2025 Playoffs: East Final: NYK (3) vs. IND (4)

NBA playoffs: What to expect in Knicks-Pacers series

The Jalen Brunson-Tyrese Haliburton matchup takes center stage as each looks to enforce his respective team's tempo.

Will Jalen Brunson and the starter-dependent Knicks have enough gas against a deep Pacers team?

When the smoke cleared this week in the Eastern bracket of the NBA playoffs, the conference’s two season-long juggernaut teams were nowhere to be found. Cleveland (64) and Boston (61) each won upwards of 60 times this year, but failing four times in a span of 10 days was enough to send both into early summers.

Still standing: the New York Knicks and the Indiana Pacers. The former eliminated the Celtics in a Game 6 blowout Friday night at Madison Square Garden, after the latter stunned the Cavaliers and their fans at Rocket Arena on Tuesday, ousting them in five.

The No. 3 seed vs. the No. 4 isn’t what Las Vegas saw back in October for the East’s championship round. But what folks showing up or tuning in will see are two of the hardest-working teams in the league. Both are grounded in defense, with significant contrast in their ways of scoring.

This will be fourth time New York and Indiana have met this late, four victories away from the NBA Finals. But it’s the first since 2000, when the Pacers prevailed and advanced. In 1994 and 1999, the Knicks were the ones eliminating nemesis Reggie Miller and his crew.

More recent history is tough to read. New York took the season series, 2-1, but Indiana won their showdown last spring in the East semifinals, 4-3. Every one of their past seven meetings have been decided by more than 10 points – by an average of 20.7 points, in fact.

Expect something much closer in the coming days.


Series schedule

Here’s how to watch the Knicks vs. Pacers series: 

All times Eastern Standard Time 

  • Game 1: Pacers vs. Knicks; Wednesday, May 21 (8 p.m., TNT)
  • Game 2: Pacers vs. Knicks; Friday, May 23 (8 p.m., TNT) 
  • Game 3: Knicks vs. Pacers; Sunday, May 25 (8 p.m., TNT) 
  • Game 4: Knicks vs.  Pacers; Tuesday, May 27 (8 p.m., TNT) 
  • Game 5: Pacers vs. Knicks; Thursday, May 29 (8 p.m., TNT)* 
  • Game 6: Knicks vs. Pacers; Saturday, May 31 (8 p.m., TNT)* 
  • Game 7: Pacers vs. Knicks; Monday, June 2 (8 p.m., TNT)* 

* = If necessary 


Top storyline

Pace. The Knicks and the Pacers ended up in nearly the same space in their stats and their efficiency as measured over the 2024-25 season. They limited opponents to 113.3 points per 100 possessions and were separated by only 1.9 points per 100 on the offensive end.  

But the eye test provides the context needed here. New York favors playing in the halfcourt, letting lead guard Jalen Brunson find openings either for himself or his teammates. He and big man Karl-Anthony Towns combined for more than 50 points nightly in the regular season, and the three other starters – Josh Hart, OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges – better hit their double-digit averages because the Knicks’ bench chips in a league-low 21.7 while also playing the fewest minutes.  

The Knicks advance past the Celtics in six games, and now face off against a deep Pacers team ready to race up and down.

Indiana has been that rare team that can both pressure opponents 94 feet, then shift instantly into transition offense. They’ll even run after the other guys’ makes. Seven Pacers averaged at least 10 points or more; forward Pascal Siakam (20.2) was their only rep in the NBA’s top 50 in scoring and Tyrese Haliburton – while crafting a big-shot reputation – still is most inclined to seek out others with his passes.  

In actual pace, as the NBA defines it, the Pacers ranked seventh. The Knicks, just 26th.


Keep your eyes on

Towns from downtown. KAT has made the case for himself, in deeds and words, that he might be the best-shooting 7-footer in NBA history. He won the 3-Point Contest at All-Star Weekend a few years back, and his career accuracy from the arc is a strong 40%. His ability to spread the floor for Brunson and New York’s wings is invaluable, as is the demoralizing effect on rival bigs who don’t get out far enough to contest him.  

