Sources: Don't count the Knicks out on a potential Giannis Antetokounmpo trade

NBA superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo could be looking for a new city to call home this offseason – could that mean we see the Greek Freak in New York?

According to ESPN’s Shams Charania, Antetokounmpo, for the first time, is "open-minded about whether his best fit is remaining in Milwaukee – or playing elsewhere."

After trading for Karl-Anthony Towns and Mikal Bridges and re-signing OG Anunoby, the Knicks - on paper - don’t look like a team that could trade for Antetokounmpo.

But league sources familiar with the dynamic say it would be foolish to count the Knicks out because of their roster construction, according to SNY’s Ian Begley.

If the 2024-25 season had gone poorly, the Knicks would have had strong interest in dealing for Antetokounmpo, Begley notes.

The Knick focus at the moment is far from Antetokounmpo; they host Boston in Game 4 of their second-round playoff series and hold a 2-1 series lead.

While Antetokounmpo led the Bucks to an NBA title in 2020-21, the Bucks have been bounced in the first round of the playoffs in each of the last three years.

Per Charania, Antetokounmpo and his representatives will meet with the Bucks front office at some point this offseason to discuss his future with the club.

He is currently on his second super-max contract with Milwaukee, and is under contract through the 2026-27 season, with a $62.8 million player option for 2027-28.

"The Nets, it should be noted, have a bevy of assets to offer in a trade for Antetokounmpo – or another star," Begley wrote in April. "Brooklyn owns four first-round picks in the 2025 NBA Draft and has 13 tradeable first-round picks in the next seven drafts."

Antetokounmpo was named to his ninth-straight All-Star team this season, averaging 30.4 points, 11.9 rebounds, and 6.5 assists.

NBA Draft Lottery 2025: Schedule, history, best odds, lottery explained

The NBA Draft Lottery is a major step for rebuilding teams. Here's everything you need to know:

How does the NBA Draft Lottery work?

The lottery system is how the NBA determines the draft order for the teams that don’t make the playoffs. It only determines the first 14 picks of the draft and has no impact on the second round. The first four picks are determined by the lottery, and picks 5-14 are determined by the reverse standings of whoever is left.

Each lottery team is assigned a certain number of ping-pong balls, which is determined by the regular season standings. Four ping-pong balls will be randomly selected, and the combination will determine the first four picks.

NBA Deputy Commissioner Mark Tatum will then reveal the picks in reverse order. As he shares the picks, it will be easy to determine who has leaped into the top four, since he should say the teams in reverse lottery order.

Last season, the Hawks only had a three percent chance of getting the first pick, but they leaped up and selected Zaccharie Risacher. In 2016, the lottery didn’t change the order of the draft at all, which is the first and only time that has happened. It is entirely random from year to year.

How to watch the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery

The lottery will take place on May 12 at 7pm ET and will be available to watch on ESPN.

Which team has the best odds to get the first pick?

The Jazz, Wizards and Hornets all have a 14 percent chance to get the first pick, though the Jazz have a slight advantage over the other two. Utah had the worst record in the league at 17-65, so the worst they can pick is fifth.

2025 NBA Draft Lottery odds

The following odds are each team’s chances of receiving the first overall pick.

14%: Jazz

14%: Wizards

14%: Hornets

12.5%: Pelicans

10.5%: 76ers (top-six protected)

9%: Nets

7.5%: Raptors

6%: Spurs

3.8%: Rockets (via Suns)

3.7%: Trail Blazers

1.8%: Mavericks

1.7%: Bulls

0.8%: Kings (top-12 protected)

0.7%: Spurs (via Hawks)

How have trades altered this year’s lottery?

Over half of the picks in the lottery were involved in some sort of trade, though not every pick will convey to a different team.

