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Thirteen-year-old spelling phenom Faizan Zaki won the Scripps Spelling Bee after coming in second last year. His winning word was “éclaircissement.” I’ll admit I don’t know what that word means, but I assume it has something to do with when George Costanza got caught eating one out of the trash.
Knicks Survive For Now
Easy part of potential comeback is now done
While the odds are greatly in the favor of the Pacers to close out this series after going up 3-1, the odds were heavily in the Knicks’ favor to take Game 5 at Madison Square Garden. I saw a stat from Raheem Palmer of The Ringer yesterday that home teams down 3-1 are 32-12 in Game 5s. We can update that to 33-12 after the Knicks dismantled the Pacers 111-94. It’s not a surprise that the Knicks won this game to force a Game 6 Saturday night in Indianapolis.
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The surprise is how dominant the Knicks were, considering the Pacers’ play so far in the postseason. Indiana had two blowout losses in the previous two rounds: A 16-point loss to Milwaukee in the first round that was fueled by a 70-44 second half by the Bucks. And a 22-point loss to the Cavaliers, thanks to a 34-13 second quarter to take control of the game. Their only other loss was actually Game 3 at home when the Knicks came back to avoid going down 3-0.
They didn’t get dominated, though, like the Knicks did to them last night. Indiana didn’t lead for a single second of that game. The Knicks outscored them 60-34 in the paint. Karl-Anthony Towns had 24 points and 13 rebounds. Jalen Brunson led the way with 32 points, five rebounds and five assists. But most importantly, the Knicks completely shut down a Pacers offense that has been hounding their defense by pushing the ball into the paint.
All series long, the Knicks have been hovering around a 1:1 assist-to-turnover ratio against this Pacers team. They just haven’t moved the ball, and they’ve been a little too sloppy with the rock. They flipped that on Indiana in Game 5. They actually forced 20 turnovers by an Indiana team that was fourth in the NBA in turnover rate, and allowed just 20 assists. It was the ninth game of the season the Pacers turned it over 20 or more times, and the first time they did it in the postseason. They’re now 3-6 in those games.
A few questions pop up for the Knicks in this scenario moving forward:
1) Were the Pacers overmatched?
One option credits the Knicks and one option kind of dismisses the dominance they showed in Game 5. I’m not going to allow myself the copout of saying that this is somewhere in the middle, so I’m going to say the Knicks overmatched them. It’s possible the Pacers kind of packed it in effort-wise in this game and decided to rest to fight another day – that day specifically being Saturday for Game 6. However, that’s not how they played in trying to make runs in this game. This wasn’t like how OKC got dominated in Game 3 in Minneapolis or how Minnesota got dominated in Game 5 in Oklahoma City.
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After the Knicks got the lead to 20 in the third quarter, the Pacers cut it to 10 with a spirited run thanks to Bennedict Mathurin and Obi Toppin. But the Knicks responded with a 10-0 run to get it back to 20 with a quickness. Indiana wouldn’t cut it below 12 in the fourth. The Pacers just couldn’t solve the Knicks at all last night.
2) Did they figure out how to slow down Haliburton?
This is oddly similar to the game we saw from Haliburton in the 22-point loss to Cleveland in Game 3 of the second round. He had four points on eight shots, zero free-throw attempts, five assists and three turnovers in 30 minutes in that loss. Against the Knicks last night, his game was painfully apathetic to what the Pacers normally need from him.
Haliburton followed his historic Game 4 performance by putting up an absolute dud. Just eight points on seven shots, 4-of-5 from the free-throw line, six assists and zero turnovers in 32 minutes of action. The Pacers were terrible with him on the court. That’s not what we’re used to seeing from him. I would imagine Game 6 at home will have a different, more familiar side of his game, but the Knicks need to replicate that the best they can.
3) How likely is a Game 7?
This is the tricky part. Thirteen times in NBA history, a team has forced a Game 7 and completed the comeback. As we noted a couple of days ago, only four of those have come in the conference finals or later. Two of those happened in the same year, so it’s pretty rare. Nineteen other times, a team has forced a Game 7, only to lose that Game 7. We’re not counting teams that were down 3-0 in a series and came back to force a Game 7.
They’ve already beaten the odds of getting to a Game 6. Of the 297 series with a 3-1 lead, 179 of them ended in five games (60.2 percent). But 82 of those 297 (27.6 percent) do end in six games. So, things are still looking murky for the Knicks Saturday night.
We’ll get deeper into the Game 7 history for 3-1 series below.
The Last 24
How Wolves tweak their roster?
🏀 Now what? Jon Krawczynski outlines a very complicated summer for Minnesota. Tough decisions await. Will Julius Randle be back?
