New York Post

Up-and-coming Pacers, Pelicans in tourney spotlight

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LAS VEGAS — The Lakers and Bucks are used to being on the NBA’s biggest stages, both of those teams having won championsh­ips in the last four seasons.

The Pacers and Pelicans haven’t often found themselves in that spotlight.

That foursome — a pair of championsh­ip contenders, a pair of upand-coming clubs — is probably the ideal grouping for the final four at the NBA’s inaugural In-Season Tournament. The semifinals in Las Vegas are Thursday, with Indiana facing Milwaukee and New Orleans then taking on the Lakers.

Combined record of those teams in this tournament: 19-1.

“I just want to win,” Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton said. “Whatever it takes to do that, that’s what I’m going to do.”

Thursday’s games count as regular-season games. The championsh­ip game on Saturday does not.

There’s also a big financial incentive to win in Las Vegas. By making the semifinals, all players on standard contracts have assured themselves of $100,000 from the league’s tournament prize pool; players on two-way deals get half of the standard-contract share.

That figure goes to $200,000 each with a semifinal win, and $500,000 each for the players on the team that wins the title on Saturday. And even for players like the Lakers’ LeBron James these games are significan­t.

“I continue to have this battle with Father Time, that for so long everybody has said has been undefeated,” James said. “I’m trying to give him one loss.”

The matchups:

PACERS VS. BUCKS Outlook:

Haliburton had the first triple-double of his career in the quarterfin­al win over Boston and has put himself into the MVP conversati­on for this tournament (and quite possibly the season to this point). Milwaukee’s offense clicked at a season-best level in its quarterfin­al win over the Knicks, with 146 points on 60% shooting. There’s no certain bet in Vegas, ever, but expect tons of points: The teams are ranked No. 1 and No. 2 in tournament games in points per game (Indiana 133.6, Milwaukee 129.6), field-goal shooting (Milwaukee .529, Indiana .516) and 3-point shooting (Milwaukee .463, Indiana .445).

PELICANS VS. LAKERS Outlook:

James has talked about owning a team in Las Vegas when the NBA inevitably expands once the new media rights deal is completed, and he’s clearly motivated by the prospects of being the winner of the first NBA Cup. The Lakers are 10-4 since starting the season 3-5. The Pelicans have been underdogs in all five of their tournament games to this point, and unless the line shifts by Thursday night this will be no exception. They’ll have very little burden of expectatio­n on them in this one, which will surely help their chances.

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