  • The Jazz and Wizards picks are both top-10 protected, meaning if it landed outside the top 10 picks, it would have conveyed to a different team. That isn’t possible in this draft, but it could come into play in the future.
  • The Hornets and Trail Blazers picks are top-14 protected, which also won’t matter for this draft.
  • The Suns and Hawks picks were both traded with no restrictions. No matter where the pick lands, they won’t make their pick.
  • The 76ers pick is top-six protected, and they are currently projected to pick fifth. They will have a 64 percent chance of retaining their pick, but if it falls outside the first six picks, it will be conveyed to the Thunder.
  • The Kings pick is top-12 protected, and their pick is currently projected to be 13th. There is a 3.8 chance it leaps into the first four picks, in which case they would make their own pick. The most likely scenario is that the Hawks make this pick at 13, which has a 92.9 percent chance of happening. 

Which team has won the NBA Draft Lottery the most times?

The Cavaliers, Clippers and Magic have each won the draft lottery four times. Cleveland traded one of those picks (Andrew Wiggins) before he suited up for them. When Cleveland won the top pick in 2011, it came after they acquired the Clippers’ pick in a trade earlier in the season. Had the Clippers held onto their pick, they could’ve won it a fifth time. In 1986, the Clippers won the lottery and traded the pick to the Cavaliers, so Cleveland has made the first pick in the draft five times.

All three teams made the playoffs this season, so none of them will be winning the lottery again this season.

Top expected players available

These are some of the players that teams will be hoping to get in the draft on June 25 at 8pm ET.

  • Cooper Flagg, F, Duke
  • Dylan Harper, G, Rutgers
  • Ace Bailey, F, Rutgers
  • VJ Edgecombe, G, Baylor

These Celtics stats at MSG should make fans confident entering Game 4

These Celtics stats at MSG should make fans confident entering Game 4 originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Celtics have played pretty well at TD Garden over the last 25 years, both in the regular season and playoffs. In fact, they’ve closed out two championships (2008, 2024) on the parquet floor during that span.

But they’ve actually performed even better, based on win percentage, at a different Garden over that stretch.

The C’s resume their Eastern Conference semifinals series against the New York Knicks with Game 4 at Madison Square Garden on Wednesday night.

The Celtics trail 2-1 in the series, but Boston fans should feel pretty confident entering this pivotal matchup because the C’s have played fantastic at MSG — not only this season but since the turn of the century.

The Celtics have a better winning percentage at MSG than they do at TD Garden over the last 25 years.

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The Celtics are 3-0 with an average margin of victory of 17 points at MSG this season, including Saturday’s 115-93 win in Game 3.

Boston has won five straight games at MSG overall, with its last loss in that building coming on Feb. 27, 2023.

The Celtics aren’t just a good team at MSG, they have dominated almost everywhere away from home lately. Boston’s 33-8 road record this season was tied for the second-best in league history.

Road teams are 10-4 in the conference semifinals so far this year. Can the Celtics make it 11-4 on Monday night? There are many stats and trends that would suggest their chances are pretty good.

Ranking Cooper Flagg’s best, most interesting fits in NBA Draft Lottery

Only one thing is certain heading into Monday night's 2025 NBA Draft Lottery: Whichever team lands the No. 1 pick will select Cooper Flagg. Following a standout season at Duke, Flagg is unquestionably on his own tier and on top of every team's draft board.

But which NBA landing spot would be the best fit? What are the most interesting landing spots for Cooper Flagg? Let's break down the top landing spots (with their odds of landing the No. 1 pick).

San Antonio Spurs ( 6% chance)

This is the best basketball fit, probably what's best for Flagg in terms of his career — and would be totally unfair for the rest of the NBA.

Put Flagg next to Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs would have the best defensive front line in the league starting next season (sorry Cleveland), plus two bigs who are gifted passers as well as scorers. Add in De'Aaron Fox at the point, Rookie of the Year Stephon Castle, plus solid role players and this team is on a path to championships. Plural. It's easy to envision the Spurs as contenders within a couple of years.

