Indiana
Indiana Pacers Game 7 Loss An Emotional Ending And Unwanted Beginning
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma – JUNE 22: Tyrese Haliburton (0) of Indiana Pacers in action against … More
OKLAHOMA CITY — In Tyrese Haliburton’s locker, a framed piece of wisdom from writer Carl Bard sits at about eye level. It’s impossible to miss but as plain as could be, with black text on white paper within a white frame. Haliburton sees it multiple times a day when the Indiana Pacers play at home.
“Though no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new end,” the saying reads. And after losing in the NBA Finals, that expression is now more appropriate than ever to the Pacers.
When it comes to star athletes, Haliburton is as grounded as they come. He’s present in each moment and conversation brought his way. He carries the right energy to every situation he must face. His day-to-day demeanor is endearing to everyone — his teammates, coaches, fans, and even most opponents. And during his solo moments at his locker before and after home games, Haliburton is reminded of beginnings and endings. It’s forceful reflection.
In 2022, Haliburton was traded from the Sacramento Kings to the Pacers. It was a stunning move, and it changed everything for a franchise in Indiana that desperately needed a shakeup. They needed a new start.
Haliburton, however, did not. He was crushed to be traded from the Kings. Yet as he does, he quickly adjusted to his new reality with a contagious smile and unmatched presence. Instantly, the internal feeling within the Pacers shifted. Optimism crept in. A necessary rebuild started, though it didn’t feel as daunting with Haliburton around.
In his first game with his new team, the Pacers set a then-franchise record for points in a first quarter. Haliburton rocked the house in that frame, scoring 12 points and dishing out an assist. He buried two outside shots. It was a sign of what was coming.
“The potential is obvious and very encouraging,” Carlisle said after the outing. “The first quarter was spectacular. The energy, the pace, the ball movement, the shot making. It’s a high bar… you can see the possibilities.”
The Pacers ascended rapidly with Haliburton as their central figure. Their high-paced style formed first, then an elite offense came right after. In the second full season with Haliburton in Indiana, they made the Eastern Conference Finals. He was so good that less than two years after being acquired, the Pacers were ready for another star and traded for Pascal Siakam. Off they went as a duo, leading a voyage that led the Pacers to a winner-takes-all title fight.
What happened to the Pacers in Game 7 of the NBA Finals?
Sunday, led by that pairing, Indiana played in Game 7 of the 2025 NBA Finals. It was unreached territory for the blue and gold, who fell in six games during their previous, and only, NBA Finals trip. Win or lose, a brand new ending was coming for the Pacers.
Haliburton, by virtue of his framed quote, thinks about new endings often. His new start with the Pacers was special. It was one epic quarter, followed by two fun, growth-filled seasons. The 2024-25 campaign was nothing short of magical, with the Pacers winning 50 games for the first time in 11 years. They raced through the Eastern Conference postseason field and were on the doorstep of immortality.
Win or lose, the result of Game 7 was going to be a conclusion Indiana hadn’t seen before. They knew it going into the game. Players admitted that their mind wandered leading up to the action as they thought about what could be on Sunday. Sleeping on Saturday night wasn’t a trivial task. Nerves, excitement, anticipation, and anxiety all combined in a way that few get to feel in the NBA.
Just after 7 p.m. local time, the game tipped off. Haliburton, battling a calf injury, was rolling. He hit a three 3.5 minutes into the action. One possession later, another. Before long, a third. He was nearly matching the Thunder on the scoreboard by himself when OKC took a timeout with 7:01 left in the first quarter.
Then, tragedy. Haliburton received a pass from teammate Obi Toppin on the left wing and tried to drive toward the rim. He couldn’t. His right Achilles ruptured and he fell to the floor, launching the ball away with about five minutes remaining in the first period. His pain was immediately obvious as he smacked the court over and over, tears in his eyes. T.J. McConnell, who was waiting at the scorer’s table to check in, was the first Pacers player to reach Haliburton. Soon, the entire roster, as well as a few staffers and coaches, surrounded him on the floor.
