INDIANAPOLIS — The Pacers were back to being themselves Sunday.
INDIANAPOLIS — The Pacers were back to being themselves Sunday.
They made shots. They defended hard for 48 minutes. Lance Stephenson regained his swagger and, yes, the reeling Pacers even looked like a playoff-ready team.
David West made three free throws in the final 15 seconds and Stephenson produced his league-leading fifth triple-double to give Indiana a 102-97 win over Oklahoma City 102-97, putting the Pacers on the cusp of clinching the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference.
“We’re going to treat it (the season finale) like a playoff game. We have to get that No. 1 spot,” Stephenson said. “That’s what we wanted from the beginning of the season so we have to take it, not get it, we have to take it.”
All they need is a win Wednesday night at Orlando or one more Miami loss. The Heat visit Washington today and host Philadelphia on Wednesday.
It’s been a wild second-half ride for Indiana (55-26), which held the top spot in the East from opening night in October until the last week of March. When the Pacers beat the Heat on March 26, they had a three-game lead and a seemingly firm grasp on home-court advantage.
As the losses mounted, though, Miami charged back and finally took the top spot on March 31. But rather than pulling away, the two-time defending champs gave the lead right back.
Miami retook a one-half game by beating the Pacers at home Friday, then fell into a tie with Indiana after losing Saturday night in Atlanta.
The Pacers went into Sunday’s game with six losses in eight games and the knowledge that all they had to do was win their last two — because they have a better conference record than the Heat.
Six players reached double figures including West, who had 21, and Stephenson, who had 17 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds. He broke Detlef Schrempf’s franchise record for most triple doubles in a season (four in 1992-93).
Paul George finished with 20 points and 12 rebounds and C.J. Watson scored a season high 20 points. The Pacers didn’t even need much from Roy Hibbert, who had six rebounds, no points and was 0 for 9 from the field.
The Thunder (58-22) shot 42.9 percent from the field, were 7 of 28 on 3-pointers and were outrebounded 46-32.
NBA scoring leader Kevin Durant had 38 points and Russell Westbrook had 21 as they rallied Oklahoma City from a 10-point deficit over the final seven minutes.
The Thunder, who were trying to lock up the No. 2 seed in the West, have no doubt Indiana can play with the best in the NBA.
“What’s surprising to me is the people who are down on them,” Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks said. “In an 82-game season, you’re going to have some tough times. Unfortunately for them, they’re having it late in the season. But all it takes is a game or two to get back on.”
What changed for the Pacers, aside from returning to their home court?
They were gritty and selfless, the starters who sat out Wednesday at Milwaukee looked well-rested and the bench that produced a big win over the Bucks looked more confident. While there were still signs of lingering problems, such as 21 turnovers.
Indiana stayed in control and closed it out late.
After George’s 12-foot runner gave the Pacers an 87-77 lead with 6:59 to go, the Thunder charged back, tying the score at 89 when Westbrook hit a 3 with 2:46 to go.
“We put ourselves in good position, we just couldn’t finish,” Durant said.
The Pacers wouldn’t allow it.
George broke the tie with a 3 and 2:09 to play, West followed that with two straight mid-range jumpers and Stephenson knocked down a 3 with 34.2 seconds left to give make it 97-91.
“We’re just trying to put together good basketball at this point and hopefully carry it into the playoffs,” West said.
RAPTORS 116, PISTONS 107
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — DeMar DeRozan scored 14 of his 30 points in the fourth quarter, and Toronto tied a franchise record for victories with a win over Detroit.
The Raptors (47-33) had already clinched the Atlantic Division, and the victory over Detroit was their 10th in 14 games. Toronto has reached the 47-win mark for the third time. The Raptors went 47-35 in 2001 and 2007.
Kyle Lowry scored 28 points for Toronto before fouling out with 5:51 remaining.
Andre Drummond had 14 points and 17 rebounds for the Pistons in the final home game of their dismal season. Detroit’s Josh Smith missed a fourth straight game with tendinitis in his left knee.