logo
He wanted to live long enough to see Pacers win NBA title. He died day before Game 7 at 48

He wanted to live long enough to see Pacers win NBA title. He died day before Game 7 at 48

INDIANAPOLIS -- Former Indiana Pacers photographer Matt Dial, whose friends rallied around him as he battled Stage 4 colon cancer to get him one last night inside his beloved Gainbridge Fieldhouse, wanted to live long enough to see his team win its first NBA Finals.
Dial died early Saturday morning at Life Journey Hospice, just one day short of the Pacers' Game 7 at Oklahoma City on Sunday night. He is survived by his wife, Shelley, and two sons Noah and Aaron.
"At 2:54 am, Matty passed on from this life. I was humbled by the bravery of Aaron, who was there until the end. Pat and Gary (Dial's parents) were champions and provided so much support through all of their own pain," Shelley posted to Dial's Caring Bridge page. "I appreciate them so much. The end was so hard for us."
Shelley called Dial the best husband, father, son, partner and friend. "He is missed by all who knew him," she wrote, "especially me."
It was February 2023 when doctors finally discovered the reason Dial had been losing so much weight without trying, why he wasn't hungry. He had a cecal mass that had spread to his abdominal lymph nodes and his liver.
When Dial was first diagnosed, he started planning trips with his family to make memories. Not fancy trips. Better than that. Trips to Tennessee to see the mountains and one to Branson, Missouri, known as "the live entertainment capital of the world," because of all those shows and theaters.
But, in the past year, the pain from the cancer and everything that treatments had done to his body became, at times, unbearable.
In late May, Dial's friends and an army of people came together to give Dial a chance to make one last, beautiful Pacers memory with his family at Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals. Dial felt well enough to make the trip from his Zionsville home to Gainbridge for that historic, electric Game 6.
"He's not able to travel as much, and that's why this game was so important," said Noah. "Because I never thought I'd get that chance to go with him again."
Those who knew Dial called him a kind, wickedly smart, self-proclaimed technology nerd, lover of the Pacers and even moreso lover of his family and friends. They were all fiercely hoping that Dial lived long enough to see his Pacers win an NBA title.
"I was going to cry anyway (if they won it), but I would cry even more because, you know, he's been waiting for this. And he might not see another run," Dial's son Noah, 25, told IndyStar earlier this month. "When we get through this and we win the championship, it's going be a memory I'll always cherish."
There will be no funeral for Dial, at his request, Shelley wrote. Just a party to celebrate him.
"Thank you to all our friends and family who have stepped up so much in the last difficult weeks," Shelley wrote. "I love you."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Legacies on the line in NBA Finals Game 7: What's at stake for Thunder, Pacers
Legacies on the line in NBA Finals Game 7: What's at stake for Thunder, Pacers

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Legacies on the line in NBA Finals Game 7: What's at stake for Thunder, Pacers

