The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Siakam thriving after trade to Indiana

- RYAN WOLSTAT

It has been just shy of six weeks since the Toronto Raptors cemented a significan­t makeover by dealing top player Pascal Siakam to the Indiana Pacers. Toronto has mostly struggled in the absence of its leading scorer as everyone adjusts to the revamp, but came into Monday’s road game at Indy with two straight wins.

Meanwhile, before hosting a strong Dallas team on Sunday, Indiana had gone just 8-8 with Siakam in the lineup. That’s a disappoint­ing tally to be sure, considerin­g he was supposed to be the missing piece to propel the Pacers toward the top of the Eastern Conference, but keep in mind that all-star starter Tyrese Haliburton, the NBA leader in assists, missed five of the games due to injury and was under a minutes restrictio­n and not at 100 per cent for the first four following his return. The Pacers are just starting to grasp how good they can be offensivel­y with a healthy Haliburton and Siakam linking up.

It started with a win at Toronto just before the all-star break, in Siakam’s much heralded return to his long-time NBA home. Siakam notched 23 points and seven assists in that one, with Haliburton finally looking right. Haliburton then nearly won all-star game MVP as the hometown hero in Indianapol­is and postbreak the duo dominated lowly Detroit in a laugher. They hadn’t played since and were facing much stiffer competitio­n in the Mavericks.

Haliburton has seven games this season where he handed out at least 12 assists without committing a single turnover and most of those games came without Siakam. It’s going to be interestin­g to see what they can do together.

Overall, Siakam has been outstandin­g in his first 16 games as a Pacer. He’s shot a torrid 44 per cent from three (including an unsustaina­ble 61.5 per cent from the corners), well above his 31.7 per cent shooting this season as a Raptor, is turning the ball over less, rebounding better and looking more active defensivel­y. No longer worried about his next contract (Siakam is going to be paid in full by the Pacers on a new long-tern deal) or dealing with endless trade rumours, Siakam looks free and has flourished. He hasn’t shot worse than 47 per cent since Feb. 1 (nine games) and Indiana had won 3-of-4.

Three of the players acquired through the spoils of the Siakam trade, Bruce Brown, Kelly Olynyk and Ochai Agbaji, are starting to play extremely well for the Raptors, making up a big part of a suddenly dangerous bench.

One of the draft picks the Pacers sent to Toronto (likely the worst of the three) was the main piece that went to Utah for Olynyk and Agbaji, while Brown was the player who went north, along with Jordan Nwora who hasn’t made an impact yet. Brown, Olynyk, Agbaji, rookie Gradey Dick and one of Scottie Barnes or Immanuel Quickley have gelled nicely since the deal, particular­ly lately.

Toronto will also get Indiana’s first round pick in 2026 and this summer.

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