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Game 4 Decisive Moments: Caruso Does It All as Rookie’s Brief Appearance Turns Costly

OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma City Thunder stormed back from a seven-point fourth-quarter deficit to defeat the Indiana Pacers 111-104 in Game 4 of the NBA Finals, tying the series at 2-2 behind a legendary closing performance from MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Winners

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Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (35 PTS, 15 in Final 4:38)
The MVP took over when it mattered most, scoring 15 of Oklahoma City’s final 16 points. After struggling early, Gilgeous-Alexander exploited mismatches against Aaron Nesmith, drawing eight fourth-quarter free throws while maintaining perfect composure. “He’s unreal,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said of his superstar’s clutch gene.

Alex Caruso (20 PTS, 7/9 FG)
The defensive stalwart delivered unexpected offensive fireworks, slicing through Indiana’s defense for floaters, Euro steps, and backdoor cuts. His efficiency (77.8% shooting) provided crucial support when Gilgeous-Alexander needed time to warm up.

Jalen Williams (27 PTS, 11/11 FT)
The rising star continued his breakout Finals with another aggressive performance, keeping OKC afloat with 16 first-half points. Over the last two games, Williams has averaged 26.5 points on elite efficiency.

Obi Toppin (17 PTS, 7 REB off bench)
Indiana’s lone bright spot, Toppin shot 7/12 (58.3%) as the only Pacer above 50% from the field. His energy kept Indiana competitive during their second-half drought.

Losers

Pacers’ Late-Game Execution
After leading by seven entering the fourth, Indiana:

Pascal Siakam’s Disappearance
The Pacers’ leading scorer (20 PTS) didn’t attempt a shot until the final minute of the fourth quarter as Indiana inexplicably abandoned their hot hand.

Bennedict Mathurin’s Costly Minute
Inserted after Nesmith fouled out, the rookie:

Rebounding Woes
OKC dominated the glass 43-33, including 4-1 on offensive rebounds in the fourth. This prevented Indiana from igniting their trademark transition game.

Turning Point

With 4:38 remaining and OKC down 98-97, Gilgeous-Alexander initiated his personal 15-5 run, attacking Nesmith in isolation while the Pacers’ offense collapsed into hero ball.

What’s Next

Game 5 shifts back to Indiana on Monday as both teams battle for a pivotal 3-2 series lead. Can the Pacers rediscover their ball movement, or will OKA’s young stars continue their ascent?

Key Stats:

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