Indiana
Pacers Summer League Grades: Jarace Walker shines but Indiana loses sloppy opener
The Indiana Pacers committed an obscene amount of turnovers with 27 coming in the first three quarters and made just 4 of their 23 attempts from deep as they lost in overtime to the Brooklyn Nets after blowing a 15-point lead with five minutes to go. Welcome to NBA Summer League, isn’t it grand?
Every year I like to grade these often sloppy, poorly executed games that serve as introductions to the team’s draft picks and a first look at where the returning young prospects have started to improve. It’s nonsensical to put grades on these guys as they play a lot without a ton of familiarity with each other after just a few days of practice but let’s have some fun and dive into the performances of every player.
Jarace Walker – B+
Walker looked like the best player on the floor for much of the game as he finished with 25 points (9 of 18), 6 rebounds, 4 assists, 2 steals, and a block. He showed off his passing and playmaking chops with quick feeds inside to Oscar Tshiebwe and a dart to Johnny Furphy in the corner off of one of his drives. The way he can make quick passing decisions in any situation whether off the catch or off the bounce has always stood out as one of his best traits.
Seven turnovers the big blemish on his offensive game as he forced the issue too much at times instead of making a simple pass to an open player or tried to squeeze in a pass that just wasn’t there.
“Definitely had a lot of turnovers, got to cut down on that,” Walker said of how he felt he did tonight. “Feel like I got to rebound better, shot selection was decent. Overall was just a decent game. Next game I’ll be better.”
The shot-making was phenomenal where he hit multiple mid-range jump shots including off the dribble and one off of movement on a baseline out of bounds play. He was unable to connect on any of his 3-point attempts.
He had some impressive finishes inside including a euro-step in transition and never settled for his floater but played with physicality going to the rim which is something the Pacers want to see from him with using his big body as he earned 8 attempts from the free-throw line.
The Pacers found him repeatedly on similar plays with Tshiebwe with the ball at the elbow and Jarace ducking into the paint and getting inside position on a smaller defender. He scored his first points of the game on a dunk on this play, got an and-1 layup later in the first half, and finished a third time on an acrobatic finish off the catch while still in the air while being fouled again.
Walker had some highlight worthy plays on the defensive end as well while blocking a shot viciously while guarding a smaller guard on the perimeter and showed off his elite hands with a couple of steals as well.
One thing that the Pacers want to see from Walker this week and beyond according to both Rick Carlisle and Summer League head coach Jannero Pargo is improved conditioning that allows him to play hard and with energy for long stretches of the game and that’s the only area besides the turnovers where it doesn’t feel like this was a great performance from Walker. He played 35 minutes in this one and did seem to wear down a bit as he made just one of his final six shot attempts. But even beyond that, there were multiple plays where he was slow to get back on defense after a turnover or a missed layup. He could be seen standing upright on the perimeter on defense on occasion not ready to help a teammate that had been beaten off the dribble. Late in the fourth as the Nets made their run to tie, Walker didn’t even get past halfcourt before Noah Clowney had a tip dunk finish to cut the Pacers lead to three. The coaches will have plenty to point to if needed when continuing to work towards an increased endurance to be able to play hard consistently. That’s what they need him to do to earn a spot in a crowded rotation.
“We knew he was going to score the ball,” Pargo said after the game. “We were focused on his defense, his energy, his effort. For the most part, he was really good. He got tired a couple of times but he’s playing hard. He played well for us; we just need him to—along with some of our other guys—take care of the ball better and not turn it over.”
Walker said after the game that he felt like his conditioning held up pretty well considering this was his first game with this level of minutes in a long time—a fair point—but said it is among the things he’s working on along with being physical and driving all the way to the rim.
Enrique Freeman – A-
Speaking of hard play, Enrique Freeman has a relentless motor. He played 17 minutes and I’m not sure he ever stopped running at full speed. He immediately made a huge play as soon as he entered the game with a phenomenal block even with the offensive player trying to his off arm to push off the Pacers rookie from making the play.
Amazingly this wasn’t even his best block of the game as he erased a potential highlight dunk with a perfectly timed jump and clean swat of the ball that turned into a Pacers transition opportunity.
Freeman doesn’t stop hustling and looks like a pure energy big. He wasn’t perfect on the perimeter on defense but moved his feet well and always made an effort to get back into the play when beat.
He scored 7 points (3 of 4) with a strong tip dunk and a nice hook shot that may serve him well in the G-League even if he doesn’t get many opportunities to showcase his post game in the NBA. He added 5 rebounds, an assist, and a steal to go with those two emphatic blocks as well. I was really impressed with his relentless spirit and high energy during his time on the floor. In the first half, he had strongly outplayed Tshiebwe, who bounced back with a big second half performance.
