This time, Indiana’s rally fell short.
The Indiana Pacers cut an 18-point first-half deficit to two points in the fourth quarter Monday night. But the Oklahoma City Thunder did not relent and held on for a 120-109 win in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
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With the win, the Thunder take a 3-2 series lead and stand one win away from securing the franchise’s first NBA championship since it moved to Oklahoma City. They have Jalen Williams largely to thank for the win.
The third-year forward exploded for a playoff career-high 40 points alongside six rebounds, four assists and a steal to lead Oklahoma City to another gritty Finals win. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander joined him with a big night of his own while pouring in 31 points, 10 assists and four blocks.
It was the third straight game in which Williams has scored 26 points. His buckets were big Monday night and repeatedly thwarted Pacers efforts to take control of the game.
None were bigger than a 3-pointer with 8:06 remaining in the the fourth quarter. A Pascal Siakam 3 on the other end had just cut Oklahoma City’s lead to 95-93 and resurrected memories of the Thunder’s Game 1 collapse that allowed the Pacers to take a stunning 1-0 series lead.
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Williams attacked the bucket in response and missed a tough layup in traffic. But Cason Wallace secured the offensive rebound, and the ball made its way back to Williams on the right wing. This time he didn’t miss.
Williams drilled a 3 to extend Oklahoma City’s lead back to five points, and a Cason Wallace steal and layup pushed it to 100-97, forcing an Indiana timeout.
From there, the Pacers never threatened again on a night where star guard Tyrese Haliburton was a non-factor while playing on an injured right calf.
Tyrese Haliburton doesn’t hit a field goal
Tyrese Haliburton struggled through a first quarter in which he missed the only two shots that he attempted. He left briefly for the locker room after a scoreless first quarter and returned with a wrap around his right calf.
ESPN’s Shams Charania reported at halftime that Haliburton was dealing with calf tightness.
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Haliburton continued to play and appeared to move well despite the injury after returning. But he was not on his game. He finished first half scoreless after missing all five of his field goals. He didn’t score his first points until a pair of free throws with 7:07 remaining in the third quarter.
Haliburton finished with four points, seen rebounds and six assists. He finished 0 for 6 from the field and took just one attempt after halftime. His status moving forward will be a significant storyline as the series shifts to Indiana for Game 6 and the Pacers try to extend the Finals to a Game 7.
T.J. McConnell, Pascal Siakam try to rally Pacers
With Haliburton struggling, it was T.J. McConnell who led Indiana’s rally effort in the third quarter. The backup guard who’s provided repeated sparks for the Pacers throughout the lit another in the third quarter as Indiana cut Oklahoma City’s 14-point halftime advantage to 85-79 late in the quarter.
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McConnell scored 13 of Indiana’s 34 third-quarter points and assisted on five more to put pressure squarely back on a Thunder team that dominated the first half. A Paycom Center crowd that watched the Thunder blow a 15-point fourth-quarter lead in a Game 1 loss was on edge.
Williams provided some relief before the start of the fourth. With 3.4 seconds left in the third, Williams fought through contact from Andrew Nembhard and hit a tough, contested floater off the glass to send the Thunder into the fourth quarter with an 87-79 advantage.
The bucket didn’t end the Pacers rally, but it did put it on pause.
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The start of the fourth quarter then belonged to Siakam, who scored 12 of Indiana’s first 14 points of the stanza to cut OKC’s lead to two points. But the Thunder never allowed the Pacers to take the lead after halftime and finished the game on a flurry to thwart any hope of another Indiana miracle.
McConnell finished with 18 points, four rebounds, four assists and two steals in another big game off the Indiana bench. Siakam led the Pacers with 28 points, six rebounds, five assists, three steals and two blocks. But it was his six turnovers that better told the story of the game.
OKC rides defense, 3-point shooting to victory
Like in Game 1, Oklahoma City opened an early advantage with a swarming defense. This time, the Thunder for seven first-quarter turnovers that it converted into a 32-22 first-quarter lead that it extended to 59-45 at halftime.
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Unlike Game 1’s loss, Oklahoma City converted those turnovers into points. In the end the Thunder scored 32 points off 23 Pacers turnovers. The Thunder offense limited their own turnovers to 11 that resulted in just nine Pacers points.
The Thunder took care of the ball while assisting on 24 of their 40 made field goals. The result in part was an efficient night on open looks from 3 in which Oklahoma City shot 14 of 32 (43.8%) from beyond the arc.