His night was over, and the injury was confirmed midday on Monday. It was a crushing blow for the Pacers, who not only had to play without their star but had to carry a heavy emotional toll for the rest of the game. Tony Bradley admitted it took a bit out of him. Toppin blamed himself for the injury due to his involvement in the play.
“I felt like that was my fault, too. Passed the ball to him, and as soon as he went down, that sh— hurt. I ain’t gonna lie. I was thinking about that the whole game,” the bench forward said. Earlier, Toppin admitted he played poorly and took ownership for the loss. “It didn’t go the way we wanted it. I played terrible today,” he began. “Sh— felt like it was my fault.”
The Pacers lost their identity without Haliburton. They also lost their focus, and who could blame them? They all spent a lifetime preparing for this game and spent days thinking about the feelings coming their way. Now, their mentality was shaken, if not broken.
To Indiana’s credit, they battled and took a lead into halftime. But a dominant third quarter from the Thunder was the difference in the 103-91 game. Oklahoma City became champions. The Pacers faced a brand new ending, but one that felt familiar — a loss on the biggest stage. So close, yet not enough.
Indiana Pacers guard T.J. McConnell (9) leaves the court after losing the NBA basketball … More
It hurt more than everyone expected. The Pacers had one game in front of them to win a championship. They knew defeat would be draining. Even then, players freely admitted it was more painful than they foresaw.
“I wanted this one bad for our guys,” Pacers forward James Johnson said of his emotions and his teammates. “We work hard every day to compete every day. They play the game the right way.”
On the court after the game, the Thunder celebrated. Just feet away in the halls of Paycom Center, the Pacers either wept or did everything they could to avoid tears. Wing Aaron Nesmith had just finished crying. Assistant coach Jenny Boucek carried the same look as she hugged her daughter just outside the locker room. A group of team staffers embraced and wiped incoming tears off each other’s faces. The scene was devastating. This brand new ending felt horrible.
As players made their way back to their personal spaces after the game, they were greeted by Haliburton, standing on crutches. They all embraced him individually. “He could have been in the locker room feeling sorry for himself after something like that happened, but he wasn’t. He was up greeting us,” McConnell shared. “A lot of us were hurting from the loss and he was up there consoling us. That’s who Tyrese Haliburton is.”
Inside the locker room, players sat motionless. Thomas Bryant, Johnny Furphy, and Andrew Nembhard were planted in the chairs at their locker and stared off into space. Reality had set in.
Toppin said he felt “Sh—y,” and couldn’t compare the emotion to any that he had felt in his life before. Coming from him, that was particularly revealing. He’s among the most fun-loving players on the Pacers roster, steady as can be with his attitude. Throughout the playoffs, that frequently led to impactful performances. But his gripping smile wasn’t there after Game 7. Nobody had one. Without their star, the Pacers came up short.
And now, the Pacers and Haliburton face the other part of that Bard quote. They have to start from now again. An Achilles tear will rob Haliburton of a significant portion, perhaps all, of his 2025-26 season. Indiana won’t be the same. They have to reset for the coming campaign, then again one year later. The roster will change. Players will be gone, others will be older. Fresh faces will arrive.
But this specific group saw the end in Game 7. So close to glory, they fell short. And it hurt even more after how magical their season was. In early December, they were 10-15, unable to beat some of the worst teams in the NBA. But they banded together, worked hard in practice, got healthy, and were among the league’s best rosters for the final five months of the season.
In the postseason, they made history over and over. Haliburton hit one miraculous shot after another as the Pacers blasted the Milwaukee Bucks, Cleveland Cavaliers, and New York Knicks. In Game 1 of the NBA Finals, he did it again. The Pacers felt on top of the World. Fate was on their side. Their style was working, and their star kept making heroic plays.
Yet in the ultimate game, that star went down with a franchise-altering injury. The magic was gone. It was as painful as possible, made more difficult by just how wonderful the last two months were for the team. Some of the best moments in the lives of many Pacers players happened in that span. At the end, agony was waiting.
The group will push on. Resilience was their superpower all postseason long, and it is needed now more than ever. Bouncing back from their low emotional state will be among the greatest challenges any of Indiana’s players have faced.