It also seems fitting to place Flagg with the franchise that had the most success with a Twin Towers lineup in NBA history (David Robinson and Tim Duncan).

It would just suck for the 29 other teams.

Philadelphia 76ers (10.5% chance)

Philadelphia winning this lottery feels like the basketball gods letting the Sixers off the hook for the questionable decisions (and bad injury luck) that have them in the lottery in the first place.

However, pairing Flagg with Tyrese Maxey — especially with a healthy Jared McCain at shooting guard — would be dynamic. Just that young core could have the Sixers contending in a few years down the line, if the roster is built out right around them.

For the first couple of years, the 76ers would have Paul George and Joel Embiid on the roster, too, and if the stars align and everyone is healthy, that team could chase a ring. However, landing Flagg would give Daryl Morey a clear path to he future of the franchise and the ability to pivot away from Embiid and George if it comes to that.

Brooklyn Nets (9% chance)

How badly does the NBA want Flagg in the league's largest market?

It would also be a quality basketball fit because Brooklyn is well positioned to build a contender around Flagg: They have two other first-round picks in this draft alone, a number of future ones, and just four players under contract for next season. With that flexibility, the Nets could build quickly around Flagg with free agents and young players. Plus, if Giannis Antetokounmpo asks out of Milwaukee, and Brooklyn has Flagg, suddenly that looks like a much more desirable location for the Greek Freak.

Brooklyn also has a good coach in Jordi Fernandez, who kept getting the most out of players and winning despite management's best efforts to tear everything down around him. There are a lot of reasons to think Flagg would thrive in Brooklyn.

Houston Rockets (3.8%)

Houston winning would set the Phoenix Suns fanbase on fire — this is the Suns' pick, traded first to Brooklyn, then sent on to Houston (it is technically a swap, with the Rockets moving up to the lottery and the Nets getting the Rockets' No. 27 pick). After the season the Suns just had, to watch their pick go first to another team would be cruel.

Houston is a team stacked with athletic young talent: Amen Thompson, Alperen Sengun, Jalen Green, Jabari Smith Jr., Reed Sheppard, Tari Eason and more. Flagg would fit right in with his defense.

The playoffs showed Houston lacked an elite bucket getter in the half court and the clutch. Could Flagg be that guy? Maybe. Most importantly, this is a stacked roster with a lot of draft picks in the coming years, they are well positioned to build out a championship team around Flagg and their existing young core.

Portland Trail Blazers (3.7% chance)

As it showed in the final months of last season, Portland has some impressive young talent on the roster already: Scoot Henderson, Shaedon Sharpe, Toumani Camara, and Donovan Clingan, to name a few. Flagg would fit right in with this core — Camara and Flagg playing defense with Clingan as a backstop would be fearsome — and he could help spark their offense.

Portland also is a fan base that knows how to embrace their stars and make them at home, just ask Damian Lillard.

5. Utah Jazz (14% chance)

Of the three teams with a 14% chance at winning the lottery — the three worst teams in the league last season — this is the best landing spot for Flagg. That's because among the teams at the bottom of the league the Jazz have the best organizational foundation: Danny Ainge is an experienced head of basketball operations who knows how to build a winner, and they have a coach in Will Hardy who, even with the losses this season, drew the attention and respect of other teams for his player development and schemes.

Utah has the organizational foundation to build something impressive, they just need some luck to jump start the process. Like winning the NBA Draft Lottery.

Michael Jordan joining NBC for NBA coverage as a special contributor

Michael Jordan joining NBC for NBA coverage as a special contributor originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The NBA’s GOAT is coming to NBC.

Michael Jordan will join NBA on NBC coverage for next season as a special contributor, the company announced Monday.

Jordan starred for the Chicago Bulls throughout the 1990s, when NBC aired NBA games. NBC was the home of the NBA Finals from 1991 to 2002, with Jordan’s Bulls winning six titles over that span.

