With the way that New York closed the third quarter, it felt like the Knicks had all the momentum and silenced the sold-out crowd in Gainbridge Fieldhouse. New York was able to push its lead to nine points on two different occasions to really make Pacer fans sweat. With 9:46 left in the game, New York led 98-89 after a Miles McBride three. Indiana responded with a 10-1 run to tie the game at 99 with 6:58 left in the contest.
You're going to find this hard to believe, I know. But somehow, they played professional basketball games before the evening of Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2017. Somehow, the NBA had become a genuine global phenomenon in the 69 years before that night, when the NBA's 70th season began with the defending-champion Warriors dropping a 122-121 nail-biter to the Rockets in Oakland, and the defending runner-up Cavaliers squeaking past old fried Kyrie Irving and the Celtics, 102-99, in Cleveland. Maybe you were otherwise occupied that night, so you missed the revolution. The Yankees were playing the Astros in Game 4 of the 2017 ALCS that night, after all, and it was a rollicking celebration at Yankee Stadium,
Indiana Pacers center Myles Turner was correctly called for an illegal screen in the closing seconds of the New York Knicks' controversial 121-117 victory in Game 1, according to the NBA's Last Two Minute Report released Tuesday evening. With about 15 seconds left and Indiana down 118-117, Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton dribbled up the floor as Turner set a high screen on New York's Donte DiVincenzo, sending him to the ground.
No | Player | P |
---|---|---|
5 | PF | |
8 | SF | |
44 | SF | |
4 | SG | |
11 | PG | |
18 | SG | |
0 | SG | |
25 | PF | |
3 | SG | |
55 | C | |
8 | SG | |
2 | PG | |
13 | SG | |
30 | PF | |
23 | C | |
45 | C | |
00 | SF | |
1 | SG |