But Towns is coming off a Boston series in which he shot 3-for-19 on 3s (15.8%). Never mind the residual benefits of his prowess from deep; the Knicks rely on the big fella to generate points with those hoists. Indiana center Myles Turner (who also can hit 3-pointers) isn’t the most mobile defender, but other Pacers big such as Siakam and Obi Toppin can hang with Towns on the perimeter.


1 more thing to watch for each team

For Pacers: These guys can go 11 deep when they need to. Ten Pacers averaged at least 19 minutes, and the versatility in the roster allows for coach Rick Carisle to mix ‘n’ match as each situation requires. New York’s Tom Thibodeau has become somewhat notorious, to a silly degree, for riding his starters hard and sticking to just seven, sometimes eight, most nights. To the Knicks and their training staff’s credit, the minutes-gobblers haven’t broken down. Besides, there are longer timeouts in the postseason and no back-to-backs to navigate.  

But Indiana still has more tools, more looks and more adaptability in its toolbox.  

For Knicks: Anunoby is one of those barometer players, the Knicks rising or falling in concert with a lot of his individual performances. The beauty of that in his case is he can set that one at either end. Taking a greater role offensively since joining the Knicks two seasons ago, the sturdy 6-foot-7 native of London – by way of Missouri and Indiana – has helped New York to an 80-42 record (regular season plus playoffs) since arriving. This year, the Knicks have gone 28-10 when he scores 20 points or more. Anunoby also figures to draw defensive time on his old Raptors teammate Siakam, among others


1 key number to know

58.3% — Through the first two rounds, the Pacers have had an effective field goal percentage of 58.3%, what would be the highest playoff mark in NBA history.

The Pacers’ regular-season offense (115.4 points per 100 possessions) wasn’t nearly as good as it was last season, but they’ve scored 117.4 per 100 in the playoffs, easily the best mark among teams remaining.

Among the 38 players with at least at least 100 playoff field goal attempts through Friday, Aaron Nesmith (65.2%), Andrew Nembhard (60.6%) and Pascal Siakam (60.1%) rank first, second and third in effective field goal percentage. Nembhard has seen the biggest jump from the regular season (50.6%) among those 38 players, with five of the other seven Pacers who’ve taken at least 50 shots (all but Tyrese Haliburton and Obi Toppin) also having seen improvement.

According to Second Spectrum, the Pacers rank just seventh in shot quality in the playoffs (the Knicks rank last), but have outperformed the quality of their shots by more than double the amount of any other team. So they could be in store for some regression to the mean in the conference finals.

The Knicks had their worst defensive stretch of the season in Games 3-5 of the conference semis, but might have played their best defensive game as they closed out the Celtics in Game 6. Over the full series, they held Boston to 8.9 fewer points per 100 possessions than it scored in the regular season, having held Detroit to 5.1 fewer than its regular-season mark in the first round.

— John Schuhmann


The pick

Pacers in six. The Knicks haven’t been to the Finals since 1999 and haven’t won one in 52 years. Indiana only went once, losing to the Shaq-Kobe Lakers in 2000. One of these teams is going to hit the refresh button on championship opportunity. The Pacers’ deep roster and their taste of this round last spring (they got swept by the Celtics) could be enough to swing this. Remember, playing more guys means more places to spread the fouls around, too, when the action gets physical.  

One thing that should not matter: home-court advantage. The Knicks hold the extra game by virtue of winning one game more than Indiana during the season. But both teams are stellar on the road. New York was 24-17, including 17-9 vs. East foes, and is 5-1 through two rounds so far. Indiana went 19-9 from Dec. 6 and finished 4-1 playing in Milwaukee and Cleveland during these playoffs.

* * *

Steve Aschburner has written about the NBA since 1980. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on X.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Warner Bros. Discovery.

Latest