Oscar Tshiebwe – A-
Tshiebwe just feasted on the glass as he does while racking up 19 rebounds including eight on the offensive glass to go with his 17 points (7 for 11). He was repeatedly the beneficiary of numerous passes inside from both Walker and Quenton Jackson and made his own offense with his work on the glass as well including the first points of the game for the Pacers.
He had those three nice passes from the elbow to Walker on those aforementioned plays where he found inside position. The play worked so often for the Pacers that at one point they doubled Walked and left Tshiebwe wide open at the elbow. He badly missed the jumper but just immediately followed the ball and gobbled up his own shot and put it in the basket from there.
Tshiebwe scored the Pacers first four points in overtime to give them a lead early in the first to seven Elam Ending target score extra period and got a nice steal on the defensive end that gave the Pacers a chance to win the game.
Defensively, he struggles any time he needs to leave the paint and closing out on shooters. He often looks stiff with how he moves and he’ll struggled to guard against a big that can shoot or teams would likely look to attack him as the big covering the screener in the pick and roll. But his rebounding and drive to control the glass is phenomenal and he was very good at what he does in this game.
Johnny Furphy – C+
Furphy started a little slow but was nearly the only Pacers player to be able to make a 3-point shot in this game. He finished with 12 points (3 for 8 from deep), 4 rebounds, and a steal. He also had a nice lob finish from fellow rookie Tristen Newton for his only basket inside the arc.
He got his jumper blocked a couple of times in a short stretch where he underestimated the length of his defender. Defensively, it was a mixed bag, seemed to get beat often off the dribble but did make a few solid plays to get stops on that end as well. Overall just an okay performance from the 35th pick who I perhaps had some unfair expectations for after he surprisingly jumped Kendall Brown into the starting summer lineup after Pargo said the starters would be all returning players, got compared by his summer coach to Lauri Markkanen, and Carlisle said the team’s scouts had him as the 14th best player in the draft. Excited to see how the rest of the week goes for the rookie.
Kendall Brown – A-
Brown looks like a perfect fit for the Pacers hyper fast play style anytime he get involved in transition where it’s pushing the break himself or getting out on the wings and gliding down court. Coming into his third season, he hasn’t had many opportunities at the NBA level but you can still see the vision of a fun NBA wing. Unfortunately as he prepares for his third season, it’s difficult to see any path to playing time for him.
Brown finished with 19 points (6 for 11) in 27 minutes in this game including some tough finishes at the rim and earned 9 free throw attempts for the game. He scored 10 points early in the fourth quarter when it looked like the Pacers were going to cruise to an easy victory before the wheels fell off. He went 1 for 3 from deep as one of only two Pacers to make a 3-point shot in the game. He also added 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, and 2 blocks.
The blocks were impressive including one with impressive reach in transition that knocked the ball off of the shooter on a play the broadcast team thought initially may have been a foul before seeing the replay.
Quenton Jackson – F
Jackson was bad, there’s no getting around that but—even though I’m giving him an F because there’s just no other choice—I don’t think he was as bad as his box score would suggest with an ungodly 9 turnovers and 3 of 10 shooting. It was rough, don’t get me wrong, but I still saw some glimmers of what makes Jackson an interesting player.
Jackson showed off his burst and quick speed often but as soon as he got near the rim things just did not go his way. While he took some ill-advised shots and made many poor decisions passing the ball (similar to Walker where they too often avoided making the simple play, held onto the ball too long, and then ended up turning it over), the way the game was officiated didn’t do him any favors as he was called for a bad charge where he wisely avoided hitting the defender straight on and made the basket and had many drives to the basket where contact was not called a foul and instead resulted in a missed shot or a ball knocked out of bounds. At one point he airballed a 3-pointer that landed a nearby casino.
His defensive effort was strong as he harassed the Nets guards into many turnovers of their own including four steals. He calmed down a lot with no turnovers after the third quarter and finished with five assists including some nice dump offs to Tshiebwe.
Many plays will haunt him in this nightmare of a game but missing the final two free throws with the game tied and just two seconds remaining was absolutely brutal. Jackson hit 77% of his free throws in the G-League last year. I expect to see him bounce back the rest of this week but we shall see. That one was ugly. He finished with 9 points, 6 rebounds, 5 assists, 4 steals, and 9 turnovers.
Tristen Newton – INC
With how things simply weren’t going Jackson’s way tonight, I don’t know why a guard like Newton didn’t see more time than just 7 minutes. He had 4 assists, nearly leading the team, in his short stints including the lob to Furphy. He had one offensive rebound on a nice play that he converted into another one of his assists as well. I hope we get to see him more in the rest of these games.
Ben Sheppard – D–
Summer League is not the place for Ben Sheppard. He made just one of his nine shots in this game and missed all four of his 3-pointers. He stays away from the F because his defense was awesome as he had the best +/- at +7 as he had 3 steals, including one T.J. McConnell style steal in the backcourt that earned him his only field goal of the game. He opened up the game with a forced turnover with strong defense.
