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NBA Finals Game 4 box score, stats: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder tie series vs Pacers

NBA Finals Game 4 box score, stats: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder tie series vs Pacers

Yahoo6 days ago

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The Oklahoma City Thunder is headed home with an even series in the NBA Finals, fresh off winning the most important fourth quarter of its season.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder rallied for a 111-104 win against the Indiana Pacers in Game 4 Friday night at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.
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It'll be a best-of-three series for the NBA title.
Here's a look at the box score.
5 TAKEAWAYS: Thunder wills its way to Game 4 win vs Pacers, evens NBA Finals
More: Thunder vs Pacers score: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, OKC rally past Indiana to tie NBA Finals
NBA Finals Game 4: Oklahoma City Thunder vs Indiana Pacers box score, stats
NBA Finals schedule: Thunder vs. Pacers
All times are Central
This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: NBA Finals Game 4 stats: OKC Thunder vs Indiana Pacers box score

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Thunder players openly discuss how they feed off their raucous crowd, and this becomes most noticeable on defense — the Thunder's defensive rating is 12.7 points per 100 possessions better at home this postseason. 'You're ultimately in your complete comfort zone,' Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said of their home court advantage. 'The flow to the day doesn't change. You're in your own bed. You have shootaround at your building. You eat your pregame meal from your chef or your whoever. It's very comfortable, the whole flow to the day, and then the crowd is behind you. They give you energy, whether you're up or down or whatever is going on in the night. It's an advantage.' The energy the Thunder players get from their deafening crowd is real. 'The crowd. You know, they work in our favor,' Cason Wallace said. 'They're rowdy and they're into the game, and that gives us a boost and an edge.' The Pacers have been a strong road team this postseason, with a 7-4 record away from the Gainbridge Fieldhouse, and have generally played teams evenly (a minus-0.6 point differential). They have won one game on the road this series, they know what is coming and how to withstand it. 'Crowds give you a little bit more energy, a little bit more burst. We are going to be practically alone tomorrow,' T.J. McConnell said. 'This crowd here in Oklahoma City is amazing. It's going to be very loud. We have to be ready.' Haliburton's health Tyrese Haliburton's strained left calf wasn't much of an issue in Game 6. That doesn't mean it should be ignored in Game 7. There were a couple of moments early in Game 6 when he clearly hesitated to push off on his left leg, but it ultimately didn't matter because his shot was falling and the Thunder's defensive pressure was not cranked up to its usual intensity. 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