The announcement came at NBCU’s Upfront presentation Monday. Composer John Tesh took the stage for a live performance of his iconic “Roundball Rock” jingle before a video message came in from Jordan.

“I am so excited to see the NBA back on NBC,” Jordan said. “The NBA on NBC was a meaningful part of my career, and I’m excited about being a special contributor to the project. I’m looking forward to seeing you all when the NBA on NBC launches this October.”

NBA coverage will return to NBC next season as part of a new media rights deal, with games and telecasts also available to stream on Peacock. It will be the first time since 2002 that the league will be on NBC.

NBC has made several announcements for its coverage next season, including Carmelo Anthony, Jamal Crawford and Reggie Miller joining the network. Mike Tirico and Noah Eagle have been revealed as play-by-play announcers, and more hires are expected to be shared in the coming months.

Michael Jordan joining NBC for NBA coverage as a special contributor

Michael Jordan joining NBC for NBA coverage as a special contributor originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The NBA’s GOAT is coming to NBC.

Michael Jordan will join NBA on NBC coverage for next season as a special contributor, the company announced Monday.

Jordan starred for the Chicago Bulls throughout the 1990s, when NBC aired NBA games. NBC was the home of the NBA Finals from 1991 to 2002, with Jordan’s Bulls winning six titles over that span.

The announcement came at NBCU’s Upfront presentation Monday. Composer John Tesh took the stage for a live performance of his iconic “Roundball Rock” jingle before a video message came in from Jordan.

“I am so excited to see the NBA back on NBC,” Jordan said. “The NBA on NBC was a meaningful part of my career, and I’m excited about being a special contributor to the project. I’m looking forward to seeing you all when the NBA on NBC launches this October.”

NBA coverage will return to NBC next season as part of a new media rights deal, with games and telecasts also available to stream on Peacock. It will be the first time since 2002 that the league will be on NBC.

NBC has made several announcements for its coverage next season, including Carmelo Anthony, Jamal Crawford and Reggie Miller joining the network. Mike Tirico and Noah Eagle have been revealed as play-by-play announcers, and more hires are expected to be shared in the coming months.

Giannis Antetokounmpo open to leaving Bucks and exploring potential fits: Report

Giannis Antetokounmpo open to leaving Bucks and exploring potential fits: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

For the first time in his career, Giannis Antetokounmpo is exploring his options.

The Greek Freak reportedly is open to leaving the Milwaukee Bucks after a third straight first-round playoff exit, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania.

Charania added that the two-time league MVP has not made any firm decisions about his future just yet. But, after 12 seasons in Milwaukee, Antetokounmpo’s open-minded to figuring out where his best long-term fit is.

Antetokounmpo, 30, is coming off perhaps the best statistical season of his decorated career. He averaged 30.4 points, 11.9 rebounds and 6.5 assists over 67 games, which is likely to earn him a seventh straight All-NBA First Team nod.

The Bucks, though, fell to the Indiana Pacers in five games for another early playoff exit. With Damian Lillard expected to miss most, if not all, of the 2025-26 season with a torn Achilles, Milwaukee’s expectations for next year won’t be much higher.

Charania said that discussions about Antetokounmpo’s future are expected to ramp up during the NBA draft combine in Chicago this week. Teams have often approached the Bucks about his availability, but the Bucks wouldn’t trade the 2021 Finals MVP unless he asked out.

If bidding for Antetokounmpo does begin, expect plenty of franchises to be interested in his services. He has two years remaining on his contract before a player option in the summer of 2027.

While the second round of the playoffs roll on, this is a storyline worth monitoring across the league.

Steph Curry hamstring injury progression, next step outlined by Shams Charania

Steph Curry hamstring injury progression, next step outlined by Shams Charania originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors will provide an official re-evaluation of Steph Curry on Wednesday, but per ESPN NBA Insider Shams Charania, the 37-year-old superstar is taking steps toward returning.