He tried to do a bit too much at times where he didn’t seem to be playing within himself like he normally does with three turnovers. He did get hammered on a no call in overtime that would have given the Pacers free throws with a chance to get to within one point of winning the game and the lead. I’m just not going to worry about this one exhibition game for a guy that just played valuable minutes in the playoffs and led the team in net rating through the postseason as well. We know what he can do as a role player in limited minutes.
Dakota Mathias (C) is the only other player to have got into the game for the Pacers in this one. He scored two points on a baseline two that was reminiscent of McConnell as well as he drove under the basket before pulling up on the other end. He missed two 3-pointers but clearly got fouled on one attempt that wasn’t called. He somehow played more than Newton which seems odd.
Indiana
Live updates: Indiana vs. Oregon in the College Football Playoff semifinal
Atlanta will host a top-five Big Ten rematch in the Peach Bowl on Friday. No. 1 Indiana will take on No. 5 Oregon in a semifinal of the College Football Playoff for a chance to compete for a national championship. The Hoosiers won the regular-season matchup 30-20. This is the fifth all-time meeting between the teams, with the series tied 2-2.
Both defenses have proved stout, making the offenses the biggest determining factor in this game. Indiana is second in scoring defense, while Oregon is close behind at sixth. The Hoosiers have the advantage on the line, giving up the third-fewest rushing yards in the nation. Oregon, however, has the edge in the air, allowing the ninth-fewest passing yards. The Ducks also pitched a shutout in the Orange Bowl against Texas Tech.
The Hoosiers didn’t skip a beat on offense, handing Alabama its first 30-point loss this side of the new millennium. Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza was highly efficient, going 14-of-16 with three touchdowns and no interceptions. That efficiency has helped Indiana earn the top seed; the Hoosiers have committed the fewest penalties of any CFP team and have the fourth-fewest penalty yards in the nation.
Oregon, meanwhile, struggled to score for most of its quarterfinal matchup against Texas Tech. The Ducks didn’t reach the end zone until 11:20 remained in the third quarter and rushed for just 64 yards. Dante Moore threw for 234 yards but had no touchdowns, an interception and minus-12 rushing yards due to constant pressure.
Indiana is the favorite, but Oregon has been one of the strongest units in the country, with its lone loss coming against the Hoosiers. Will the Ducks learn from their earlier mistakes, or will Indiana continue one of the most dominant runs of the CFP era?
Indiana
Rematch history in CFP and BCS favors Oregon vs. Indiana in Peach Bowl
Oregon struggles to match Indiana’s dominant defensive front
Oregon must control the line of scrimmage to have any hope against Indiana’s dominant front.
The College Football Playoff national semifinal at the Peach Bowl marks a rematch of No. 1 seed Indiana’s 30-20 win against No. 5 Oregon in October, the first of several results this year that have left the Hoosiers knocking on the door of a historic and unbeaten season.
With two more wins, Indiana would become the first 16-0 national champion since Yale in 1894. But in order to make history, the Hoosiers will need to reverse some recent history.
Since the 1996 season, there have been seven regular-season rematches in the College Football Playoff and in national championship games played under the two previous postseason formats, the Bowl Championship Series and the Bowl Alliance. Four of these pairings have occurred since the playoff expanded last season.
Surprisingly, all but one of these games have seen the loser from the regular season rebound to win the rematch. This could be a coincidence. At a minimum, though, this trend shows the difficulties in defeating an elite opponent twice in under a four-month span.
The Hoosiers look to buck that recent history. Here’s a look back at these rematches and what they might suggest about the Peach Bowl:
Ole Miss vs. Georgia, 2025
Results: Georgia 43-35, Ole Miss 39-34.
Ole Miss led Georgia in the second half when the two met in October but coughed up a lead for its one and only loss on the year. The two SEC rivals met again in the Sugar Bowl earlier this month, with the Rebels pulling out the win on a late field goal. Unlike during the regular season, Ole Miss landed a big game from Trinidad Chambliss and did much better running the ball, indicating how teams can strategize by looking back and evaluating the previous matchup.
Ole Miss vs. Tulane, 2025
Results: Ole Miss 45-10, Ole Miss 41-10.
Here’s the one outlier. The Rebels stampeded over Tulane at home in September and then did the same in the opening round. The one difference: Lane Kiffin was the head coach for the first game and Pete Golding for the second. In this case, a significant edge in talent was the biggest factor in helping Ole Miss defy recent history.
Oklahoma vs. Alabama, 2025
Results: Oklahoma 23-21, Alabama 34-24.
Again, an SEC rematch that reversed the regular-season result. Oklahoma’s win in November sparked its run to the playoff. That seemed to carry over to the opening round, when the Sooners stormed out to a 17-0 lead. But the Tide crawled back to tie for the biggest comeback in playoff history.
