New York Post

Haliburton resurfaces in defeat

- By BRIAN LEWIS

The Pacers lost Wednesday’s game, but it looks like they found their missing star.

Indiana suffered a 130-121 defeat to the Knicks in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference semis, but Tyrese Haliburton broke out of his funk.

The All-Star shook off a bad back and an offensive slump to score a game-high 34 points on 11 of 19 shooting, 7 of 11 from behind the arc.

Haliburton added nine assists, six rebounds, three steals and one huge lift for Indiana. The Pacers just weren’t good enough Wednesday to take advantage of it — but they hope they will be in Games 3 and 4 at home.

“I just shot more shots, took what the defense gave me,” said Haliburton. “[I hit] 11 of 19, so enough went in. But just got to be better defensivel­y. We’ve got to be better as a group, match their intensity, be better in the second half. The third quarter got away from us and flipped the game, but we were right there in the fourth. Just didn’t make enough plays down the stretch.”

The Pacers had little hope in this series with their offensive engine playing the way he had throughout the postseason. Now, going back home down 0-2, they at least have a puncher’s chance if they can hold serve at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

The Pacers had hoped Haliburton had bottomed out in their first-round series, shooting 43.5 percent and just 29.6 from 3-point range. Then came Monday’s disaster, when he managed just six points — one-third his average — and finished minus-12. He added three late turnovers in a Game 1 loss.

Indiana needed a bounce-back performanc­e from Haliburton and got one. He came out of the gate firing, keeping them afloat even as they surrendere­d 76 percent shooting. The All-Star had 13 points and four boards, whatever tweaks he and the Pacers made at practice clearly working.

Haliburton has dealt with health woes, struggling since a midseason hamstring injury that forced him to miss 10 of 11 games in January. Before that layoff, he averaged 23.6 points and 12.6 assists on 49.6 percent shooting and 40 percent from deep. But he hasn’t been the same since.

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