The Indiana Pacers are getting ready for Tyrese Haliburton’s potential absence for Recreation 6 of the NBA Finals on Thursday towards the Oklahoma Metropolis Thunder.
Head coach Rick Carlisle mentioned Haliburton’s standing for Recreation 6 intimately in a radio interview Wednesday morning.
“He’s going to be fastidiously evaluated over the subsequent 36 hours and can probably be listed as questionable on the harm report and doubtless a game-time determination for Recreation 6.”
Haliburton has been coping with a nagging decrease proper leg harm all through the collection. The ailment was exasperated in Recreation 5 when the 25-year-old guard tried to drive to the basket.
The harm occurred through the first half, placing Haliburton’s standing for the second in query. Haliburton performed by the calf pressure, logging 34 minutes, however didn’t make a field-goal try within the recreation.
It has been an up-and-down collection for Haliburton. He is averaging 15 factors, 7.2 assists and 6.2 rebounds whereas taking pictures 45.3% from the sphere and 29.4% from three. Modest numbers on the floor — aside from his manufacturing from past the arc — however Haliburton has too typically been invisible on the court docket, missing aggressiveness inside the offense.
Regardless of being passive and trying to get others concerned fairly than taking issues into his personal arms, Haliburton is the centerpiece of Indiana’s offensive id, and his affect is irreplaceable.
T.J. McConnell will take over as the place to begin guard if Haliburton is out for Recreation 6. McConnell has been distinctive on this collection together with scoring 18 factors off the bench in Recreation 5, sparking a comeback earlier than Oklahoma Metropolis ultimately pulled away within the fourth quarter.
With out Haliburton’s play-making means and creativity off the dribble, the Pacers’ half-court offense loses rhythm and construction.
If Haliburton just isn’t in a position to play on Thursday evening, the Thunder will probably be one step nearer to clinching the NBA Finals and hoisting the Larry O’Brien Trophy.