Oregon vs. Ohio State, 2024
Results: Oregon 32-31, Ohio State 41-21.
Oregon narrowly pulled out the win in Autzen Stadium and then went on to post a perfect regular season, earning the top seed in the debut of the expanded playoff. But in the Rose Bowl the Ducks ran into a buzzsaw in the Buckeyes, who stormed out to a 34-0 late in the second quarter and won going away. A year later, Oregon hopes to follow Ohio State’s blueprint and score the upset against the unbeaten Big Ten champs.
Alabama vs. Georgia, 2021
Results: Alabama 42-24, Georgia 33-18.
The Tide knocked off then-unbeaten Georgia in the SEC championship game behind 421 yards and three touchdowns from quarterback Bryce Young. That landed Alabama in the four-team playoff as the No. 1 seed, while Georgia slotted in at No. 3. The pair met in the championship game after beating Cincinnati and Michigan, respectively, and the Bulldogs would hold Young to 6.5 yards per throw and make two picks to take the first of back-to-back titles.
LSU vs. Alabama, 2011
Results: LSU 9-6, Alabama 21-0
The Tigers’ overtime win during the regular season was about as ugly as the score suggests with five field goals being the only scores. The rematch in the title game about two months later wasn’t any better. Alabama’s defense barely allowed LSU to cross midfield in this second meeting to win the second of Nick Saban’s six titles in Tuscaloosa.
Results: Florida State 24-21, Florida 52-20.
No other rematch has come within such a short time frame. FSU topped Florida on Nov. 30 to end the regular season and drew the immediate rematch in the Sugar Bowl, which was designated as the championship game in the Bowl Alliance format, because then-No. 2 Arizona State was obligated to face No. 4 Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. This time, Steve Spurrier’s Gators bombarded the Seminoles to capture the first national title in program history with the Sun Devils falling to the Buckeyes.
Indiana
Peach Bowl Ticket Prices Skyrocket Ahead of Oregon and Indiana Rematch
As the No. 5 Oregon Ducks prepare to face off against the No. 1 Indiana Hoosiers with a bid to the College Football Playoff National Championship Game on the line, ticket prices for the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl in Mercedez-Benz Stadium have increased.
Though Duck fans were outnumbered in the previous playoff quarterfinal against Texas Tech at the Orange Bowl in Miami, a Big Ten rematch might drum up more fans wearing green at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
That increase in visiting fans, plus the importance of this game, can be seen through the surging prices for tickets on event websites.
Current Prices for Peach Bowl Tickets
The cheapest tickets to get into the Peach Bowl start at standing room only, with a $166.50 price from Ticketmaster and a $178 price on StubHub.
This total for standing room has decreased since allotment tickets sold out on Monday, with Oregon Ducks on Sports Illustrated reporting $184 for standing-room only on StubHub.
Seats behind both teams’ benches have almost the same amount of seats still open, with the cheapest ticket behind the Ducks’ bench sit around the club 130 section in row 34 for $628.32 on StubHub. Ticketmaster has a $638 price tag per ticket in the same section a few rows up, which the website states is discounted from an over $1,000 original resale listing.
The most affordable sections according to both websites is the upper decks with sections 342 through 350 on the Oregon bench side selling in the $250-$300 range a piece. The highest-priced ticket, according to Ticketmaster, sits on the side of the Indiana bench in section 110 in the club, with a price of $4,760. However, there are several club level tickets with price tags well over a grand.
Oregon’s Ticket Allotment Sold Out Early
At the beginning of the week, the allotted tickets for Oregon fans to the Peach Bowl had officially sold out through the Oregon Athletic Department. According to the Peach Bowl, this is the 26th time the game has sold out of initial ticket inventory in it’s last 29 kickoffs.
MORE: Oregon Fans Won’t Like Dante Moore’s New Projected NFL Team
MORE: Oregon Ducks’ Peach Bowl Uniforms Make History
MORE: Oregon Ducks Get Jay Harris Update From New Injury Report
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Comparing Peach Bowl Tickets to Oregon’s Other Playoff Games
In terms of ticket prices, the Peach Bowl turnout likely will become the most expensive postseason game for Oregon this season. For the Orange Bowl in Miami, Vivid Seats reported that the get-in price dropped to $39 a ticket.
The Oregon crowd for that showdown was roughly 25 percent compared to 75 percent Texas Tech fans, with many empty seats seen throughout Hard Rock Stadium. Furthermore, the lowest cost for tickets in terms of Oregon’s first round playoff game against James Madison at Autzen Stadium also reached around $50 with only a few hours before kickoff.
The Hoosiers and the Ducks will kickoff at 4:30 p.m. PT from Mercedenz-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia.
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