logo
Inside the numbers: Pacers, Thunder set to play Game 7 for NBA title on Sunday night

Inside the numbers: Pacers, Thunder set to play Game 7 for NBA title on Sunday night

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — For the 20th time, there will be a Game 7 in the NBA Finals.
Indiana will play at Oklahoma City on Sunday night in the final game of the season, with the winner getting the Larry O'Brien Trophy.
Home teams are 15-4 in Game 7 of the finals, but a road team — Cleveland, over Golden State — won the most recent of those games in 2016.
A look inside some numbers surrounding this matchup:
Odds are, nobody's scoring 40
There have been only two 40-point scoring performances in Game 7 of the NBA Finals — and both came in losing efforts.
Jerry West scored 42 points in Game 7 of the 1969 series, but the Los Angeles Lakers lost to the Boston Celtics in Bill Russell's final game. And Elgin Baylor scored 41 points in Game 7 in 1962 — another Lakers-Celtics matchup — but Boston prevailed in that one as well.
Bob Pettit had the third-highest scoring total in a Game 7. He had 39 for the St. Louis Hawks against the Celtics in 1957 ... and Boston won that game as well.
The highest-scoring Game 7s in a winning effort? Those would be by Boston's Tom Heinsohn in that 1957 game against St. Louis and Miami's LeBron James in the 2013 series against San Antonio.
Both had 37; Heinsohn's was a double-overtime game, James got his in regulation.
And no team might break 100, either
Yes, these are high-scoring teams. Oklahoma City was No. 4 in points per game in the regular season (120.5 per game) and Indiana was No. 7 (117.4). The Thunder are second in that category in the playoffs (115.2), just ahead of No. 3 Indiana (115.1).
In Game 7, that might not matter much.
No team has reached 100 points in Game 7 of the NBA Finals since 1988. Or even topped 95 points, for that matter.
The last five Game 7s:
— 2016, Cleveland 93, Golden State 89
— 2013, Miami 95, San Antonio 88
— 2010, Los Angeles Lakers 83, Boston 79
— 2005, San Antonio 81, Detroit 74
— 1994, Houston 90, New York 84
The last finals Game 7 to see someone hit the century mark was when the Lakers beat the Pistons 108-105 in 1988.
Expect a close one
The average margin of victory in Game 7 of an NBA Finals: 6.9 points.
Each of the last eight such games have been decided by single digits. Only four have been double-digit wins: Boston over St. Louis by 19 in 1960, Minneapolis over New York by 17 in 1952, Boston over Milwaukee by 15 in 1974 and New York over the Los Angeles Lakers by 14 in 1970.
The closest Game 7 in the finals was Syracuse beating Fort Wayne 92-91 in 1955. That was one of six finals Game 7s decided by three points or less.
By seed
The Thunder are the 22nd No. 1 seed to play in Game 7 of an NBA Finals. Their 21 predecessors on that list are 12-9 in the ultimate game; seven of those games have been ones where both teams entered the playoffs as No. 1 seeds.
The Pacers are the fourth No. 4 seed to make Game 7 of the title round. Their three predecessors went 1-2 (Boston beat the Lakers in 1969, Seattle lost to Washington in 1978 and the Celtics lost to the Lakers in 2010).
Game 7 experience
It'll be the fourth Game 7 for Indiana forwards Pascal Siakam and Myles Turner. Siakam's teams have gone 2-1 in Game 7s, Turner's have gone 1-2.
Indiana's Aaron Nesmith is 2-0 in the pair of Game 7s in which he has played, with Indiana winning at New York last year and Boston beating Milwaukee in 2022. Both of those wins were in the Eastern Conference semifinals.
Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the league's reigning MVP, has averaged 27 points in two previous Game 7s. Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton scored 26 points in his lone Game 7 to this point.
No player on either side has previously been part of a Game 7 in the NBA Finals.
New for some refs, too
The NBA doesn't announce referee assignments until game day, so it won't be known until Sunday morning who the three-person crew is for Game 7.
This much is certain: for at least two of the referees, it'll be the first time on the Game 7 finals stage.
Scott Foster — who would seem a likely pick this year — worked Game 7 of the finals in 2013 alongside Dan Crawford and Monty McCutchen, and Game 7 of the title series in 2010 with Dan Crawford and Joe Crawford.
The most recent Game 7 of the finals was in 2016 and the crew for that game was Dan Crawford, McCutchen and Mike Callahan.
Outside of Foster, no referee in this year's pool has been on the floor for a Game 7 in the NBA Finals.
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Blueprint for defending Caitlin Clark may have been established by Valkyries, coach Natalie Nakase
Blueprint for defending Caitlin Clark may have been established by Valkyries, coach Natalie Nakase