“I’m told his progression going into [Monday] was really like jogging, some movement into his jump shooting over the weekend,” Charania said on “The Pat McAfee Show” roughly nine hours before the Warriors host the Minnesota Timberwolves in Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinal series. “I think the next step is trying to get him to the point where he can run fully, sprint fully, cut fully, take contact fully. Until you get to that point, there’s not like a safe way to bring him back from a hamstring injury, and that organization is obviously, I think, been very measured and careful bringing back players from these significant, soft tissue muscle injuries.

“And Stephen Curry said the other day, this is the first muscle strain of this kind that he’s ever dealt with in his 16-year NBA career. So I think they’re going to take a careful approach the next two days, I think it’s to see, can you ramp him up into running and cutting and sprinting, but they got to win tonight.”

Curry sustained a Grade 1 left hamstring strain early in Game 1 against the Timberwolves on May 6.

The Warriors won Game 1 even without Curry for most of the contest, but they were blown out in Game 2 and coughed up a fourth-quarter lead in Game 3 at Chase Center on Saturday.

Charania previously reported that the earliest Curry could return is Game 6, which is scheduled for Sunday, May 18.

But the Warriors must win Monday or Wednesday night before they can even start thinking about a potential Game 6.

The good news for the Warriors and Dub Nation is that Curry is making progress, even if it’s slow.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Will Sixers have a 2025 1st-round pick? All the odds going into draft lottery

Will Sixers have a 2025 1st-round pick? All the odds going into draft lottery originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

A high-stakes date on the 2025 Sixers calendar has arrived.

Here are the essentials ahead of the NBA draft lottery:

When and where is the lottery?

The event will begin Monday at 7 p.m. ET in Chicago on ESPN. Jared McCain will represent the Sixers.

What do the Sixers need to keep their first-round pick?

The Sixers’ first-rounder this year is top-six protected because of the 2020 trade that sent Al Horford to the Thunder and brought Danny Green to the Sixers.

If the Sixers’ pick does not convey to the Thunder in 2025, it will become top-four protected in 2026 (and 2027, in the event the Sixers wind up with very high selections for two consecutive years).

As far as the Sixers’ 2025 outlook, it’s simple: A top-six lottery draw means they own their first-round pick. Anything outside of the top-six means they don’t. In that scenario, the Sixers would only have their second-rounder, which is No. 35. 

The odds 

The team’s top-six odds are 63.9 percent. 

Here’s a rundown of the Sixers’ chances at every pick between No. 1 and No. 6:

  • First: 10.5 percent 
  • Second: 10.5 percent 
  • Third: 10.6 percent 
  • Fourth: 10.5 percent 
  • Fifth: 2.2 percent 
  • Sixth: 19.6 percent 

How do the Sixers view this draft? 

Though Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey is always open to trades, there’d clearly be plenty of logic in using a top-six pick.

“Definitely best player available,” Morey said on April 13 of his approach. “It has to be that in the draft for sure, but we see the pick as sort of a tool to upgrade the team. It will matter if it’s one, two, three, four, five, six or we just have the pick in the future. That could also happen. It’s just a tool to make the team better, but there’s obviously a good chance we take someone. 

“In that case, it will just be the best player. I’ve never shied from that.”

The Sixers have generally done well on draft nights during Morey’s tenure. 

They’ve made (and kept) first-round picks in three years under Morey, drafting Tyrese Maxey (No. 20), Jaden Springer (No. 28) and McCain (No. 16). The team’s second-rounders with Morey in charge have been Isaiah Joe, Paul Reed, Charles Bassey, Filip Petrusev and Adem Bona. 

Who are the best prospects? 

As always, experts’ opinions vary on the draft’s leading players. However, Cooper Flagg will be No. 1 anywhere you look. Flagg was fantastic in his freshman year at Duke, averaging 19.2 points, 7.5 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.4 blocks and 1.4 steals. And the 6-foot-9 forward doesn’t turn 19 years old until December. 

