NBA Finals 2025: How the Pacers present a different type of ‘puzzle’ f

OKLAHOMA CITY — On the court, Cason Wallace doesn’t do anything slow. Seated at a podium at the Thunder’s Wednesday media day session ahead of Game 1 of the 2025 NBA Finals, though, the second-year guard eased off the gas and took a second to think.
Wallace, who has blossomed into one of the NBA’s best young point-of-attack stoppers, had just fielded a question about guarding Tyrese Haliburton — the Pacers’ All-Star and All-NBA point guard. Wallace guarded Haliburton plenty during two regular-season meetings between Oklahoma City and Indiana; he figures to find himself across from Haliburton plenty over the next couple of weeks, too.
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So: What do you do with a problem like Tyrese, the engine of a hard-charging Indiana offense that scored nearly 120 points per 100 possessions in its 12-4 run through the Eastern Conference playoffs? What’s Job No. 1 when you’re dealing with a quicksilver ball-handler who’s a high-volume, high-efficiency shooter capable of popping for 30 in any given game, but who’d much prefer to set the table for his teammates all night to the tune of double-digit assists? What’s the first thing your defense looks to take away?
Wallace took a beat to consider. Then, with a smile, he decided.
“Everything,” he said.
What Wallace’s answer lacked in specificity, it made up for in sheer soundness of logic. After all, when you’re as all-consumingly excellent as the Thunder’s defense is — No. 1 in points allowed per possession during the regular season, No. 1 in the playoffs, one of the stingiest units the league has seen since the ABA-NBA merger — you don’t have to choose; you just erase. Specificity is for lesser beings.
Can the Thunder slow down Tyrese Haliburton? (Photo by William Purnell/Getty Images)
(William Purnell via Getty Images)
“I go into every matchup the same — just trying to take them out,” Wallace said. “Just trying to take the ball from them.”
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Wallace and the Thunder…

