CHAMPIONS” painted along the side. Stern-faced and short with his answers, Carlisle was not happy with Oklahoma City’s preparations for a championship parade.

“I just saw a video that’s probably going to go viral,” Carlisle said, “of some buses, open-top buses, presumably for the parade that are already painted with them as champions. That’s all I’m thinking about right now.”

Both of these teams are built on winning the possession game: forcing turnovers, not turning the ball over themselves, securing some offensive rebounds, scoring easy buckets in transition, and simply creating more scoring opportunities than their opponent.

Which team has executed that has swung from game to game, but in Game 6 it was clearly Indiana.

“I think last game, we didn’t play our brand of basketball and we didn’t play our brand of defense and we just let them be comfortable,” Isaiah Hartenstein said of the Thunder. “So I think it’s a mix of things. They do a great job of never changing the way they play. So they get out, they run. And it’s our job to just get back to playing our style of defense and going from there.”

Turnovers and bench points will be bellwethers in Game 7, as they have been throughout the series.

Read the full article here.

Cities have rallied behind their teams since sports began, yet in Oklahoma City, what is atypical is the degree to which that relationship is not one-sided. Fans, city officials and the team itself are intertwined more closely than perhaps any other NBA market. Fans show up for the Thunder in uncommon ways — during late nights at the airport, yes, but also at the ballot box, where a 2023 measure to use public money to help fund a new Thunder arena scheduled to open in 2028 passed with 71% of the vote.

The team has returned the embrace.

Sam Presti, the team’s top basketball executive since 2007, “may be the only GM in America who texts with the mayor,” the mayor himself, David Holt, said with a laugh in his office, which is decorated with a framed Thunder jersey. It hangs to the left of the desk where, this week, Holt signed an agreement that will keep the team in Oklahoma City through 2053 and could extend up to 15 additional years.

Read the full article here.

It will be the 20th Game 7 in NBA Finals history. Home teams have gone 15-4 to this point — but a road team won the most recent one of these showdowns, when Cleveland topped Golden State in 2016.

Tyrese Haliburton’s strained left calf wasn’t much of an issue in Game 6. That doesn’t mean it should be ignored in Game 7.

There were a couple of moments early in Game 6 when he clearly hesitated to push off on his left leg, but it ultimately didn’t matter because his shot was falling and the Thunder’s defensive pressure was not cranked up to its usual intensity. Haliburton finished with 14 points, five assists, and played less than 23 minutes in the blowout.

Also of note: The Thunder rarely dragged Haliburton into a pick-and-roll and made him move laterally quickly on defense. Expect more of that in Game 7.

Read the full article here.

At the Indiana Pacers’ team practice ahead of a crucial Game 6 of the NBA Finals, assistant coach Jenny Boucek was doing everything but focusing on the history she’s been making.

According to the league, Boucek is the first woman to be a staff assistant coach on an NBA Finals team. “I don’t think twice about it on a day to day-to-day basis,” Boucek told NBA News after Wednesday’s team practice. “I just want to coach the team, go to war with them, try to help us win a championship.”

Read the full story here.

Brad Thomas and Vaughn Dalzell weigh in on the player props for Game 7 between the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder, focusing on the over for Tyrese Haliburton’s point total and the under for Isaiah Hartenstein.

James Capers, Josh Tiven and Sean Wright joined a very small club tonight.

Capers, Tiven and Wright were announced by the NBA as the officiating crew for Game 7 of the NBA Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Indiana Pacers. It’s the first Game 7 of a finals for all three, who are now the 22nd, 23rd and 24th referees in NBA history to land such an assignment.

Unlike the league’s four most recent champions, Boston, Denver, Golden State and Milwaukee, who drafted and developed their franchise cornerstones, or the 2020 Los Angeles Lakers, who signed LeBron James as a free agent and whose glamour status made them the preferred trade destination for its other star, Anthony Davis, Indiana’s front office has struck gold by trading its way up.

Of the 10 players Indiana has typically leaned on during this postseason, half were acquired via trades, including three of the top four scorers in Pascal Siakam, Tyrese Haliburton and Aaron Nesmith. Since the Miami Heat built a superteam through free agent signings and won consecutive championships in 2012 and 2013, the only NBA champion to have relied that much on trades were the 2019 Toronto Raptors, who traded for four of their top five leading scorers.

“There’s no one right way to do it,” Pacers general manager Chad Buchanan told NBC News. 

Read the full story here.

Dan Patrick reacts to Game 6 of the NBA Finals between the Thunder and Pacers, where T.J. McConnell and Obi Toppin excelled for the Pacers, while Tyrese Haliburton played through his injury.

Drew Dinsick breaks down the Thunder vs. Pacers matchup in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, looking at the trends for both teams and how bettors can find profitable live betting angles.

Reporting from Indianapolis

There was one margin in particular that propelled Indiana to a stunning, 108-91 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Thursday night, the same one that coach Rick Carlisle said cost them Game 5: Turnovers.

In Game 5, the team coughed up the ball a whopping 22 times in an 11-point loss, including seven in the first quarter and eight in a tightly contested fourth. And they came in a variety of forms, from bad passes to aimlessly dribbling into traffic to picking up the ball too far away from the hoop.

In Game 6, Indiana had zero turnovers in the first quarter, only two by halftime, and seven by the end of third — building a 30-point lead before backups played the majority of the fourth quarter.

Read the full story here.

2016: Cavaliers defeat the Warriors

2013: Heat defeat the Spurs

2010: Lakers defeat the Celtics

2005: Spurs defeat the Pistons

1994: Rockets defeat the Knicks

1988: Lakers defeat the Pistons

1984: Celtics defeat the Lakers

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