Indiana Pacers 104-111 Oklahoma City Thunder Game 4 LIVE: Highlights and Reaction - NBA Finals 2025

us for Game 4 from the Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indiana

Indiana Pacers vs Oklahoma City Thunder - NBA Finals 2025
Updated

Hello everyone and welcome to another MARCA in English live blog, this time taking you through Game 4 of the 2025 NBA Finals between the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder.

Pacers hosts the Thunder at Gainbridge Fieldhouse, leading the series 2-1, as this clash could either tilt the championship decisively toward Indiana or breathe new life into Oklahoma City's title hopes.

A 3-1 lead would push Indiana to the brink of its first-ever NBA championship, and history is firmly on their side, teams leading 3-1 in the Finals go on to win the title over 95% of the time. But the Thunder, who have yet to lose back-to-back games this postseason, are desperate to avoid that fate and reclaim home-court advantage.

Despite a subdued 24-point outing in Game 3, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander remains the focal point of the Thunder offense, averaging over 30 points in the postseason. He'll need help from Jalen Williams, who posted 26 in Game 3, and improved bench contributions from players like Alex Caruso and Cason Wallace.

Indiana Pacers vs Oklahoma City Thunder Game 4 LIVE - Latest Updates

09:04

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander makes a 3-point jump shot from 27 feet out. Jalen Williams with the assist.

08:08

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander blocks a 3-point Tyrese Haliburton jump shot from 30 feet out.

08:36

Alex Caruso makes a 3-point jump shot from 26 feet out. Jalen Williams with the assist.

07:49

Obi Toppin makes a 3-point jump shot from 24 feet out. Tyrese Haliburton with the assist.

07:20

Obi Toppin makes a 3-point jump shot from 27 feet out. Pascal Siakam with the assist.

05:35

Andrew Nembhard makes a 3-point jump shot from 23 feet out. Tyrese Haliburton with the assist.

04:43

Pascal Siakam makes a 3-point jump shot from 26 feet out. Myles Turner with the assist.

07:50

Aaron Nesmith makes a 3-point jump shot from 24 feet out. Tyrese Haliburton with the assist.

02:52

Ben Sheppard makes a 3-point jump shot from 27 feet out. Aaron Nesmith with the assist.

00:11

Bennedict Mathurin makes a 3-point jump shot from 24 feet out. T.J. McConnell with the assist.

07:20

Luguentz Dort makes a 3-point jump shot from 27 feet out. Aaron Wiggins with the assist.

05:48

Obi Toppin makes a jump shot from 16 feet out. Tyrese Haliburton with the assist.

05:28

Obi Toppin makes a jump shot from 11 feet out. Andrew Nembhard with the assist.

04:59

Andrew Nembhard makes a 3-point jump shot from 24 feet out. Pascal Siakam with the assist.

03:56

Myles Turner makes a jump shot from 15 feet out. Tyrese Haliburton with the assist.

02:39

Tyrese Haliburton makes a 3-point jump shot from 32 feet out. Andrew Nembhard with the assist.

01:53

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander makes a jump shot from 9 feet out. Isaiah Hartenstein with the assist.

01:25

Aaron Nesmith makes a 3-point jump shot from 24 feet out. Tyrese Haliburton with the assist.

00:52

Pascal Siakam makes a 3-point jump shot from 24 feet out. Aaron Nesmith with the assist.

00:00

Jump Ball: Chet Holmgren vs. Myles Turner -- Shai Gilgeous-Alexander gains possession.

New challenges for Indiana -- and OKC

Hartenstein adds size and rim protection, but Tyrese Haliburton loves attacking slower bigs in space. Meanwhile, Pascal Siakam may look to bully Holmgren in the post. Still, the Thunder should own the glass -- forcing Indiana to win this one from the perimeter.

Double-big look returns -- will it pay off?

The Holmgren-Hartenstein combo is +7 in limited Finals minutes, but the smaller lineup with Cason Wallace had also built strong first-quarter leads. Wallace has struggled overall, and removing him takes away a defender Indiana was targeting in mismatches.

Thunder revert to big lineup with Hartenstein starting

After dropping the first three games of the Finals, OKC is shaking things up, putting Isaiah Hartenstein back in the starting five alongside SGA, Lu Dort, Jalen Williams, and Chet Holmgren.

Haliburton's control, Mathurin's spark, and Indiana's grit

Indiana's Game 3 win was a testament to their depth, defensive hustle, and composure under pressure. Tyrese Haliburton orchestrated the offense with near-perfect poise, posting 22 points, 11 assists, and 9 rebounds, while Bennedict Mathurin erupted for a career-high 27 points off the bench, tying a franchise record for playoff scoring by a reserve.

The Pacers bench overwhelmed Oklahoma City's second unit 49-18, with T.J. McConnell's disruptive defense adding five steals and five assists. That production proved decisive, as Indiana outlasted OKC in a fourth-quarter surge to win 116-107, holding the Thunder to just 18 points in the final frame.

Where to watch Pacers vs Thunder?

U.S. viewers looking to catch Game 4 of the 2025 NBA Finals can watch on ABC. If you don't have cable, the game is also available via ESPN, ABC.com, Watch ESPN, and ESPN Deportes.

Streaming services such as fuboTV, Hulu + Live TV, DIRECTV Stream, Sling TV, and YouTube TV offer ABC access -- many with free trials for new s.

What time does Pacers vs Thunder start?

Those hoping to watch the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers can tune in on ABC at 20:30 ET / 17:30 PT. Pregame coverage begins a bit earlier, building up to tip-off.