All that's at stake is legacy. The victor of Game 7 of the NBA Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers will shape the narrative, the frame through which the winning team is remembered. If it's the Thunder... Shai Gilgeous-Alexander will go down as having an all-time great season. He will have notched a regular season Most Valuable Player award — and probable Finals MVP — and will have led Oklahoma City, which tied for the fifth-most victories in a regular season (68), to its first NBA championship since moving to the city and the franchise's first since 1979, when it was the Seattle SuperSonics. Jalen Williams will emerge as a legitimate star whose Game 5 heroics in a 40-point masterpiece lifted the Thunder. And Mark Daigneault, 40, will reinforce his position as one of the premier coaches in the NBA, leading the second-youngest team to win a Finals in NBA history — which implies OKC could be in position to repeat. If it's the Pacers... Point guard Tyrese Haliburton will obliterate the 'overrated' narrative that has unfairly followed him since The Athletic published a player poll that labeled him the most overrated player in the league. He will wrap an unprecedented run of clutch postseason play with a title. Pascal Siakam will become a two-time champion and see his profile raised further. Rick Carlisle will become just the fourth coach — joining Phil Jackson, Pat Riley and Alex Hannum — to win championships with two different teams. His status as an innovative and adaptable coach who entrusts his players will be unquestioned after leading the decided underdog Pacers to an NBA title, their first in franchise history. Game 7s in the Finals are special, with this marking just the 20th in history. Just the very nature of the games — the magnified stakes, the drama — can define legacies. 'Respect isn't something that we can just talk about and receive — it's an earned thing,' Haliburton said in a Saturday, June 21 news conference. 'No matter what happens, it's still probably not going to be where necessarily it 'should' be or what we think it should be. 'It doesn't really matter, though. I think from our standpoint — teams we compete against, they respect us. I think that's the most important thing. … We are in a great, great point right now in our organization's history and for our team specifically. You've got to be really excited about the chance to compete in one game to win a championship.' It becomes a very different story with a loss — for both squads. The Thunder suddenly will be framed as front-runners and Gilgeous-Alexander's greatness and efficiency will likely be overshadowed. Detractors will get louder with their 'foul merchant' critiques and almost certainly will say the Thunder got a favorable whistle and still couldn't do anything with it. Similarly, a defeat would likely only strengthen the barbs hurled at Haliburton. Indiana's up-tempo, free-flowing offense may be discounted as a gimmick and an operation — despite Indy's success this postseason — not suitable to win when it counts. Critics will likely say the Pacers still need a true star. The reality, however, is that it serves teams no use to consider narrative and legacy before a Game 7. While players and coaches certainly do reap future profits from championship runs, Game 7s are — in their most distilled terms — just another game. Forty-eight minutes for a team to top another. The glory cannot come without the actual victory. The secret to success, therefore, likely requires some willful ignorance, some intentional blocking out of the context of the game. 'You try to make it as binary as possible,' Thunder guard Alex Caruso, a champion with the 2020 Lakers, said Saturday. 'You're either going to win or lose. That is literally what's going to happen. The season is going to be over and you're going to be champion, or you're going to lose and start from square one. You might as well go out and put your best forward and compete your (butt) off and play hard for your teammates and try and win.'

Game 7 offers perfect coda to riveting 2025 NBA playoffs, all-time classic NBA Finals
Game 7 offers perfect coda to riveting 2025 NBA playoffs, all-time classic NBA Finals

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Game 7 offers perfect coda to riveting 2025 NBA playoffs, all-time classic NBA Finals