Two Rutgers products are projected to go very early in the draft: Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey. Harper’s a big, crafty lefty lead guard. Bailey’s a 6-foot-10 shotmaker capable of draining tough jumpers. 

Other names regularly found in mock draft top 10s include ultra-athletic Baylor guard V.J. Edgecombe, sharpshooting Duke wing Kon Knueppel, high-scoring Texas guard Tre Johnson and 7-foot-2 Duke rim protector Khaman Maluach. 

Will Sixers have a 2025 1st-round pick? All the odds going into draft lottery

Will Sixers have a 2025 1st-round pick? All the odds going into draft lottery originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

A high-stakes date on the 2025 Sixers calendar has arrived.

Here are the essentials ahead of the NBA draft lottery:

When and where is the lottery?

The event will begin at 7 p.m. ET in Chicago on ESPN. Jared McCain will represent the Sixers.

What do the Sixers need to keep their first-round pick?

The Sixers’ first-rounder this year is top-six protected because of the 2020 trade that sent Al Horford to the Thunder and brought Danny Green to the Sixers.

If the Sixers’ pick does not convey to the Thunder in 2025, it will become top-four protected in 2026 (and 2027, in the event the Sixers wind up with very high selections for two consecutive years).

As far as the Sixers’ 2025 outlook, it’s simple: A top-six lottery draw means they own their first-round pick. Anything outside of the top-six means they don’t. In that scenario, the Sixers would only have their second-rounder, which is No. 35. 

The odds 

The team’s top-six odds are 63.9 percent. 

Here’s a rundown of the Sixers’ chances at every pick between No. 1 and No. 6:

  • First: 10.5 percent 
  • Second: 10.5 percent 
  • Third: 10.6 percent 
  • Fourth: 10.5 percent 
  • Fifth: 2.2 percent 
  • Sixth: 19.6 percent 

How do the Sixers view this draft? 

Though Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey is always open to trades, there’d clearly be plenty of logic in using a top-six pick.

“Definitely best player available,” Morey said on April 13 of his approach. “It has to be that in the draft for sure, but we see the pick as sort of a tool to upgrade the team. It will matter if it’s one, two, three, four, five, six or we just have the pick in the future. That could also happen. It’s just a tool to make the team better, but there’s obviously a good chance we take someone. 

“In that case, it will just be the best player. I’ve never shied from that.”

The Sixers have generally done well on draft nights during Morey’s tenure. 

They’ve made (and kept) first-round picks in three years under Morey, drafting Tyrese Maxey (No. 20), Jaden Springer (No. 28) and McCain (No. 16). The team’s second-rounders with Morey in charge have been Isaiah Joe, Paul Reed, Charles Bassey, Filip Petrusev and Adem Bona. 

Who are the best prospects? 

As always, experts’ opinions vary on the draft’s leading players. However, Cooper Flagg will be No. 1 anywhere you look. Flagg was fantastic in his freshman year at Duke, averaging 19.2 points, 7.5 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.4 blocks and 1.4 steals. And the 6-foot-9 forward doesn’t turn 19 years old until December. 

Two Rutgers products are projected to go very early in the draft: Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey. Harper’s a big, crafty lefty lead guard. Bailey’s a 6-foot-10 shotmaker capable of draining tough jumpers. 

Other names regularly found in mock draft top 10s include ultra-athletic Baylor guard V.J. Edgecombe, sharpshooting Duke wing Kon Knueppel, high-scoring Texas guard Tre Johnson and 7-foot-2 Duke rim protector Khaman Maluach. 

Michael Jordan joining NBC for NBA coverage as a special contributor

Michael Jordan joining NBC for NBA coverage as a special contributor originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The NBA’s GOAT is coming to NBC.

