Pacers 98
Wizards 95
March 4, 2018 | Capital One Arena | Washington, D.C.
With the Indiana Pacers in town, the Washington Wizards had the opportunity to win the season-series for the playoff tiebreak that would have given them a decent cushion for the No. 4 seed. Unfortunately, the home team could not take care of business against the potential first round opponent. The Wizards were able to claw their way back from a 15-point fourth quarter deficit, but late-game execution cost them and led to their first three-game losing streak of the season.

(Photo: Ned Dishman via Getty Images)
Slow Start Digs Deep Hole
After the first quarter, Washington already found themselves down 30-20 as they shot a mere 9-of-27 (33.3 percent) from the field, while Indiana was 11-of-20 (55 percent). Markieff Morris had 10 points on 4-of-4 shooting, but the Pacers rallied for an 8-0 run late in the quarter to take control. Head coach Scott Brooks was infuriated late in the first quarter when Beal was clearly fouled by Victor Oladipo on the fast break, but the Washington guard was not rewarded. In the first half, Bradley Beal was 2-of-10 from the field and Otto Porter was 1-of-7 from the field.
“It seemed like we couldn’t get over the hump, but I think that came from being down so much in the third quarter,” Jodie Meeks explained. “We can’t put that much pressure on ourselves to try to dig an uphill battle in the fourth. It was definitely frustrating, [we] couldn’t get over the hump.”
Bench Lineup Finishes Game
Jodie Meeks, Mike Scott, and Ian Mahinmi finished the game instead of Tomas Satoransky, Markieff Morris, and Marcin Gortat during a game that Kelly Oubre Jr. did not dress because of a sore left foot injury. The trio that finished the game on the court instead of the bench combined for a +/- of 28. I am still puzzled by the fact that Brooks ended the game without a point guard for the final eight minutes. Meeks was 1-of-6 from the field including 1-of-5 from beyond the arc in 26 minutes that could have been much better spent by Satoransky. “I have to do a better job of knocking them down for him. If I had hit a couple of my threes we would have won,” Meeks said.
“They gave us energy,” Brooks said. “The other lineup, we were down a big number and they gave us energy. We came from behind with that lineup, and I was going to roll the dice. I thought they deserved the chance to win the game. I thought Ian [Mahinmi] was good in the second half protecting the paint and rolling to the basket and might get some big shots. I thought [Markieff] was good but Mike [Scott] at that point–Mike was… the momentum changed for us. We were down 17 and we had a chance to take the lead with 18 seconds with that group.”
Bradley Beal Was Bad, Good, and Bad Again
After starting the game 3-of-15, Beal finished the third quarter with a driving layup after Indiana had a game-high 17-point lead. The All-Star shooting guard then went on to make five of his next seven field goals including a three-pointer with 3:06 to play to cut the deficit to three. Beal would then go cold and miss his final five shots of the game. His penultimate miss was a layup in transition that he short armed and did not get a foul call, while his final miss was a three-point attempt from the left slot that would have tied the game. Beal had a career-high 11 assists, but also had a crucial stretch with back-to-back turnovers that turned a two-point deficit into six in less than 30 seconds.
“He has to continue to trust what we do, and I think he will,” Brooks said about Beal’s late game play. “I thought the layup, he could have easily gotten two free throws off of that. He had some good, clean looks. The turnovers… the one early when I think he threw it to Ian on the left side, that’s the one that we wish we could take that one back. We just got to keep looking for good shots, and he’s going to continue to put himself in those positions, and this team’s going to continue to trust him and his coach is going to continue to trust him making those decisions and those positions that he’s in. He’s going to have to keep working through it all.”
“They gave us opportunities, we fought and clawed back into the game,” Beal said. “We knew we had the momentum. I felt like I had a great shot in the paint. My guy kinda clipped me a little bit. I still should have made that shot. I had another opportunity for a three at the end, they ran out. It was an easy pump-fake, just a three I should have just hit, plain and simple. Great plays that coach drew up.”