Since nobody else has said it yet - another poor end-game decision by Joe to not call the timeout there. That JB shot was poor, in tons of traffic, too early, and the same kind of awful shot we have Tatum take in those situations when we don’t run a play. He was lucky/bailed out by the foul call that ended up being questionably overturned.
Not sure how you trust this guy when the games matter when he consistently doesn’t learn from these mistakes. The Pacers are hardly a defensive juggernaut, so you absolutely take the dang timeout there and get a better look at the basket than that, especially given our history of futility in those situations.
I mentioned it in one of the previous game threads ... I was listening to the podcast Mazzula did with JJ Redick before the start of the season and was kinda shocked at how he thought about end of game situations. How he approached them. He said what you want in an end of game situation is the ball in the hands of your best player and them taking the shot.
He was talking also about why he didn't call timeouts in those situations and it was basically well we have the ball in our best guys hands and this is what we want so why would we call a timeout.
There was no difference in terms of shot quality, in terms of location of where your best guy gets the ball, makes his move or takes his shot. You just want the ball in your best guys hands and you will live or die with what he does.
That is all you want down the stretch. Your best guy with the ball making the play. So long as you get that, it is a good possession to end the game.
It seemed like such a ridiculous thing to say and maybe he just didn't clarify his thoughts well on the podcast ... but watching all these games this season and seeing the same thing over and over, I have to take those words as an accurate description of what he believes a good end of game situation is. Best player, ball, let him win or lose the game. Nothing more, nothing less. Best player, ball. Make or break.