Indiana Pacers Get Much-Needed Opening Series Win Vs. Cavaliers
By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/07 04:30:02
0
Share
CLEVELAND, OHIO – MAY 04: Dean Wade #32 of the Cleveland Cavaliers guards Pascal Siakam #43 of the ... More Indiana Pacers during the fourth quarter of game one of the Eastern Conference Semifinals at Rocket Arena on May 04, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Pacers defeated the Cavaliers 121-112. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) CLEVELAND – No, Game 1 of their series against the Cleveland Cavaliers was not a “must-win game” for the Indiana Pacers. But in terms of seizing an opportunity, Game 1 was a chance that the Pacers couldn’t let get away. Indiana is the road team in the best-of-seven set, meaning only three games at most will be played in Indianapolis. If the Pacers are going to win the series, they’ll have to win on the road. They knew it wouldn’t be easy coming into the second round – they have a ton of respect for Cleveland and their high-powered offense. But that elite scoring attack was missing a key piece to open the series. Darius Garland, a two-time All-Star who earned that honor again in 2025, was out with a toe injury. It was his third-straight missed game for the Cavaliers, so the Pacers already had an unforeseen advantage in Game 1. What other edge did the Pacers have in Game 1? The blue and gold needed to take advantage, but Garland’s absence alone didn’t end up being the only reason the first game of the series came with extra closing pressure for the visitors. Indiana started the series hot with their jumpers, something they’ve done before in the postseason but less often to this extent. “I think the ball movement was good, and [our threes] were in rhythm,” Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard said postgame. “A lot of the times when a lot of guys are touching it, [the ball] just has a better energy about it.” After one quarter, the Pacers were 6/9 from deep. Not long after, they sat at 9/15 from long range. They couldn’t miss, and it wasn’t just one player – six different Pacers combined to make those first nine outside shots. That didn’t slow down in the second half as Nembhard and Aaron Nesmith combined to make four threes in under five minutes to open the third quarter. Late in that period, Bennedict Mathurin stopped a Cavs run with a big triple, then Myles Turner hit one at the ending buzzer of the quarter. All night, the Pacers were warm from deep. But they weren’t creating a ton of separation on the scoreboard. Cleveland took the lead in the third quarter, then again in the fourth during a back-and-forth game. Indiana had to earn a victory. They couldn’t waste a game where their shots were falling at a terrific rate. “I feel like our offensive processes were good. Felt like we got good shots and just stepped into them and knocked them down,” Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton said. The Pacers hopes to get Game 1 extended beyond the jump shots. Garland, who has an All-NBA case this season, was out. Some thought he would play, and Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle made a joke pregame that indicated he thought Garland would be in the lineup. But he wasn’t, and Cleveland started shooting guard Sam Merrill in his place. Merrill is a good shooter and lit up Indiana during the regular season. He’s not close in impact to Garland, though. It was a huge loss for the Cavs, who clearly weren’t moving the ball as well as they did throughout the regular season. Indiana Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard (2) shoots as Cleveland Cavaliers forward Evan Mobley (4) ... More defends in the second half during Game 1 in the Eastern Conference semifinals of the NBA basketball playoffs Sunday, May 4, 2025, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki) Cleveland lost three-point shooting without Garland, too. They were off all night, making just nine of their 38 looks for the contest. It was one of their worst games of the entire campaign from long range for the 64-win group, a massive issue on a night when Indiana was hot. Garland’s absence made it difficult for the Cavs to make up the gap in three-point shooting in other ways. He can get into the lane and finish. He’s a strong distributor, and his gravity would have made it harder for the Pacers to defend others. The Cavs were better with him on the floor than off this season. “When he doesn’t play, they play pretty well without him,” Carlisle noted of Garland’s absence. Merrill had a just-okay outing. Garland’s ball handling mostly shifted to Cavs star Donovan Mitchell, and reserve guard Ty Jerome took on a bigger role. Those two are talented players, but the Pacers still were given an advantage with Garland out. “Losing a lot of talent,” Mitchell said of the Cavaliers injuries on Tuesday when addressing the team being banged up. With Garland out and the Pacers feeling it from long range, they needed to win Game 1. They had a better-than-expected opportunity to win a road game against the top seed in the Eastern Conference. Losing a battle with this many things going their way would signal a challenging series would be coming for Indiana. The blue and gold played like they knew they needed the win. Haliburton, known for his offensive firepower, had a few of his best-ever postseason defensive reps late in the game to help his team get stops. Turner finished plays inside the arc and grabbed 11 rebounds to balance the possession battle after the Cavs dominated it early. Indiana controlled the pace and moved the ball well. The list goes on and on. Carlisle and Cavs head coach Kenny Atkinson both commented on the Pacers great shooting when speaking with reporters postgame, but the Pacers won thanks to more than just that. They did many things well down the stretch. Given the opportunity they had open up, it was critical that they had a strong close. “When we’re making shots like that, we’re tough to beat,” Haliburton said. With Garland out and threes dropping, the Pacers needed to come away with Game 1. They did, and they now have the Cavaliers looking for answers. Haliburton has never lost a home playoff game, and the Pacers will win this series if they go unbeaten at home. It’s now on Cleveland to find answers if they want to find their footing against an Indiana team that earned a 1-0 series lead. Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tonyeast/2025/05/06/indiana-pacers-get-a-win-they-had-to-have-to-open-series-vs-cavaliers/
You may also like

Sam Altman's Twenty-Four Hours: The Pentagon said "no" twice, but only one was serious
In Silicon Valley, Altman's sub-12-hour move has a name. It's not called backstabbing, it's called timing.

