Sunday, May 18 at 3:30 PM ET at Bankers Life Fieldhouse
Scott Agness | May 16, 2014 at 1:43 p.m.
Matchup
More than 11 months later, after 82 regular season games and 13 postseason contests, after their brilliant start and a concerning slide into the playoffs, the Pacers are exactly where they wanted to be all along: In the Eastern Conference Finals with a rematch against the two-time defending champion Miami Heat – and this time, they have homecourt advantage.
This is what the Pacers’ longed for back on June 3rd as they sat in their American Airlines Arena locker room after losing Game 7 in Miami. They firmly stated their beliefs in the months following that if Game 7 was on their court, they would have moved on to the NBA Finals. Now they have that opportunity, a golden one that can’t be taken lightly. Some of the league’s best fail to reach this moment even once in their professional career.
Indiana took heat (no pun intended) for stating their goal on the first day of training camp: to earn the conference’s top seed, and thus homecourt advantage. Just how critical is it in this matchup? The home team has won 12 of the last 14 meetings, including all four regular season games this season.
The Pacers are competing in the Conference Finals for the eighth time in NBA franchise history. They are 1-6 in the series of the past, four of which went to seven games. This series marks the third consecutive postseason that the Heat and Pacers have squared off.
To get to this point, No. 1 seed Indiana beat the Atlanta Hawks in seven games and then the Washington Wizards in six. No. 2 Miami handled their business in four fewer games, sweeping the Charlotte Bobcats and finishing off the Brooklyn Nets in five games.
At the center of this matchup is the world’s greatest player and four-time NBA Most Valuable Player, LeBron James. He’s second to only Oklahoma City’s Kevin Durant in scoring this postseason, averaging 30 points per game – along with seven rebounds and almost five assists. He can’t do it all by himself, though.
All season long, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra managed the minutes of Dwyane Wade, who’s dealt with knee issues for a while, including last postseason. Wade, however, is coming off his best showing of the playoffs as he put 28 points on the Nets in their Game 5 series-clinching win on Wednesday. Get your popcorn, because Wade against Lance Stephenson is always a show.
Roy Hibbert’s play inside will be huge, particularly on the defense. While they’ve won all five playoff games in which he’s reached double figures, his rim protection is most important, as usual. In their meeting on March 26th, he went off for 21 points – 13 in the first quarter and mostly paired against Greg Oden, who has yet to see the court this postseason. Containing James (easier said than done) is obviously priority number one and Paul George, along with Hibbert, play key roles in doing such.
Unlike the Pacers, the Heat have mixed up their lineups and rotations frequently. In their Second Round clash with the Nets, they went smaller. Against the Pacers, the ferocious Chris Andersen will have to play a larger role and Udonis Haslem, who’s been utilized minimally, is expected to receive more minutes. The power forward spot has been the Heat’s weakest when facing the Pacers, and David West has been there for the Pacers when called upon. He scored 18 of his 29 points, postseason career-high in a Pacers uniform, in the second half to pull Indiana to victory over the Wizards and move on to this postseason.
Indiana can’t turn the ball over, as Miami will make you pay with turnovers for touchdowns, and it has to get productive minutes out of its bench. Pacers coach Frank Vogel has had to lean heavily on the starters, and with more games added to their resume, they’ve had less time to rest.
The NBA’s final four is set and it’s no different than we all predicted at the beginning of the season: Pacers-Heat, Spurs-Thunder. Game 1 of the Pacers-Heat series is Sunday, May 18 at 3:30 p.m. ET. The NBA Finals begin on June 5th.
Probable Starters
Injury Update
Pacers: None
Heat: None
Quotable
“I think we’re ready to go. … Excited to have another crack at them.” – Frank Vogel on Miami
“Everything is behind us, like we said when we started the playoffs, 33-7 means nothing. How we struggled down the stretch, and took a lot of criticism, that means nothing, that’s behind us and this is where we wanted to be, at the Conference Finals and a chance to move on.” – Frank Vogel on moving on
“It's only going to get tougher. We've been talking about this series all year. We've had a different path than they've had.” – David West
“I’m looking forward to my matchup.” – Paul George said with a big grin
“Through all the thick and thin, all the stuff that people said about us – commentators or whatever – we stuck together no matter what and we have a chance to go out there and play against a Heat team so we’re going to make the most of it.” – Roy Hibbert
“I like being the underdog and everybody talking about us and trying to bring us down but we stay together as a unit, stay poised in the locker room and it just makes us stronger.” – Lance Stephenson
Noteworthy
- The Heat have won all five postseason home games whereas the Pacers are 3-4.
- Indiana is 7-0 when holding its opponent below 90 points and 5-0 when center Roy Hibbert scores 10 points or more.
- The Heat are 13-0 in postseason games when ‘The Big Three’ combines for 70 points or more.
- The Pacers are 53-3 this season when leading after three quarters.
- ESPN’s NBA Countdown studio show, which features Sage Steele, former Pacers player Jalen Rose, coach Doug Collins and Bill Simmons, will originate on site at Bankers Life Fieldhouse.
Last Meeting
April 11: With playoff seeds still undetermined, the Heat pounded it on the Pacers in Miami, 98-86 the final. The Pacers, who lacked any kind of rhythm for much of the night, hung around in the first half and trailed by just three points at intermission. The Heat then broke the game open with a 20-2 run, including 16 straight points to open the second half. The Pacers later used a 13-0 run to trim it to nine. At that point, Miami called timeout, Indiana’s Evan Turner was whistled for a technical foul, and the champs tacked on another nine points in a row in their double-digit win.
It was the Pacers’ third loss in four games. Paul George scored 22 points and David West contributed 18 points and eight rebounds before fouling out. Roy Hibbert managed just five points and a rebound in 34 minutes. LeBron James scored a game-high 36 points and Udonis Haslem added 11 points and nine rebounds in his return from a stomach virus. Dwyane Wade and Greg Oden each sat out. shots.
TV: ABC – Mike Breen (play-by-play), Jeff Van Gundy (analyst), Doris Burke (analyst)
NOTE: FOX Sports Indiana will air a postgame show immediately following the conclusion of Game 2, hosted by Chris Denari, Quinn Buckner, and Brooke Olzendam.
Radio: FM 107.5/AM 1070 The Fan, Pacers Radio Network – Mark Boyle (play-by-play), Slick Leonard (analyst), Kevin Lee (sideline reporter)
ESPN Radio: Marc Kestecher (play-by-play), Jon Barry (analyst)
Tickets
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