But they’ll keep going. Haliburton will return one day. And in the meantime, everyone involved will slowly start to realize just how incredible their 2025 playoff run was. It was nearly one of the great sports stories of all time. The ending was cruel, but the journey was incredible and unforgettable. They’ll bond over it forever.
So the Pacers are runner ups. They haven’t felt like this before. Haliburton and company can’t make a new start. But they can start from now and make a brand new ending once again.
Indiana
Indiana Pacers Must Manage Two-Way Contract Player Availability Down Stretch
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA – DECEMBER 20: Ethan Thompson #55 of the Indiana Pacers takes a shot over Derik Queen #22 of the New Orleans Pelicans during the second half of a game at Smoothie King Center on December 20, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Tyler Kaufman/Getty Images)
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WASHINGTON – The Indiana Pacers have a player availability puzzle to put together down the stretch of the 2025-26 season, and it involves all three of their players on two-way contracts.
Currently, the Pacers have Jalen Slawson, Ethan Thompson, and Taelon Peter signed to two-way deals. Thompson and Peter have been helpful at different points this season, and all three players are healthy right now. They each project to have a bigger role in the Pacers’ final outings of the season.
But they can’t all play in every game thanks to two-way contract rules, and the Pacers will have to juggle the availability of each player. Indiana has already played multiple games since the All-Star break with just one or two or their two-way contract signees available to play.
That’s because two-way agreements come with a limit – players on such contracts can only be active in 50 games per season (or a proportionate ratio of 50/82 games at the time of signing based on the number of days left in the season). The Pacers couldn’t get by without their two-way contract players at various moments this season due to injuries, with Peter being active for 23 of the team’s first 25 games and Thompson during every game from December 1 through January 17.
During those stretches, Indiana needed their two-way players to field a team or a rotation that actually made sense. It wasn’t a poor use of their active days. But that two-way usage early in the season now requires the Pacers to be strategic down the stretch of 2025-26. They have 22 more games this season but won’t be able to use their two-way talents in all of them.
Peter, a rookie selected in the second round of last June’s NBA Draft, had a rush of games to open the campaign, and he’s allowed to suit up 14 more times this league year. “He’s figuring out what being a professional basketball player is about,” Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle said of Peter and his in-season growth earlier this month. “It’s about being who you are all the time, regardless of make or miss. Just keep playing, just keep staying aggressive.”
Thompson was signed on November 30, which permitted him to appear in 39 games this season. He’s only got 10 left – Thompson was effective right away with the Pacers and played often after his signing. He was named to the NBA G League Next Up game, effectively the G League All-Star game, for his performances this campaign.
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA – OCTOBER 13: Taelon Peter #4 of the Indiana Pacers takes a shot against the San Antonio Spurs at Bankers Life Fieldhouse on October 13, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images) Getty Images
Slawson signed his contract earlier today and is eligible for 13 appearances the rest of the way for the Pacers. So, with 22 games remaining, none of the team’s two-way contract players can be active for each remaining game. The team will have to figure out the best strategy when it comes to managing two-way player availability during the final months of the season.
Another consideration for the franchise is that two-way players, by virtue of their contract, can be transferred down to the G League at any time. Peter, Slawson, and Thomspon have combined for 64 appearances with Indiana’s G League affiliate team, the Noblesville Boom, this season. Once the Boom’s season ends – their final scheduled game is March 26 but the team currently holds a playoff spot – then the G League is not an option for two-way players.
So the Pacers have to figure out the best way to deploy, and evaluate, their two-way contract signees during March and April. It’s a lot to manage.
“We’re trying to save games for him,” Carlisle said of the Pacers decision to keep Quenton Jackson, who was previously on a two-way contract, inactive for a game earlier this month. “We want to conserve those games as much as possible.”
Jackson had his contract converted from a two-way deal to a standard deal earlier today, and Slawson filled his two-way slot. It was sharp business for the Pacers, but they lost some available two-way days as a result – Jackson had more than 13 games remaining, but Slawson gets fewer because of the day he signed his contract.
“Two-way guys, your life is a lot of unpredictability of where you’re going to be from day to day,” Pacers general manager Chad Buchanan shared in February.
