Current:Home > NewsPacers coach Rick Carlisle takes blame for Game 1 loss: 'This loss is totally on me' -MarketEdge
Pacers coach Rick Carlisle takes blame for Game 1 loss: 'This loss is totally on me'
View
Date:2025-04-16 08:13:05
BOSTON — Year after year, NBA executives vote Rick Carlisle one of the league’s best in-game coaches.
Carlisle, the Indiana Pacers’ head coach, admitted late Tuesday night he didn’t have his finest moment in the final seconds of regulation in the Boston Celtics’ 133-128 overtime victory against the Pacers in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals.
“This loss is totally on me,” Carlisle said.
The Pacers had a 117-114 lead and the possession of the basketball but turned the ball over on the in-bound pass, leading to Celtics guard Jaylen Brown’s overtime-forcing corner 3-pointer with 6.1 seconds left in the fourth quarter.
“With 10 seconds (left) in regulation, we should’ve just taken the timeout, advanced the ball, and found a way to get it in and made a free throw or two and ended the game,” Carlisle said. “It didn’t happen.”
Unlike many Pacers players who are playing in the conference finals for the first time, Carlisle is a championship coach with decades of experience.
He wasn’t the only one making mistakes in a game the Pacers will look back on as one should have won. Indiana committed 22 turnovers that led to 32 points. Beside the aforementioned late-game turnover, Pacers All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton lost the basketball out of bounds with 27.7 seconds left in the fourth quarter with the Pacers ahead by three points, and Haliburton had another one in overtime, leading to a Jayson Tatum 3-pointer that put the Celtics up 127-123.
“We made mistakes, so that’s an area we need to clean up,” Carlisle said.
Even Brown’s 3-pointer that sent the game to overtime is under scrutiny. Up three, why not foul and prevent a game-tying 3? That was the instruction. However, Brown caught the ball in the corner ready to shoot, and Pacers forward Pascal Siakam didn’t want to risk fouling Brown and giving him the chance at three free throws or a four-point play.
“He caught the ball and was face up, and Pascal decided to lay off which I understand was probably the right decision,” Carlisle said.
Said Siakam: “As soon as I got to him – I was a little late because of the screen – he was going up so I didn’t to do it (foul). I was a little too late. If you have an opportunity to do it, you do it. I felt like he was going into his (shooting) motion. It was a tough shot. Maybe I could’ve contested it better. It was just a tough play.”
The image of Siakam with his hands behind his back and Brown launching a 3 in front of the Pacers’ bench will haunt Indiana. At least until Game 2.
“A lot of things had to go wrong for us and right for them. They did,” Carlisle said. “We’ve got to own it and we’ve got to get ready for Thursday.”
The Pacers played well enough to win. They shot better from the field (53.5%-47.5%) and 3-point range (37.1%-33.3%), outrebounded Boston, had more assists and Indiana’s bench outscored Boston’s 30-13.
But those turnovers and refusal to call a timeout cost Indiana. Those plays not only sway a game, they have the potential to sway a series. The sixth seed can’t waste many opportunities against the one seed.
“We’ve been a tough-minded, resilient team the second half of the year,” Carlisle said, “and we’ve got to continue that.”
veryGood! (23)
Related
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Judge rejects former Delaware trooper’s discrimination lawsuit against state police
- Teachers criticize Newsom’s budget proposal, say it would ‘wreak havoc on funding for our schools’
- US security alert warns Americans overseas of potential attacks on LGBTQ events
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Spring Into Savings With These Very Rare Lilly Pulitzer Deals
- Scottie Scheffler emerges from wild PGA Championship ordeal looking like a real person
- Missouri inmate facing execution next month is hospitalized with heart problem
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Avril Lavigne addresses conspiracy theory that she died. Why do so many believe it?
Ranking
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- These Are the Highest-Rated, Affordable Hoop Earrings From Amazon
- My dad died 2 years ago of this rare, fatal disease. I can't stop thinking about this moment.
- Why Jessica Biel Almost Quit Hollywood
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- There's a surprising reason why many schools don't have a single Black teacher
- Q&A: The Dire Consequences of Global Warming in the Earth’s Oceans
- Dabney Coleman, actor who specialized in curmudgeons, dies at 92
Recommendation
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Putin visits Beijing as Russia and China stress no-limits relationship amid tension with the U.S.
A man investigated in the deaths of women in northwest Oregon has been indicted in 3 killings
Cassie's Husband Alex Fine Speaks Out After Sean “Diddy” Combs Appears to Assault Singer in 2016 Video
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
70 years on, Topeka's first Black female superintendent seeks to further the legacy of Brown v. Board of Education
Bill to ban most public mask wearing, including for health reasons, advances in North Carolina
Morehouse College to cancel commencement if President Joe Biden's speech is disrupted