Indiana has some things to figure out
Game 3 crucial as Pacers take home-court edge away by winning Game 1
For a team that has now won 81 of its 100 games this season (not counting the NBA Cup final loss, since that doesn't figure into any records), the Thunder somehow tend to get overlooked on the defensive end. Oklahoma City handcuffed the Pacers in the first two games, daring Indiana to take 3-pointers and barely giving up anything easy around the rim.
It starts with bothering Haliburton, which the Thunder have managed to do for the majority of the first two games.
"Most of the guys I guard have the ball most of the time," said Thunder forward Luguentz Dort, who has drawn the assignment on Haliburton for much of the first two games. "My main thing is to stay in front of him and make everything tough. He's a great player. He is going to make some tough shots and great reads, so I just have to stay in front of him."
No team gave up fewer paint points in the regular season than the Thunder. It truly is a clash of styles; the Pacers are averaging 46 paint points in their 13 wins in these playoffs as opposed to averaging 36 paint points in their five losses.
"I think we have been one of the better teams scoring in the paint all year and we have to establish that early," Pacers forward Myles Turner said. "I think we only had four or six points in the paint in the first half (of Game 2) and that's not Pacers basketball. When you live and die by that three or mid-range shots, it doesn't always fare well for you."
Maybe at home, things will be easier. The Pacers got a split in Oklahoma City; things could be much worse. And now, the Pacers have two days to try to find a way to respond to what the Thunder defense is taking away.
"We'll watch the film, see where we can get better," Haliburton said. "We know that the paint is our emphasis and the paint is our friend. The more that we're able to attack the paint, usually better things happen for us."
Agencies via Xinhua
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