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Blueprint for defending Caitlin Clark may have been established by Valkyries, coach Natalie Nakase

The Indiana Fever (6-6) get back on the court for a matchup with the Las Vegas Aces on Sunday following an 88-77 loss to the Golden State Valkyries (6-6) on Thursday in San Francisco. Golden State held Caitlin Clark to 11 points on 3-of-14-shooting — including 0-for-5 on 3-pointers, which is only the second time in her early WNBA career that she hasn't a shot from behind the arc. The Fever star had two points at halftime, checked tightly by Tiffany Hayes with Kayla Thornton and Veronica Burton also taking turns defending her. Advertisement Thursday's game matched the lowest point total by Clark this season, which came against the Atlanta Dream on May 22. Perhaps not coincidentally, that was the only other game in which Clark hadn't hit a 3-pointer. However, the 11-point effort was not the lowest-scoring performance by Clark during her WNBA career. Last season, she scored three points in a 104-68 loss to the New York Liberty. But during her rookie campaign, Clark didn't reach double figures in only five of her 40 games. Struggling against the eventual WNBA champions perhaps shouldn't be a surprise. But the Valkyries are an expansion team, so holding Clark to 11 points seems notable. Following the game, Hayes and her teammates credited head coach Natalie Nakase for coming up with the effective game plan against Clark. 'Coach gave us a great gameplan,' Hayes told the San Francisco Chronicle's Marisa Ingemi. 'We knew we had to stay up on her. We knew she's a three-level scorer. I think it was a great team defensive game today, everybody was locked in making sure she didn't get any easy looks.' Advertisement Nakase is in her first year as a head coach after three years as an assistant with the Aces and three years with the Los Angeles Clippers and their G League affiliate. She explained some of the defensive scheme against Clark before and after the game, saying that defenders had to pick Clark up higher on the court since she can knock down 3s from the logo. "She shoots from a logo you can't pick her up at a logo just because, that's a super comfortable shot," Nakase said, via ClutchPoints' Kenzo Fukuda. "It's almost like a layup to her. Need to get her going to her left.' More importantly was to not let Clark get into any sort of rhythm. "We were being disruptive, we know she doesn't like physicality," Nakase said after the game. "And we know she wants to get back to that left stepback. I watched her at Iowa; she loves that left step-back. "So again," she added, "just making sure that she wasn't getting into a rhythm and making sure she was seeing multiple bodies.' Caitlin Clark was held to 11 points against the Golden State Valkyries, facing double-teams, multiple defenders and pressure up the court. (Photo by) (Eakin Howard via Getty Images) Part of combating multiple defenders is to get the ball to her teammates and Clark finished Thursday's game with nine assists. So at least to some extent, she was taking what the Valkyries' defense was giving her. And perhaps the easiest explanation is that the Valkyries have Hayes to defend Clark and other WNBA teams don't. Advertisement However, it's now on Clark and the Fever coaching staff to make adjustments against what Nakase might have established as a blueprint to keep her in check. Acting head coach Austin Kelly, filling in for Stephanie White, indicated what Indiana would have to do to combat double-teams and pressure earlier in the possession. "I think the lack of ball movement allowed them to really beat her up," Kelly told Ingemi. "When we move it, a lot of good things happen, we are able to punch it, we get to our sprays, and it gets back to her. That's when she is going to get the good looks. But they did a good job of being physical and making it tough for her.' Clark's response could be immediately apparent with Sunday's matchup versus the Aces. The Valkyries also return to the court on Sunday, facing the Connecticut Sun (2-11).

