New York @ Indiana preview
Gainbridge Fieldhouse
Last Meeting ( Jan 11, 2023 ) Indiana 113, New York 119
With a playoff berth in hand and the postseason itinerary nearly locked in for the New York Knicks, head coach Tom Thibodeau might be ready to afford a few players a rare night off.
Known for his all-gas, no-brake demeanor, Thibodeau ruled out multiple key players for Wednesday night's visit to the Indiana Pacers, the first of two matchups between the longtime rivals in the final five days of the regular season.
Indiana is also sitting multiple top performers.
Both teams played Sunday, when the Knicks clinched a playoff berth by beating the visiting Washington Wizards 118-109 and the Pacers were eliminated from postseason contention with a 115-105 loss to the host Cleveland Cavaliers.
The Cavaliers are the next opponent that matters for the Knicks, who are locked into that playoff matchup. The Knicks (46-33) are assured fifth place in the Eastern Conference after the sixth-place Brooklyn Nets fell to the Minnesota Timberwolves on Tuesday night.
The Nets (43-36) still could tie the Knicks, but New York has the tiebreaker by virtue of a better conference record.
The Cavaliers (50-30) were locked into the fourth seed on Tuesday night, when they beat the Orlando Magic 117-113 and the third-seeded Philadelphia 76ers edged the Boston Celtics 103-101.
Earlier Tuesday afternoon, hours before the Cavaliers officially became the Knicks' first-round foe, Thibodeau said it was "hypothetical" to begin wondering how he might handle the final three games for his nicked-up team.
Power forward Julius Randle will miss the remainder of the regular season due to a sprained left ankle while star point guard Jalen Brunson has missed seven of the last 15 games due to hand and foot injuries. Guard RJ Barrett, who missed Sunday's game due to a non-COVID illness, is expected to return Wednesday.
"Approach every game like it's your last -- same mentality as the first 79 games," Brunson said of the Knicks, who are scheduled to host the Pacers in the regular season finale Sunday. "Nothing changes."
But the Knicks did shift gears on gameday. Brunson was ruled out for Wednesday's game due to what the team termed "right hand maintenance." Barrett remained questionable for the game after Wednesday's shootaround and Randle was confirmed out.
While the Pacers (34-45) have shown improvement following their worst season in almost four decades, the end result is the same after an untimely fade cost them any chance at qualifying for the Eastern Conference play-in tournament. Indiana has missed the playoffs three straight years.
The Pacers, whose 57 losses last season were their most since the 1984-85 team finished 22-60, reached the midway point of this season with a 23-18 record but are 11-27 since, including 2-7 since March 18. Only one of the defeats in the latter stretch has been by fewer than 10 points.
But with only two rotation members older than 27 years old, head coach Rick Carlisle is hopeful Indiana is on the verge of turning the corner. The Pacers have five picks in the upcoming draft and cleared more than $10 million in cap space with a series of minor deals at February's trade deadline.
Three of those picks will come in the first round.
"We're competing and there are a lot of positives from these experiences," Carlisle said Sunday night. "We've got cap flexibility and we've got assets. We're headed into a big summer and an important draft."
Two of the Pacers' building blocks -- leading scorers Tyrese Haliburton and Myles Turner were ruled out Wednesday -- and could be shut down for the remainder of the season due to injuries. Haliburton missed the past four games with a sprained right ankle while Turner has been sidelined the last five games due to a sore back and a left ankle ailment.
Indiana also ruled out Chris Duarte with an ankle injury.
--Field Level Media