OKLAHOMA CITY — Nobody wants to know the ending of a story before it begins. When you really crystallize the question of why the NBA playoffs have been so great, with two months of high-level hoops drama that will crescendo with Sunday's Game 7 between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers on Sunday night, it's because that truth has been honored in a way that has made the whole experience wildly entertaining. Ratings be damned (more on that later). Advertisement The finale alone is enough to deem this postseason special, as it's the first Finals Game 7 since the Cleveland Cavaliers' historic upset of the Golden State Warriors in 2016, the fifth since 1994 and the 20th in the league's 79-year history. Add in the fact that this Game 7 pits this historically dominant Thunder team against a relentless Pacers squad that no one outside of their locker room thought would be here, and the element-of-surprise theme that has been there since the beginning will officially carry through until the end. Now, if you take a broader look at this postseason, reflecting on the 15 series that unfolded from the first round through the end, you'll come to this informal conclusion: Seven were of the up-for-grabs variety, ending in six or seven games, and we never had to suffer through a round that was void of suspense (there was at least one up-for-grabs series in all four rounds). There were four seven-game series in all, one shy of the league record of five (which happened in 1994, 2014 and 2016). All of which is to say that the good times rolled all the way through. Who can forget that '80s-style matchup between Golden State and the Houston Rockets in the first round, when the Steph Curry-Jimmy Butler-Draymond Green Warriors survived the Rockets' physicality and brashness of youth by winning Game 7 on their Toyota Center floor? Or the New York Knicks' magical run that had the Garden popping until, well, the Pacers came along and burst their bubble in the East finals? The Cavs — that East-leading team that won 64 games in the regular season but fell to Indiana in just five games in the East semifinals — knew that painful feeling well. There was the magnificent Nikola Jokić and his 'We Believe' Denver Nuggets, fresh off the stunning firing of general manager Calvin Booth and coach Michael Malone with just three games left in the regular season, coming back from a 2-1 series deficit to down the Los Angeles Clippers in the first round, only to fall to the Thunder in seven games. (In retrospect, Denver can feel pretty good about its current place in the league's hierarchy.) Anthony Edwards and his Minnesota Timberwolves made franchise history by getting to the West finals for the second consecutive season — taking out the LeBron James-Luka Dončić Los Angeles Lakers and the Warriors along the way — but were simply outclassed by Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his rolling Thunder. Advertisement Between the blend of old and young star power, the return of gritty, defense-first basketball that has been a focal point of the NBA's in these past few seasons and the absurd number of (mostly Tyrese Haliburton) game winners, a level of quality and excellence was on display that should make the league's new media rights partners ecstatic about the product it paid such a pretty penny for last summer. Even if it takes a while for the 'casuals' to catch up. As you've likely heard by now, national television network ratings were down 2 percent in the regular season. It will be interesting to see where the postseason ratings land — there was an early spike followed by a dip in the conference finals — but this Game 7 alone is likely to give the league a big-time bump. But the luxury of the league being on the front end of its 11-year, $75 billion deal with NBC, ESPN and Amazon is that there's no better time to grow the game holistically than right now. With the LeBron and Steph era nearing its end and players such as SGA, Haliburton, Edwards and others making their playoff mark, these are the kind of getting-to-know-you playoffs that should pay off in the form of increased profiles for the younger superstars and, in turn, more connectivity with the fans who come to appreciate their games. The league should lean into this parity era, with Sunday's winner marking the seventh consecutive season in which a new champion has been crowned. This finals matchup is a perfect promotional ending, with this 68-win Thunder squad showing dominance is still possible in the second-apron era and the plucky Pacers (who started the season 10-15 before finishing 50-32) reminding the masses underdog tales are still in play, too. It's the best of both worlds in that regard. As NBA commissioner Adam Silver discussed with reporters before Game 1, and as USA Today's Jeff Zillgitt detailed recently in this on-point column, the days of ratings being the be-all and end-all measure of business success are no more. Advertisement 'The whole way media works and television works has changed so dramatically,' Silver said. 'Just by way of example, all of us of a certain age know it used to be the case that new programs launched in the fall. There were never new programs in the summer. Nobody thinks that way anymore. New programs are launching all the time on Netflix, Amazon Prime, Peacock, whatever service you use. We don't think that way. 'Ratings have changed from what they used to be. Netflix is the most valuable pure play media company out there. Nobody in this room knows what their ratings are. We don't even think in terms of ratings. We think maybe in terms of popularity, buzz around a program. We're going through a transition, and we're going to work through that.' To that point, the Netflix folks are positively ecstatic about how their second season of 'Starting 5' is shaping up. As luck would have it, two of the five stars it decided to profile behind the scenes were Gilgeous-Alexander and Haliburton. And no matter what happens next, it's guaranteed to have a riveting finale episode. Much like the playoffs themselves.

Washington Commanders star spotted at NBA Finals Game 6
Washington Commanders star spotted at NBA Finals Game 6

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Washington Commanders star spotted at NBA Finals Game 6

The Commanders were represented at the NBA Finals on Thursday. The NBA Championship series game six was being played in Indianapolis, as the Indiana Pacers, down three games to two, were hosting the Oklahoma City Thunder in a must-win game for the Pacers. The Pacers broke open a tight game early in the second quarter and never looked back, defeating OKC by 17 points (108-91). In attendance was Washington Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin. Most Commanders fans probably recall McLaurin being drafted in the third round of the 2019 NFL draft, having played his college ball at Ohio State. Not as readily known (and understandably so) is that McLaurin was actually born in Indianapolis. Most recently, McLaurin made the news because he did not attend OTAs or the mandatory minicamp. He is negotiating a new deal. Under contract through the 2025 season, McLaurin has made no indication that he might not show up for the beginning of training camp. Two weeks ago, there was a report that McLaurin was frustrated with the Commanders. However, seeing that McLaurin never broadcast his feelings on the matter via social media or the press, there was reason to believe that perhaps his agent was the source of the "report." As of Saturday (June 21), no public details of the contract were known. We do not know if the sticking point is years of the contract, guaranteed money, or perhaps money upfront that is preventing the deal from being consummated. We simply don't know anything that would help us understand why the two parties have not yet come to an agreement. McLaurin played his high school football at Cathedral High in Indianapolis, so it's understandable that Terry is definitely pulling for the Pacers in the NBA Finals. Mark Clayton, a big-time receiver in the NFL for the Miami Dolphins and Green Bay Packers (1983-93), also played his high school ball at Cathedral. In all, ten Cathedral players, have played in the NFL, with Clayton and McLaurin being the most recognizable of the group.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store