Former Eagles Receiver Given Respect in New Role
Former Eagles Receiver Given Respect in New Role

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Former Eagles Receiver Given Respect in New Role

Former Eagles Receiver Given Respect in New Role originally appeared on Athlon Sports. At first glance, it's hard to call Olamide Zaccheaus a quality receiver for his work with the Philadelphia Eagles in 2023. Advertisement The former Atlanta Falcon and Washington Commander caught just 10 passes during his lone season in Philadelphia with two touchdowns. Zaccheaus was used more as a blocker overall but was ignored in the passing game. Last year with Washington, Zaccheaus' numbers improved. He recorded over 500 yards receiving in the nation's capital. Now, the veteran has signed a free-agent deal with the Chicago Bears. Zaccheaus won't be an everydown player in Chicago, but that doesn't mean he can't be impactful. Bill Barnwell of ESPN named the Bears receiver one of the best fourth receivers in the league today. "While Zaccheaus might have been something closer to the second or third wide receiver for the Commanders last season, he is expected to slot in behind DJ Moore, Rome Odunze, and rookie second-round pick Luther Burden III in Chicago," Barnwell said. "Don't be surprised if Zaccheaus is on the field more often than you would expect -- coaches love him." Advertisement It's easy for coaches to love what Zaccheaus brings to the table. Organizations love the veteran's blocking abilities. Zaccheaus isn't a player who complains about not getting the ball, either. It's a good reminder of how important a player like Zaccheaus is for teams around the league. And why the Bears came away with one of the better fourth receivers in the league on the open market this offseason. Related: Eagles Legends Shine on ESPN's All-Quarter Century NFL Team Related: Nick Sirianni's Stunning Turnaround Lands Him Among NFL's Top Coaches This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 21, 2025, where it first appeared.

Panthers' Sam Reinhart savors 'sweeter' second Stanley Cup with Florida on brink of hockey dynasty
Panthers' Sam Reinhart savors 'sweeter' second Stanley Cup with Florida on brink of hockey dynasty

Fox News

time27 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Panthers' Sam Reinhart savors 'sweeter' second Stanley Cup with Florida on brink of hockey dynasty

The party is still going for Sam Reinhart and the Florida Panthers, as they secured back-to-back Stanley Cup wins following their Game 6 victory over the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday. "Not too much sleep yet, but we're doing very well," Reinhart joked while speaking with Fox News Digital during an appearance celebrating the Cup win with Panthers fans at Raising Cane's in Tamarac, Fla. "I was just saying, 'Who said this isn't a hockey town?' You step foot in it here, it'll change your mind very quick." For Reinhart, it was a game he won't be forgetting after scoring four goals in the 5-1 win on home ice. So, the celebration began well before the final horn sounded in Amerant Bank Arena. The Panthers have been carrying the Cup everywhere through Sunshine and the surrounding towns and cities, including captain Aleksander Barkov knocking on his neighbors' doors at 5 a.m. the morning after the win to share the excitement. This is a feeling that Reinhart and many other teammates felt last year when they defeated the same Oilers, winning in Game 7 to collect the trophy. Reinhart admits it's better the second time around. "I think there was a moment, maybe a day ago, where it was like, 'We've been there, done that before,' and very quickly it changed your mindset," he said. "In many instances, it's sweeter than the first, so we're going to enjoy every moment of this." Florida was the first team since the 2020 and 2021 Tampa Bay Lightning to win back-to-back Stanley Cups. So, the next question is obvious: Are the Panthers a dynasty? Better yet, do they need that third straight Stanley Cup win to be cemented as one? Reinhart gave the perfect answer when asked whether his squad is on the brink of earning the dynasty tag. "I mean, that's kinda what our mindset [is]," he explained. "We've always been kinda day by day, and last year when they were asking about a repeat, we were focused on enjoying the first one. "So, when the time comes, we know we'll be ready and be motivated. But we're going to stay in the moment like we did all playoff run." Reinhart also touched on the talent the team added at the trade deadline, including playoff heroes Brad Marchand and Seth Jones, who jelled quickly with their new teammates. "It's unbelievable," Reinhart said about the newcomers who helped the Panthers win it all. "To see the new guys come in and step up in some big situations, it's been pretty special. We've got a couple competitors on and off the ice, so we're having fun." As Reinhart said, the celebration will continue and the Panthers will live in the moment. But while GM Bill Zito reiterated the same on Tuesday night, he also noted his desire to get center Sam Bennett, the Conn Smythe Trophy winner, Aaron Ekblad, Marchand and Nate Schmidt under contract to make a run at three straight next season. Those conversations will come, but Reinhart knows the Panthers will be prepared to defend their title once more when the puck drops for the 2025-26 season. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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