OKC Thunder Keeping Pace in NBA Finals
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Welcome to the next episode of In Touch with Indiana Sports hosted by John Alden and powered by TheHoosier.com. Staff writer and Talkin’ Bout the Hoosiers co-host Drew Rosenberg joins the show once again to react to how the Indiana Pacers have looked through the first four games of the NBA Finals.
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If the Pacers end up losing this series to the Thunder, they are never going to forget Game 4 -- when a 3-1 lead was right there for the taking only for the Thunder to close on a 12-1 run to steal a 111-104 victory to send the Finals back to Oklahoma City tied, 2-2.
Despite leading for most of the game, the Indiana Pacers dropped Game 4 against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals in part because of Bennedict Mathuri
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Yardbarker on MSNFive takeaways from Game 4 of the NBA Finals: MVP moment for the MVPThe Indiana Pacers were 12 minutes away from taking a commanding 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals, but the Oklahoma City Thunder moved to 6-0 in the playoffs after a loss, winning 111-104 to even the series 2-2.
The Indiana Pacers missed out on a golden opportunity — or, depending on whom you talk to, were Scott Fostered out of a golden opportunity — to improve to a borderline-insurmountable 3-1 NBA ...
Pascal Siakam shares his thoughts on what went wrong for the Pacers as they fell short late against the Thunder.
INDIANAPOLIS — T.J. McConnell didn’t even need to dribble. When the Indiana Pacers guard came up with a loose ball in the fourth quarter of Friday’s Game 4 of the NBA Finals, he quickly fired it ahead to a streaking Obi Toppin. Indiana’s high-flying forward was all by himself as he received the pass and soared in for a right-handed tomahawk dunk.