New York Post

Haliburton vows to stay aggressive

- By BRIAN LEWIS brian.lewis@nypost.com

INDIANAPOL­IS — It’s hard to pick out which body part is hurting Tyrese Haliburton the most. Foot? Back? Hamstring?

But there’s clearly nothing wrong with his heart. The Pacers star has shown plenty of that in bouncing back from his offensive funk and lifting Indiana back into this Eastern Conference semifinals series.

The sight of Haliburton driving with abandon to power Friday’s 111-106 Game 3 win over the Knicks, then having to steady himself on the rails as he gimped up and down to the postgame podium, told the tale better than words could.

“My just overall body right now,” Haliburton said. “I’m hurting. But they’ve got guys hurting, too. We’ve got to understand that everybody’s hurting right now. Thank God we’ve got a day in-between. I’m young, and I’ll heal up and be ready on Sunday.”

Indiana goes into Sunday’s 3:30 p.m. Game 4 matinee trailing 2-1 in the best-of-seven series. It could’ve easily been 3-0 if not for Haliburton, who had 35 points, seven assists and two steals.

“Just getting downhill,” Haliburton said, shrugging. “Being aggressive, being who I am.”

But Haliburton, who has been dealing with a bad back, took a hard fall on his tailbone with 9:25 to play. Then he had a steal and layup with 7:42 left, but rolled his ankle avoiding Josh Hart on the finish. He didn’t score again, missing his final three shots.

Haliburton is officially listed as questionab­le for Sunday with a number of ailments: low back spasms, sacral contusion (essentiall­y a back bruise) and a right ankle sprain.

“He got banged up,” Carlisle said. “The hope is he’s going to be OK for Sunday. I think it’s going to be hard to keep him out of the game.”

Indiana doesn’t just need the NBA assist champ. They need him aggressive in Game 4 and beyond, the same way he was in Game 3.

Haliburton had his most points and shots (26) since a Nov. 30 loss in Miami, before the hamstring injury that has been a clear line of demarcatio­n for his season. The All-Star has been a shadow of his former self since that Jan. 8 strain.

“Whether he’s scoring a lot of points or not,” Carlisle said, “his aggression is going to be important in every game.”

The Pacers need it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States