

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.
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Kenrich Williams was the culprit of the Pacers’ easiest bucket of the night. The Oklahoma City Thunder forward ran down the court with his palms up and a puzzled look spread across his face while Toppin brought the home crowd to its feet. Williams had just thrown what was supposed to be an easy inbounds pass to teammate Alex Caruso for a layup, but he put too much force on the ball, leading to McConnell’s steal and Toppin’s jam.
That sequence gave the Pacers a seven-point lead with 10:56 to play. It was also their only assist during a fourth-quarter collapse that saw Oklahoma City come back for a stunning 111-104 victory that knotted the finals 2-2.
“We just got too stagnant,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. “The ball was not being advanced quickly enough. We weren’t creating problems, and we were up against the clock a lot. So things got very difficult, but you gotta give Oklahoma (City) credit. They made it very difficult.”
Indiana committed only three turnovers in the fourth quarter, one fewer than Oklahoma City, but could not capitalize. The Pacers were outscored 31-17 in the final frame as their typically high-octane offense morphed into the motionless hero ball they’ve so rarely played in recent years. Indiana’s one assist in the fourth quarter tied for its lowest mark in any game this season.
Tyrese Haliburton was the only Pacer to make more than one shot in the fourth quarter, going 3-of-7 from the field for eight of his 18 points. But as the point guard, he still pointed the finger squarely at himself for not getting his team in rhythm.
“I gotta do a better job of keeping pace in the game,” Haliburton said. “I thought I did a much better job of that last game, especially down the stretch. Keeping pace, getting rebounds and really pushing (the ball).”
Indiana shot just 5 of 18 in the fourth quarter and missed all eight of its 3-point attempts, two by Haliburton. With the Pacers leading by two points with just under four minutes to play, Haliburton uncharacteristically went one-on-one against Shai Gilgeous-Alexander early in the shot clock. Haliburton hit the league MVP with a series of crossover moves before trying to shoot a step-back 3, only for Gilgeous-Alexander to close the distance and block his shot. Fortunately for Indiana, Aaron Nesmith caught the rebound and was fouled, leading to two made free throws.
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But later in the period, when Haliburton once again called his own number and revisited his step-back 3-pointer against Thunder center Chet Holmgren, he wasn’t as lucky. This time, with the Pacers trailing 105-103 with just under two minutes left, the star guard air-balled a 27-footer that went off teammate Pascal Siakam and out of bounds. Indiana missed its next three shot attempts and only scored one point the rest of the night.
“They went more to that small four-guard lineup that got us stagnant there, but I still think there’s a lot of areas for us to get better,” said Haliburton, who had a game-high seven assists but none in the final frame. “Felt like we got some good looks, just missed some good looks.”
Fellow point guard Andrew Nembhard didn’t offer much insight as to why the Pacers’ fourth-quarter offense was stuck in mud. The third-year pro, who shot 1-of-4 from the field for two points in the last period, said his team just “kind of stopped” what was working when it produced 20 assists through the first three quarters.
Added Toppin: “I don’t really know.”
But one thing all of them do know is that a 3-1 series lead was one quarter away and they blew it. How the Pacers handle the rest of these finals will determine how long this haunts them. It could be for only a few days if they still deliver the franchise’s first NBA title. Or it could be for a lifetime if the Thunder are the first to four.
(Photo: Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)
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