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Pacers' bright future becomes much cloudier after Haliburton tears Achilles

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INDIANAPOLIS — Tyrese Haliburton took the Indiana Pacers to heights few thought possible after they started this season with a 10-15 record.

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Getting back might take some time after team officials confirmed Monday that the two-time all-star tore his right Achilles tendon in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, an injury that could cost Haliburton all of next season.

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The announcement casts a pall on his historic postseason run, which included a litany of incredible plays, buzzer-beating winners and occasionally unprecedented stat lines, and it helped propel the Pacers to their second NBA Finals appearance and within one victory of the franchise’s first championship.

“An MRI taken on Monday confirmed that Haliburton tore his right Achilles tendon. Surgery is scheduled later today with Dr. Martin O’Malley at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York,” the team said.

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Coach Rick Carlisle still believes that when Haliburton heals he will be every bit as good — whenever that may be.

“He will be back,” Carlisle said following the 103-91 loss at Oklahoma City. “I don’t have any medical information about what’s what, what may or may not have happened. But he’ll be back in time, and I believe he’ll make a full recovery.”

A healthy Haliburton certainly makes the Pacers a stronger team. They likely wouldn’t have made it this far without him helping to orchestrate three incredible rallies from seven points down in the final 50 seconds of regulation in three weeks.

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  1. Tyrese Haliburton of the Indiana Pacers sustains an injury during the first quarter against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 7 of the 2025 NBA Finals at Paycom Center on Sunday, June 22, 2025, in Oklahoma City, Okla.
    Pacers star Haliburton helped off court in Game 7 of NBA Finals
  2. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder celebrates with his son Ares after defeating the Indiana Pacers 103-91 in Game 7 of the 2025 NBA Finals at Paycom Center on June 22, 2025, in Oklahoma City, Okla.
    GAME 7: Gilgeous-Alexander scores 29 points as Thunder beat Pacers for NBA title
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But after scoring nine points, all on 3-pointers, in the first seven minutes of the biggest game in franchise history, Haliburton’s crash to the floor and sudden departure created a double whammy for Indiana.

Not only did they lose their leader, but Indiana also fell short in its title chase. Again.

“We just kept battling because we wanted to make Indiana proud, make our fans proud,” three-time all-star Pascal Siakam said. “We tried our best, but we’ve got to be strong. It’s hard to look forward into the future after you lose like this.”

But everyone else is, and the questions about Haliburton’s playing status could make this offseason murkier than expected for Pacers president of basketball operations Kevin Pritchard.

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There are silver linings, though.

At age 25, Haliburton is young enough to return to his pre-injury form and today’s medical advances could help shorten the expected timetable of about 12 months.

Many players, including some much older than Haliburton, have shown it is possible to make a full comeback from torn Achilles tendons, and Siakam has no doubt Haliburton will join the club.

“I know there’s more coming, it’s just a tough a situation,” Siakam said. “I think back a couple of years and basketball was just not fun, you know, and I got traded here and these guys, they just gave me a boost and playing with these guys is so incredible. I found joy with so much swagger and happiness.”

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That’s unlikely to change regardless of Haliburton’s health because his effusive, contagious personality even in the face of adversity will continue to be a key feature for Indiana. Players such as Siakam won’t allow that to change.

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But Indiana also will begin next season with a strong supporting cast intact and room to grow defensively.

Indiana’s deep rotation routinely wore down playoff opponents with its racer-like tempo, a model it could replicate again next season as it has done each of the previous two even when Haliburton didn’t play.

Nine of Indiana’s top 10 players are under contract for 2025-26, with starting centre Myles Turner the lone exception. Indiana’s longest-tenured player has a cap hold estimated at slightly less than $30 million, meaning if he re-signs for something close, Indiana would be barely moving into the first apron and could stay out of that spending threshold with another move.

The Pacers also have strong guard play from Andrew Nembhard and T.J. McConnell, who can run the show, as well as emerging defender Ben Sheppard.

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Aaron Nesmith and Bennedict Mathurin also demonstrated their scoring prowess in the postseason. Both also showed they can defend guards and forwards, giving Indiana perhaps the toughness and flexibility to overcome a Haliburton absence.

And Haliburton’s absence could create more minutes for young players such as Mathurin, Sheppard and forward Jarace Walker, a lottery pick in 2023.

For now, though, it remains hard to fathom — chasing a title with Haliburton possibly out for most, if not all, of next season.

“A lot of us were hurting from the loss and he was up there consoling us. That’s who Tyrese Haliburton is,” McConnell said. “He’s just the greatest.”

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