The NBA playoffs continue Tuesday with three Game 2s, including the Lakers’ return to to action against the Timberwolves after a stunning Game 1 loss at home.
Check out Yahoo Sports’ predictions for each first-round series, in addition to Kevin O’Connor’s ranking of the top 40 players in the NBA postseason.
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Here are the results and key takeaways from Tuesday’s games:
An already heated series between the Milwaukee Bucks and Indiana Pacers intensified on Tuesday.
But Damian Lillard’s return wasn’t enough for a Milwaukee win as the Pacers held off a late Bucks rally for a 123-115 win. The Bucks mounted a 13-0 fourth quarter rally to cut a 115-100 Pacers lead to two points. But the Pacers regained their composure to hold on for the win.
The series now shifts to Milwaukee with the Pacers holding a 2-0 lead.
Lillard not limited, but struggles from the field
Lillard returned to the Bucks lineup on Tuesday for the first time since March 18th because of deep-vein thrombosis in his right calf. He started and didn’t take his first break until 2:20 remaining in the first quarter en route to playing a full starter’s allotment of 37 minutes. But he struggled after halftime after scoring 11-first half points and finished the game with 14 while shooting 4 of 13 from the field.
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The Pacers, meanwhile, jumped out to a 31-16 lead that the Bucks never threatened. This was on top of a 19-point in in Game 1 in which Indiana led by as many as 28 points. Each Pacers starters scored in double figures as Indiana shot 48.9% from the field and 44.4% (16 of 36) from 3.
Milwaukee’s offense improved after a 98-point effort in Game 1, but not nearly enough to keep pace with Indiana’s efficient attack. Doc Rivers needs to find some adjustment in Milwaukee to keep avoid digging an 0-3 hole.
Milwaukee Bucks center Brook Lopez (11) and Indiana Pacers center Myles Turner (33) fight for a rebound during the first half of a first-round NBA basketball playoff game in Indianapolis, Tuesday, April 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
(ASSOCIATED PRESS)
These teams don’t like each other
From Halibruton’s Dame Time celebration in 2023 to Game Ball-gate days later to the Pacers upsetting the Bucks last postseason, there’s plenty of bad blood between these two division rivals.
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It’s spilled over aplenty in the first two games of the series.
Lillard mixed it up in Game 1 while in street clothes in a heated back-and-forth with Haliburton that prompted Pascal Siakam and Gary Trent Jr. to get involved.
On Tuesday, Lillard hit his first bucket of the series in the first quarter in his first action in more than a month. Haliburton swiftly responded with a 3-pointer in Lillard’s face and some words for the Bucks guard on his way back down the court.
Minutes later, Trent threw Siakam to the floor during a fight for a rebound.
Siakam popped back up and made a beeline for Trent before players and an official intervened. A brief scuffle ensued, and Trent and Indiana’s Bennedict Mathurin were hit with technical fouls.
The series wasn’t five quarters old, and players were already at each other’s throats.
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Then, in the fourth quarter, Milwaukee’s Kevin Porter Jr. grabbed the foot of Indiana’s Thomas Bryant as Bryant ran down the floor, drawing a flagrant foul for unsportsmanlike conduct.
With at least two games remaining in the series, there’s plenty of potential for things to further boil over.
Game 3 is scheduled for Friday night (8 p.m. ET | ESPNU, NBATV) in Milwaukee.
Ja Morant declared after the Thunder’s 131-80 pasting in Game 1 that “We will never play that bad again.” One game later, he is so far correct, but not nearly as much as Memphis needed in another double-digit Thunder win.
Tuesday’s game looked like it was heading toward another historic beatdown, with OKC up by 23 in the second quarter, but the Grizzlies managed to look like a real playoff team in the third, which they won 27-20.
It’s really not a great sign that we’re talking about how the Grizzlies finally looked competitive after seven quarters of basketball, but there’s not really much that can be said about a team facing the Thunder. When OKC is playing its signature defense, harassing the competition at all three levels, and committing four turnovers total on offense, it is borderline mathematically impossible to beat them.
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The Grizzlies showed life, and then the Thunder opened the fourth quarter on a 14-2 run to snuff it out. Maybe the Denver Nuggets or Los Angeles Clippers will do better next round.
Alex Caruso remains a menace
The Thunder’s trade for the veteran guard last offseason felt something like a hat on a hat, but it’s pretty apparent the Thunder believe you can never have too many standout defenders.
Caruso lived up to that billing on Tuesday, smothering every perimeter threat that came near him.
With 13 points off the bench plus four rebounds and three assists, Caruso was the kind of two-way asset every playoff team needs. Of course, the Thunder are full of those.
Game 3 is scheduled for Thursday night (9:30 p.m. ET | TNT) in Memphis.