If the Pacers want to keep their two-way talents around the NBA club as much as possible, their best course of action could be to keep two of the three active in every game and occasionally just have one of the three available. If the team can get to a spot in which they have 15 games left on the schedule and all of their two-way talents have 10+ games left in which they could be active, two of the three could play every night during the final 15 outings. Using all three at once could be difficult, though Indiana may choose to deploy each of Thompson, Peter, and Slawson on the second night of back-to-backs as they manage injuries down the stretch. Putting any of the trio in the G League for a few days is an option, too, but comes with injury risks.
Slawson has not appeared in a game for the Pacers yet this season. Peter is averaging 3.3 points per game while shooting 35.8% from the field while Thompson is posting 4.9 points per contest and knocking down 36.7% of his shots. The Pacers are 15-45 with three back-to-backs remaining and three games left against teams near them in the inverse standings.
Indiana
Indiana Pacers To Add Wing Jalen Slawson Via A Two-Way Contract
Indiana Pacers’ Jalen Slawson dribbles during the second half of an NBA preseason basketball game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Pacers plan to sign wing Jalen Slawson to a two-way contract. The 26-year old forward has spent the ongoing campaign with the Pacers G League affiliate franchise, the Noblesville Boom. It’s a one-year pact covering the rest of the 2025-26 season.
Slawson was a second-round pick back in 2023 and spent his rookie season with the Sacramento Kings. That campaign, the Furman product appeared in 12 games and averaged 0.7 points and 0.6 rebounds per game. Since then, he has bounced around between the Orlando Magic and Pacers organizations.
Most of Slawson’s time in the pros has come via the G League. With the Kings and Magic affiliate teams, the forward averaged between 12 and 13 points per game while being a solid passer and rebounder for his position.
That got him a training camp invite with Indiana last fall. Slawson spent all of the 2025 preseason on an Exhibit 10 deal with the Pacers, and he appeared in all four of the team’s tune-up games ahead of the regular season. He averaged 2.8 points and 3.5 rebounds per game.
Slawson was waived just before the regular season, but the Pacers affiliate team owned his G League rights, and he’s spent the entire season with the Noblesville Boom. That’s where the 6-foot-7 forward has popped – he’s averaging G League career highs of 19.2 points and 5.4 assists per game for the Boom this season, including an improved 34.7% three-point percentage.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA – OCTOBER 7: Jules Bernard #14 of the Minnesota Timberwolves dribbles the ball against Jalen Slawson #18 of the Indiana Pacers during the second half of the preseason game at Target Center on October 7, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)
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He’s been among Noblesville’s best players this year, and with the team losing many players to injury or overseas opportunities, he has recently become the G League’ club’s top option. Even with more responsibility and attention, Slawson has continued to produce.
Now, he gets a call up to the Pacers via a two-way contract. He’s eligible to be active for 13 of the Pacers final 22 games – two-way contract players are only able to appear in a maximum of 50 games in a league year, and that ratio of games gets prorated if they are signed mid-season.
Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle had good memories of Slawson’s play for Indiana during the preseason. “ I think he’s an NBA player,” Carlisle said. “He’s had a good year with the Boom and this will be a great opportunity for him to play some games.”
Two-way contracts provide a salary that is half of the NBA’s rookie minimum, which would equate to $636k over the course of a full season. Prorated for the current day on the calendar, that means Slawson will make about $161k on his two-way with Indiana the rest of the season.
Two-way deals have no impact on a team’s salary cap, so the Pacers have no changes to their spending reality. They opened up a two-way spot by converting the contract of Quenton Jackson earlier this weekend.
Indiana
Highlights: Beech Grove at Whiteland; February 27, 2026
WHITELAND, Ind. (WISH) — “The Zone” featured highlights from eight high school boys basketball games from across central Indiana on Friday.
Watch highlights of Beech Grove at Whiteland above.
Final Score: Whiteland 89 Beech Grove 61
“The Zone” airs each Friday at 11:08 p.m. Click here to watch ‘The Zone’ for basketball highlights on February 27, 2026.
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