It wasn’t pretty, but it was enough. The Indiana Pacers overcame a seven-point deficit with 40 seconds remaining in overtime Tuesday to defeat the Milwaukee Bucks, 119-118, winning the series 4-1 and advancing to the second round of the NBA playoffs.
The win was supplied by, naturally, Tyrese Haliburton, who put the Pacers ahead with 1.3 seconds on the clock.
It took an epic comeback and an epic collapse to get there. The Pacers were down by as many as 20 points in regulation before their unlikely rally with 40 seconds left in overtime, when everything seemingly went right. Andrew Nembhard made a 3-pointer and Gary Trent Jr., who had shot the Bucks to that advantage, committed a galling turnover.
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That left Haliburton with the opportunity to be the hero.
Before the turnover, Trent was looking like the man of the moment. He missed seven straight 3-pointers to start the game, then made eight of his last nine, including four in overtime to silence a Pacers crowd that ended up having a little more noise in it at the end.
The Bucks were playing without Damian Lillard after the All-NBA guard tore his Achilles in Game 4. Trent helped fill the gap with 33 points, while Giannis Antetokounmpo, with his responsibilities even larger, supplied a triple-double with 30 points, 20 rebounds and 13 assists.
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Haliburton had 26 points on 10-of-22 shooting with nine assists and five rebounds.
The fourth quarter saw sizable swings for both teams. The Pacers had a lead, then back-to-back 3-pointers from Trent and A.J. Green, plus an Antetokounmpo and-1, put the Bucks up four with less than a minute left.
Haliburton took over from there, drawing a foul and making two free throws, then landing the game-tying dunk with 10.8 seconds left. Antetokounmpo then missed a would-be game-winner as time expired in regulation.
The performance clearly meant a lot to Haliburton. After the game, he tweeted “Overrate THAT,” in reference to a recent NBA player poll in which he was the most common answer for the most overrated player in the league.
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The Pacers will advance to face the Cleveland Cavaliers, who swept the Miami Heat in overwhelming fashion on Monday.
There appeared to be some hard feelings after the game, as Antetokounmpo got forehead-to-forehead with Haliburton’s father and then was involved in a wider scrum on the court.
The incidents loomed large over the postgame interviews, with Haliburton conceding his father was father wasn’t in the right for confronting Antetokounmpo.
Despite his team’s season ending, Antetokounmpo spoke eloquently about the confrontation:
“I believe in being humble in victory. That’s the way I am. Now, there can be a lot of people out there that can say, ‘No. When you win, you gotta talk s***. It’s a green light for you to be disrespectful towards somebody else.’ I disagree. I have won a championship. They haven’t. That doesn’t say anything.
“I’m not trying to minimize their effort, but I remember when I won, my mom, she’s never missed a game from February 11th or 13th when she came in Milwaukee against the Knicks, she’s never missed a game. When we won a championship, I remember my mom was scared to cross. She was like, ‘Am I allowed to come and hug my son?’ Except now my brother does media for this year. He wants to come back and play, but like, except Thanasis, you’ve never seen my family sit in a courtside seat. This is not something that we do. We don’t.
“I try to keep my family away from the game, but losing a game, emotions run high, having a fan, which at the moment, I thought he was a fan but then I realized, it was Tyrese’s dad. I love Tyrese. He’s a great competitor — coming in the floor and showing me his son’s towel with his face and saying, ‘This is what we do. This is what we f’ing do. This is what the F we do.’ I feel like that’s very, very disrespectful.”
If the Bucks had a hangover from the Lillard news, they didn’t show it at the start of the game. Playing in front of a hostile Indiana crowed, Milwaukee opened the game on a 13-0 run and finished the first quarter leading 30-13.
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Haliburton was scoreless, while Antetokounmpo had seven points, two rebounds and two assists in eight minutes.
It’s hard to keep a team with an offense like the Pacers’ down, though. A lead that peaked at 20 points dwindled to six at halftime and was fully erased early in the third quarter. Milwaukee can at least boast it was nowhere close to this playoffs’ most mortifying 20-point blown lead after losing a star point guard.
It really can’t be emphasized enough how bad it’s looking for the Bucks after losing Lillard.
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The team’s entire long-term plan, to both win and keep Antetokounmpo happy, was built around pairing Lillard with the Greek Freak. The duo never delivered on the potential of combining two All-NBA talents, but this is an entirely different franchise when it can’t count on Lillard to play next year.
At 34 years old — 35 by the time the next season starts — Lillard isn’t guaranteed to be the same again. What will stay in place though is his $54.1 million cap hit for next season, plus a $58.1 million player option for 2026-27, which he appears likely to take.
It’s laudable the Bucks played a competitive game after taking that blow and already being down 3-1, but they now have an uncomfortable offseason ahead of them as they try to figure out a path back to contending in the East, with the possibility of it all falling apart should Antetokounmpo decide he wants out.