Man, what a game. Jalen Williams—yeah, that second-year guy everyone’s been sleeping on—just went nuclear. Forty points. In a playoff game. And not just any game, but the one that puts OKC a single win away from their first title in forever. The Paycom Center was electric, and honestly? Williams didn’t just play well—he owned the moment. Clutch shots, lockdown defense, the whole package. You could see it in his eyes: dude wasn’t scared.
Let’s break it down. 15-of-22 from the field? 5-of-8 from three? And perfect from the line—5-for-5. That’s not just efficient; that’s ridiculous. He started hot with 14 in the first quarter, but here’s the thing: when Indiana tried to claw back in the third, Williams dropped another 12 like it was nothing. No hesitation. Just buckets.
But the real story? The last three minutes. Pacers are within two, crowd’s nervous, and what does Williams do? Steps back over Andrew Nembhard—a legit defender—and buries a three. Next possession? Steals the ball from Haliburton, leads to an easy dunk for Shai. Game over. Thunder coach Mark Daigneault put it best: “J-Dub was fearless.” Understatement of the year.
Look, Williams was the star, but this wasn’t a one-man show. Shai dropped 28 and dished out 7 dimes. Chet? Four blocks, and his rim protection was huge. Even the bench showed up—Isaiah Joe with 11 points, outscoring Indiana’s entire second unit. That’s how you win close games.
Gotta give Daigneault credit too. Switched to a small lineup in the fourth, put Dort on Haliburton, and boom—Pacers only scored 18 in the quarter. Haliburton couldn’t get anything going. Smart move, and it paid off.
Haliburton tried, man. Thirty-one points, nine assists—he was balling. But that turnover late? And the missed three with 45 seconds left? Oof. Even he admitted it: “Gotta be better in those moments.” Tough break, especially with the team shooting 8-of-27 from deep. Just one of those nights.
And the Pacers’ defense? Not their best. Gave up 22 fast-break points, and the free-throw disparity was brutal—28 for OKC, just 14 for Indiana. Coach Carlisle was pissed: “You can’t win like that. Period.” Can’t argue with that.
Game 6’s in Indy, where the Pacers are 6-1 these playoffs. But here’s the kicker: OKC’s been solid on the road too (5-2). The big question: how do you stop Williams without leaving Shai open? Good luck with that.
ESPN’s giving OKC a 78% chance to win it all now. Even Kendrick Perkins—who’s usually wrong—tweeted, “They’re younger, deeper, and now they’ve got the closer.” Vegas agrees: Thunder are -210 favorites. Not bad for a “rebuilding” team.
Twitter—sorry, “X”—lost it over Williams’ crossover into a pull-up three. LeBron even chimed in: “J-Dub cold 🥶.” NBA’s Instagram called it: “STAR. BORN.” Yeah, no kidding.
Of course, Pacers fans are mad about a no-call on a possible goaltend by Holmgren late. Conspiracy theories are already blowing up Reddit. Google searches for “NBA rigged” spiked 320% after the game. The league’s Last Two Minute Report better be interesting.
Here’s the deal: Jalen Williams isn’t just good—he’s the future of this Thunder team. And now they’re one win from a title nobody saw coming. Game 6’s gonna be wild. Can Indy force a Game 7? Or will OKC’s young guns finish the job? Drop your takes below—who’s lifting the trophy?
Source: ESPN – News
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