Pacers’ Blazing Start Fizzles as Celtics Unleash Three-Point Barrage in High-Scoring Rout
INDIANAPOLIS — For twelve minutes on Friday night, Gainbridge Fieldhouse buzzed with a rare and precious energy. The Indiana Pacers, mired in a season-long slump, played a near-perfect quarter of basketball, building a 15-point lead against the Eastern Conference elite. But in the modern NBA, no lead is safe from the tsunami of the three-point shot, especially when the Boston Celtics are holding the trigger. What followed was a masterclass in explosive offense and a sobering reminder of the chasm between rebuilding and contending, as the Celtics rained down triples to storm back for a dominant 140-122 victory.
A Fleeting Mirage: Pacers’ First-Quarter Fireworks
The opening frame was a stunning departure from the Pacers’ season script. Moving the ball with precision and shooting with uncharacteristic confidence, Indiana looked like the offensive juggernaut they aspire to be. They poured in a season-high 39 first-quarter points, connecting on 7 of 12 three-pointers. The ball didn’t stick, the shots were uncontested, and the Celtics seemed a step slow defensively. For a fanbase enduring a brutal campaign, it was a tantalizing glimpse of potential.
However, seasoned observers sensed fragility. This offensive outburst was built on hot shooting—a sustainable strategy against a team like Boston? History, including a similar collapse just days prior in Boston, suggested otherwise. The Pacers’ defense, ranked at the bottom of the league, offered no tangible resistance; they were simply trading baskets. When a team’s strategy hinges on outscoring an opponent by making every difficult shot, the margin for error is zero. The Celtics, unfazed, were about to recalibrate the game’s math entirely.
The Avalanche: Boston’s Second-Quarter Onslaught
The turning point was both predictable and breathtaking. The Celtics began the second period with a chilling display of firepower that vaporized Indiana’s lead in minutes. It wasn’t just the star-powered Jaylen Brown, who would finish with a game-high 30 points, leading the charge. It was the depth of Boston’s arsenal that delivered the knockout blow.
Boston’s second unit, led by Payton Pritchard and Sam Hauser, ignited a 3-point avalanche that buried the Pacers. Hauser became a human torch, hitting five three-pointers in the quarter alone, finishing 7-of-8 from deep for 23 points. Pritchard, orchestrating and attacking, added 29 points, nine rebounds, and five assists. The Celtics outscored the Pacers 48-26 in the period, a staggering +22 swing.
- Offensive Execution: Boston dissected Indiana’s soft defense with simple pick-and-roll actions, generating wide-open looks.
- Shooting Superiority: The Celtics’ 48.8% shooting from three-point range (20-of-41) was a stark contrast to the Pacers’ cooling off.
- Defensive Adjustment: Boston increased its ball pressure, disrupting Indiana’s offensive flow and creating live-ball turnovers that fueled their transition game.
By halftime, the game’s narrative had completely inverted. The Pacers’ early work was rendered irrelevant, a footnote in another blowout loss.
Star Power and Depth: The Celtics’ Winning Formula
This game encapsulated why the Celtics are a legitimate threat in the East and why the Pacers are anchored with the NBA’s worst record. For Boston, the victory was a holistic effort. Jaylen Brown provided the consistent, high-octane scoring. Derrick White (21 points) offered his typical all-around polish. But the story was the bench mob.
The combination of Payton Pritchard’s career night and Sam Hauser’s sniper-like efficiency gave Boston an insurmountable edge. When a team can get 52 points from its backup guard and wing, victory is almost assured. This depth is what separates playoff teams from lottery teams. Luka Garza’s 15 points further emphasized the Celtics’ ability to find production from anywhere on the roster.
For Indiana, the bright spots were individual and ultimately meaningless in the context of the scoreboard. Andrew Nembhard’s 18 points and eight assists showed promise, but the Pacers’ lack of a defensive identity or a go-to star to stem the tide during Boston’s runs was glaring. They were outgunned, plain and simple.
Looking Ahead: Divergent Paths in the East
The trajectories of these two franchises could not be more different as the season nears its midpoint. The Celtics (19-11), now winners of four straight, are solidifying their place in the conference’s upper tier. Their offense, capable of historic three-point volume, makes them a nightmare matchup. The key for Boston will be maintaining this level of bench production and tightening their defense for a postseason run. When their role players shoot like this, they are virtually unbeatable.
For the Pacers (6-25), the loss extends a demoralizing streak to seven games. The early lead and subsequent collapse is a painful microcosm of their season: flashes of competence undone by prolonged lapses. The focus now shifts unequivocally to development and the future.
- Celtics Forecast: A battle for a top-three seed. Their ceiling depends on health and consistent bench play. Games like this prove their offensive system is championship-caliber.
- Pacers Forecast: The race for the best lottery odds is their reality. Player development, trade deadline decisions regarding veterans, and securing a top draft pick are the only remaining stakes.
Conclusion: A Lesson in Sustainable Success
Friday night’s game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse was more than a simple win and loss. It was a vivid illustration of two competing NBA blueprints. The Pacers’ first quarter was built on the unstable foundation of unsustainable hot shooting. The Celtics’ response was built on systemic offensive principles, elite talent, and deep-shot creation—a sustainable model for success.
For Boston, the message is one of confidence: their offense can erase any deficit, on any night. For Indiana, the lesson is a hard one: in today’s NBA, a hot start is just that—a start. Without the defensive fortitude or the star power to counterpunch, early leads are merely mirages. As the Celtics continue their climb, the Pacers are left to sift through the ashes of another promising start gone awry, searching for building blocks amid the rubble.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
