INDIANAPOLIS — Kevin Porter Jr. scored 24 points and Ryan Rollins 23 to lead the Bucks to a 111-94 win over the Pacers on Tuesday night at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

The Pacers have lost six straight and fell to 6-24 with the most losses in the NBA. The Bucks improved to 12-18 after losing their previous three games.

Forward Kyle Kuzma added 15 points for the Bucks. forward Bobby Portis Jr. had 14 and former Pacers center Myles Turner had 10. Point guard T.J. McConnell led the Pacers with 16 points. Forward Pascal Siakam had 15, Andrew Nembhard scored 14 and Bennedict Mathurin had 13.

Here are three observations.

Pacers’ offensive woes continue

After one of their best offensive halves of the season against the Celtics, the Pacers immediately followed with their worst, scoring just 34 points in the second half in Boston to blow a 20-point lead in a 103-95 loss. They made just 12 of 44 second-half field goals, including 1 of 20 3-pointers. When they came back home on Tuesday, they hadn’t shaken themselves out of that funk at all.

The Pacers managed just 20 first-quarter points Tuesday on 7 of 20 shooting, including 1 of 8 from 3-point range. The second quarter was slightly better, but at the break they had 44 points on 16 of 40 shooting including 4 of 16 from 3. So their entire four-quarter output from halftime Monday until halftime Tuesday was 78 points on 28 of 84 shooting (33.3%) and 5 of 36 from 3-point range (13.9%).

The third quarter wasn’t much better as the Pacers scored 24 points on 8 of 21 shooting including 1 of 6 from 3-point range. They showed signs of life in the fourth and cut what had been a 20-point Bucks lead down to nine points, but they still finished with just 26 points for the period and 94 for the game. They finished 33 of 81 from the floor (40.7%) and 8 of 31 from 3-point range to go 9 of 51 over a six-quarter spread. They finished with 0.94 points per possession.

The Pacers now rank last in the league in scoring with 109.2 points per game, last in field goal percentage at .429, last in 3-point percentage at .321 and last in offensive efficiency at 107.4 points per 100 possessions. In their six-game losing streak, they’ve been held under 100 points three times and under 110 five times.

Myles Turner gets booed again, but scores 10

At least this time, Myles Turner had to see it coming. The former Pacers center who spent 10 years was the franchise was booed relentlessly in his return to Gainbridge Fieldhouse in early November after he signed with Milwaukee in free agency in the offseason. In that game, the Pacers organization greeted Turner with a welcome-back video detailing his decade with the franchise including his role in the Eastern Conference championship, but the fans still let him have it. Turner made a point of pantomiming the closing of a book when that happened and noted his displeasure afterward.

By Tuesday’s game, Turner seemed willing to play the heel and drank in some of the boos. he didn’t have a particularly great offensive game, but he was solid on defense. He scored 10 points on 4 of 14 shooting including 1 of 8 from 3-point range, but that was a useful contribution in a game when neither squad was particularly efficient on offense. More importantly, he blocked three shots and grabbed six rebounds.

T.J. McConnell Pacers’ closest thing to a bright spot

In the midst of what has been a miserable offensive season for the Pacers, T.J. McConnell has still maintained a remarkable level of efficiency.

After sitting out Monday’s game with a sore left knee, he scored 16 points on 7 of 9 shooting and posted six assists against two turnovers.

Dustin Dopirak covers the Pacers all season. Get more coverage on IndyStarTV and with the Pacers Insider newsletter.