The US-Iran Conflict Spreads to the Crypto Space: What to Expect in the Market on Monday
The most important industry in the crypto world, only 300 kilometers away from the missile's impact point

Lily Liu, the chair of the Solana Foundation, shouted "Don't waste time on crypto," is the crypto industry really dead?
The interest of the younger generation is shifting from cryptocurrency to the field of artificial intelligence, which coincides with the current phenomenon in the cryptocurrency industry.

The little deer live by the water and grass
Mining companies have never been the most devout believers in Bitcoin. Under the pressures of halving compressing profits, financial reports showing revenue growth without profit increase, and coin prices falling below mining costs, the industry is collectively de-risking.

The world belongs to Chinese people who speak English
The world is vast, and only playing half of it is truly a loss.

Why Stop at 126K? Michael Saylor Breaks Down BTC Stagnation and Retail Absence Truth
Bitcoin is digital capital, and I will spend a thousand hours explaining it to you. Eventually, you will understand, but you will still have to endure a 45% crash.

Virtuals Protocol's inaugural Titan project: ROBO aims to give a wallet to a robot
This is a key step in Virtuals expanding the Agent Economy into the Embodied AI and Robotics field.

Stablecoin Latest Report: Actual Distribution and Circulation Much More Notable Than Supply
The Truth about Stablecoin Circulation Speed, Concentration, and Structure After Doubling the Supply

Paradigm's New Arithmetic: When Crypto Can't Hold 12.7 Billion, AI Becomes the Answer
It took Paradigm three years to emerge from the ruins of FTX.

Wintermute Founder: In the Lost Cryptocurrency Market, What Can We Still Do?
This is more like a manifesto, discussing "the very reason we are here."

$1.3 Billion Debt: BitDeer Faces Tough Battle
Wu Jihan is waiting for AI's money to catch up with the speed of debt.

Anthropic's IPO Gamble: At the Most Unlikely Moment, It Chose to Say No
In the AI Era, what is the most valuable thing?

Paradigm's Math Problem: $12.7 Billion, Too Big for a Single Crypto Fund
Emerging from the ruins of FTX, Paradigm took three years

Ethereum Unveils Scaling Roadmap, What's Different This Time?
Short-term improvements to execution efficiency through the Gas mechanism optimization and block validation parallelization, and long-term scalability through ZK-EVM and blobs data architecture.

Anthropic Ban Wave, OpenAI $100 Billion Funding Controversy: What Is the Overseas Crypto Community Talking About Today?
What Have Foreigners Been Most Interested in Over the Last 24 Hours?

Morning News | OpenAI receives $110 billion investment; Solana launches Solana Payments; M0, MoonPay, and PayPal jointly launch PYUSDx
Overview of Important Market Events on February 27

Bloomberg: A Romanian Presidential Election Intervened by Crypto Traders
The puzzle of the Romanian elections under digital manipulation.

Founders Fund, Pantera, and Franklin Templeton join Sentient's "Arena" to stress test enterprise-level AI agents
Sentient is gathering builders and supporters from around the world (including Founders Fund, Pantera, Franklin Templeton, alphaXiv, Fireworks, OpenRouter, etc.) to jointly address the reasoning capability gap in enterprise AI.
Sam Altman's Twenty-Four Hours: The Pentagon said "no" twice, but only one was serious
In Silicon Valley, Altman's sub-12-hour move has a name. It's not called backstabbing, it's called timing.
The US-Iran Conflict Spreads to the Crypto Space: What to Expect in the Market on Monday
The most important industry in the crypto world, only 300 kilometers away from the missile's impact point
Lily Liu, the chair of the Solana Foundation, shouted "Don't waste time on crypto," is the crypto industry really dead?
The interest of the younger generation is shifting from cryptocurrency to the field of artificial intelligence, which coincides with the current phenomenon in the cryptocurrency industry.
The little deer live by the water and grass
Mining companies have never been the most devout believers in Bitcoin. Under the pressures of halving compressing profits, financial reports showing revenue growth without profit increase, and coin prices falling below mining costs, the industry is collectively de-risking.
The world belongs to Chinese people who speak English
The world is vast, and only playing half of it is truly a loss.
Why Stop at 126K? Michael Saylor Breaks Down BTC Stagnation and Retail Absence Truth
Bitcoin is digital capital, and I will spend a thousand hours explaining it to you. Eventually, you will understand, but you will still have to endure a 45% crash.