Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals delivered several compelling storylines. The Indiana Pacersā dramatic rally featured an iconic celebration from Tyrese Haliburton, while for the New York Knicks, it marked an infamous moment in NBA Playoff history.
Tom Thibodeauās team led the game almost from start to finish and held a commanding 116-102 advantage with just under four minutes left in the fourth quarter. The 43 points from Jalen Brunson and 35 from Karl-Anthony Towns were key in building that leadābut ultimately not enough to secure the win.
Aaron Nesmithās unforgettable performance, including 20 points with six three-pointers in just five minutes, along with a clutch shot from Tyrese Haliburton in the final seconds, changed the entire dynamic. The game went to overtime, where Indiana completed the comeback at Madison Square Garden.
But there was more. NBA history was written in those final moments, as never before in the playoffs had a team blown a lead of 14 or more points in the final 2:45 of a game and ended up losing. That scenario had occurred 970 times beforeānever with the outcome seen Wednesday night.

Aaron Nesmith #23 of the Indiana Pacers
And to make the Knicksā collapse even more staggering, consider the last minute alone. They still led by 9 points with under 60 seconds to go. In 1,414 previous instances of a team leading by that margin at that point in an NBA Playoff game, not one had lost. Not until last night.

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Pacersā Tyrese Haliburton sets aside historic rivalry, praises Jalen Brunson after Game 1 vs Knicks
āGive them a lot of credit, they closed the game out like theyāve been doing all playoffs. Just not really good on our part,ā Jalen Brunson said in the postgame press conference. He then emphasized the need to look ahead. āTomorrow we go watch film and get together as a team. Just re-evaluate and be ready for Game 2.ā
The loss to Indiana brought back memories of past battles between the two franchises, especially in the 1990s and 2000s, and more recently in last yearās Conference Semifinals, when they fell in Game 7.
Karl-Anthony Towns, however, downplayed those past matchups. āItās our job to make history. Weāre not here to repeat history, weāre here to make history,ā said the center. āSo that doesnāt pop into my mind. I only think about the present and what we can do right now so we can make our own history.ā
The Knicks and the Pacers will play Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Finals this Friday night at Madison Square Garden, before the series shifts to Bankers Life Fieldhouse on Sunday.
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