🏀 Get used to them. Sam Amick says these finals-bound Thunder are here to stay. “These guys are uncommon.”
🏀 Some advice. Caitlin Clark is out for a couple weeks, and the Fever can’t spiral. This is what they need to do.
🏀 Plan B for Duke. Cedric Coward decided to stay in the draft instead of transfer to Duke. Here’s how they pivoted and hurt Kansas in the process.
🎧 Tuning in. Today’s “NBA Daily” warns the Pacers about getting too comfortable against the Knicks.
3-1 to Game 7
About Knicks’ quest to return series to MSG
As you saw above, history is not really on the side of the Knicks for reaching a Game 7. But it’s not impossible. We’ve seen 10.7 percent of teams down 3-1 force a Game 7. We had one during this postseason, if you recall, when the Rockets forced a Game 7 against the Warriors before getting ousted. So, it’s not just something that happened long ago in a pre-merger NBA far, far away.
Seven of the 19 teams who forced a Game 7 but failed to win the series were the home team in those scenarios, including the Rockets this year.
- 1973 East finals: Celtics lost Game 7 at home to the Knicks. First Game 7 loss in Celtics history. The Knicks went on to win the championship.
- 1981 West semis: Kansas City Kings defeated the No. 1 seed Suns.
- 1982 East finals: Celtics lost Game 7 to the 76ers. Andrew Toney, The Boston Strangler, dropped 34 on the Celtics.
- 2006 West semis: Spurs lost to the Mavericks. Before Nico Harrison traded everybody away. The Mavs won Game 7 in overtime.
- 2012 first round: Grizzlies lost to the Clippers. The Grizz scored 72 points.
- 2013 first round: Nets lost to the Bulls. Would you believe a Deron Williams-Brook Lopez duo lost a duel to a Marco Belinelli-Joakim Noah pairing?
We haven’t seen a team come back from down 3-1 to win the series since the Nuggets did it in back-to-back rounds in the bubble in 2020. Of the 13 teams to pull it off, eight of them had homecourt advantage in Game 7. That’s encouraging for the Knicks if they’re going to get this done.
- 1970 West semis: Lakers took down the Suns and eventually reached the Finals, where they lost to the Knicks in seven.
- 1979 East finals: Washington Bullets over the Spurs. They reached the NBA Finals but lost to Seattle.
- 1981 East finals: Celtics took down the 76ers with the final three games decided by five points.
- 1997 East semis: Heat beat the Knicks, thanks to suspensions from a Game 5 fight that led to games missed in 6 and 7.
- 2003 first round: The Pistons took down Tracy McGrady and the Magic. This was the start of six straight conference finals for Detroit.
- 2006 first round: The Suns got revenge on the Lakers for that 1970 series.
- 2015 West semis: The Clippers dropped it to the Rockets, and Doc Rivers became the first coach to blow multiple 3-1 series leads.
- 2016 West finals: The 73-win Warriors beat the Thunder, and eventually Kevin Durant left them for Steph Curry’s squad.
We’d love a Game 7 regardless of who wins it, so the

The story of the greatest players in NBA history. In 100 riveting profiles, top basketball writers justify their selections and uncover the history of the NBA in the process.
The story of the greatest players in NBA history.
Remember the Time
This LeBron anniversary will make you feel old
On Saturday, we’re getting the 18-year anniversary of the first time LeBron James really put himself on the map in a way that scared opponents, both present and future, around the NBA. This was back when he was leading a Cavaliers team with Daniel “Boobie” Gibson (13.5 points) and Zyndrunas Ilgauskas (12.8) as his second- and third-leading scorers. Gibson didn’t even start in the Eastern Conference finals.
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After the Cavs tied up the series at 2-2 with two home victories, they headed to MoTown to face a brilliant Pistons squad. Then, with 2:23 left and the Pistons holding an 88-84 lead in regulation, nobody knew what was about to hit Detroit – in a way not even Stephen Jackson and Ron Artest could replicate.
LeBron went on a transcendent run the rest of the game, scoring the final 25 points of the game for the Cavs over a nearly 14.5-minute stretch spanning two overtime periods and the rest of the fourth quarter. His scoring was vicious:
- Final 2:18 of the fourth: A 3-pointer and two dunks.
- First overtime period: Five free throws, a long 2-pointer and a dunk.
- Second overtime period: Two 2-point jumpers, 3-pointer and game-winning layup.
Five of his scores took the lead, and the other five tied the game in this stretch. He finished with 48 points on 18-of-33 shooting in 50 minutes. He was 22 years old. He’d close out the Pistons next game and make his first NBA Finals. It’s worth watching again.
( Photo: Brad Penner / USA Today Network via Imagn Images )
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