Michael Jordan will join NBA on NBC coverage for next season as a special contributor, the company announced Monday.

Jordan starred for the Chicago Bulls throughout the 1990s, when NBC aired NBA games. NBC was the home of the NBA Finals from 1991 to 2002, with Jordan’s Bulls winning six titles over that span.

The announcement came at NBCU’s Upfront presentation Monday. Composer John Tesh took the stage for a live performance of his iconic “Roundball Rock” jingle before a video message came in from Jordan.

“I am so excited to see the NBA back on NBC,” Jordan said. “The NBA on NBC was a meaningful part of my career, and I’m excited about being a special contributor to the project. I’m looking forward to seeing you all when the NBA on NBC launches this October.”

NBA coverage will return to NBC next season as part of a new media rights deal, with games and telecasts also available to stream on Peacock. It will be the first time since 2002 that the league will be on NBC.

NBC has made several announcements for its coverage next season, including Carmelo Anthony, Jamal Crawford and Reggie Miller joining the network. Mike Tirico and Noah Eagle have been revealed as play-by-play announcers, and more hires are expected to be shared in the coming months.

Pacers win to edge closer to Conference final

Indiana Pacers' Myles Turner reacts during Sunday's game
Myles Turner made four out of four three-pointers for the Pacers [Getty Images]

The Indiana Pacers overcame the first-quarter ejection of guard Bennedict Mathurin to defeat the Cleveland Cavaliers 129-109 and go 3-1 up in their NBA Eastern Conference semi-final series.

A win for the Pacers over the top seeds in game five in Cleveland on Wednesday (00:00 BST) will see them reach a second straight conference final.

Mathurin left the game with four minutes and 32 seconds left in the opening period after a punch to the chest of De'Andre Hunter.

At that stage, the Pacers led 22-10 and they were 38-23 at the end of the quarter before outscoring their rivals 42-16 in the second to hold a 80-39 advantage

The total was a Pacers franchise play-off record for points in a half.

Pascal Siakam scored 21 points for the Pacers while Myles Turner and Obi Toppin each added 20 as they bounced back from a heavy 126-104 loss in game three.

"This is a group that plays better through adversity," said Turner. "We got punched in the mouth last game, we had a hell of a response. The starters set the tone and the bench picked it up the rest of the game."

The Cavaliers were without six-time All Star Donovan Mitchell in the second half after he suffered an ankle injury - the 28-year-old will have an MRI scan on Monday to see if he can play on Wednesday.

Thunder level series in 'disgusting' game

Elsewhere, Oklahoma City Thunder edged the Denver Nuggets 92-87 to level their Western Conference series at 2-2.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 25 points with six rebounds and six assists to lead Oklahoma City, while NBA Most Valuable Player Nikola Jokic scored 27 points and grabbed 13 rebounds for Denver.

The game tipped off approximately 38 hours after Denver's overtime win in game three and both sides showed signs of fatigue with Nuggets coach David Adelman describing Sunday's encounter as a "really disgusting basketball game".

He added: "Give their team credit, those guys made plays, made enough plays to push them over the edge and win the game."

The Nuggets overcame a poor start to lead 53-52 midway through the third quarter and led by eight points early in the fourth.

But the visitors regained the lead thanks to a Cason Wallace three-pointer with 8:35 to play and held on until the end.

The Thunder host game five on Wednesday (02:30 BST).

Cavaliers vs. Pacers Game 4: Indiana dominates from opening tip in 20-point win, Donovan Mitchell injured

NBA: Playoffs-Cleveland Cavaliers at Indiana Pacers

May 11, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Indiana Pacers forward Pascal Siakam (43) and forward Obi Toppin (1) celebrate a made basket during game four of the second round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

It's hard to imagine a game so radically different from the one the same two teams had played 48 hours before.

Friday night, the Cavaliers looked like the dominant 64-win East leaders they were this season, cruising to a 22-point win behind 43 points from Donovan Mitchell, who played like a guy deserving of First Team All-NBA.

