Pacers fail to sweep Games 1 and 2 in a series for the first time in playoffs

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Rommie Analytics

OKLAHOMA CITY — For the Indiana Pacers, a chance at being perfect in Games 1 and 2 of these playoffs went awry.

They’ll have to settle for a mere split of the opening two games in the NBA Finals instead.

The Pacers’ bid to become the fifth team in NBA history to go 8-0 to open the four playoff rounds — sweeping Games 1 and 2 in all four series — was stopped on Sunday night by the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Thunder took control early and won Game 2 123-107, tying the championship matchup at a game apiece.

The Pacers were trying to join the 1986 Boston Celtics, 1987 Los Angeles Lakers, 1996 Chicago Bulls and 2017 Golden State Warriors as teams that won Games 1 and 2 in all four rounds of a single postseason. All four went on to win the NBA title.

Those teams all did it with home-court advantage in every one of those series. The Pacers haven’t had home court since Round 1 — taking the first two of that series against Milwaukee, then winning the first two of Round 2 at Cleveland, the first two of the Eastern Conference final at New York, and Game 1 of the finals in Oklahoma City.

So, in the end, the Pacers have to settle for going 7-1, tying for the fifth-best record in Games 1 and 2 in a single postseason. They also became the third team to win five of those games on the road in a playoff run.

NBA Finals on Sportsnet
NBA Finals on Sportsnet

A new champion will be crowned as the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers face off in the NBA Finals. Which team will hoist the Larry O’Brien Trophy for the first time? Watch on Sportsnet and Sportsnet+.

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Houston went 5-3 in Games 1 and 2 on the road on its way to the title in 1995 and Miami went 5-3 in road games over the first two games of series in 2023 on its way to the NBA Finals. (The Heat were 6-2 in “road” games in Games 1 and 2 of their series in the 2020 bubble playoffs as well, but those games were all in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.)

“I’m not interested in talking about the past,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. “Each day, as you are on a playoff run, is like a new day. I find that looking back is a dangerous thing. We’ve got to keep our eye firmly where it needs to be.”

If the Pacers had won Sunday, they likely would have been overwhelming favorites heading home with a 2-0 lead. Only two teams — the 1993 Chicago Bulls and 1995 Houston Rockets — won the first two games of a finals on the road, and both went on to win the NBA title in those seasons. And teams that open the finals with a 2-0 lead go on to win the series 86.5 per cent of the time (32 times in 37 chances).

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