Sunday Indiana was dominant squad, taking command from the opening tip, getting up by double-digits with 5:15 left in the first (and the game never got closer than that), led by 41 at the half, stretched that lead out to 44 at one point, and turned the second half into essentially 24 minutes of garbage time.

Indiana now has a commanding 3-1 lead in the series — and that's potentially not even the worst news for Cleveland.

Donovan Mitchell did not play in the second half due to an ankle injury. He will get an MRI when the team returns to Cleveland, coach Kenny Atkinson said. What's most concerning is how it appeared to happen, a non-contact injury warming up for the second half (he had been playing through a calf issue, it's unclear if it's related).

As for Game 4 itself, Atkinson summed it up well.

"Complete domination by them," the Cavaliers coach said. "That's the story — in every facet."

Pascal Siakam scored 21 points to lead Indiana, with Myles Turner and Obi Toppin each adding 20. Everything Indiana did seemed to work, they moved the ball and got open looks, and shot 42.9% from 3 for the game.

Pacers coach Rick Carlisle sounded like a coach making sure his team doesn't take its foot off the gas, heading back to Cleveland for Game 5.

"We haven't done anything yet," Carlisle said after the win. "We're a pretty significant underdog in every game we've played in this series, and that will continue til the end. And we're going to keep approaching this like we have everything to prove."

Darius Garland led the Cavaliers with 21 points, and he could have a lot more responsibility on his plate in Game 5 if Mitchell cannot play in a must-win game.

Isaiah Evans pulls out of NBA Draft Combine

There’s no longer a chance — however Slim (pun intended) it ever was — of Isaiah Evans remaining in the NBA draft process. Evans has withdrawn from the NBA draft process and will not participate in the NBA Draft Combine, which begins in Chicago this week. The 6-6, 175-pounder remaining in the NBA draft always seemed to be a longshot.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scores 25 points and leads Thunder past Denver 92-87 to tie series 2-2

DENVER — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 25 points and the Oklahoma City Thunder finally outplayed Denver in crunch time, beating the Nuggets 92-87 on Sunday to knot their second-round series at two games apiece.

The Thunder trailed 69-63 after three quarters and fell behind by eight when Peyton Watson started the fourth quarter by swishing a hook shot. But Oklahoma City used an 11-0 run fueled by reserves Cason Wallace, who had a pair of 3-pointers, and Aaron Wiggins, who added another, to take control.

Wallace's second 3-pointer put Oklahoma City ahead for good at 75-73.

The Nuggets had outlasted the youngest team in the NBA with wins in Games 1 and 3, crediting their playoff experience and championship pedigree. And they looked poised to put the top-seeded team in the West on the cusp of elimination when Aaron Gordon's turnaround jumper made it 73-66.

This time, however, it was the Thunder who came up big down the stretch and the Nuggets who fumbled away the chance to put OKC in a 3-1 hole.

Game 5 is Tuesday night back in Oklahoma City, where the Thunder had a 43-point blowout of the Nuggets in Game 2.

Nikola Jokic led Denver with 27 points and 13 rebounds. Christian Braun and Jamal Murray each had 17 points and Gordon scored 15. Michael Porter Jr. scored just three points after scoring 15 Friday night.

Wiggins and Wallace each added 11 points and Alex Caruso and Jalen Williams each scored 10. Williams was 2 for 13 from the floor after scoring 32 in Game 3.

The teams played a physical, overtime game Friday night, not leaving Ball Arena until the early morning hours on Saturday. And the early Mother's Day start - 1:30 p.m. local time - led to some tired legs and a ton of errant shots.

Both teams went 3 for 22 from deep in the first half and they slumbered through a combined 25-point first quarter, which tied an NBA playoff record for fewest points in the opening quarter.

Oklahoma City was ahead 42-36 at the half.