INDIANAPOLIS — The Pacers have finally ended the franchise's 25-year NBA Finals drought, achieving the unthinkable after starting 10-15 and looking like anything but a title contender.
Now Indiana will try to exorcise the demons of its decades-long, snake-bitten history and actually win the title when the Pacers take on the Oklahoma City in the NBA Finals.
''It is really a special thing that happened 25 years ago, I wasn't even six months old,'' Tyrese Haliburton said after Indiana's series-ending victory over New York. ''There's a lot of fans who have never seen success from this organization, especially people around my age. They weren't alive for it.
"So it's really special what we're doing, and we're just trying to keep making this a special place, a place where people want to come.''
The Pacers play in a state where basketball is treated like religion, championship teams become royals and players and coaches emerge as revered figures when they achieve the unexpected like these Pacers.
But Indiana hasn't always been that dream destination for NBA players, instead being tabbed as snake-bitten franchise for most of its 48 seasons in the league.
— After winning three ABA titles, it took a telethon to save the financially floundering NBA newbie in July 1977.
— The Pacers made just one playoff appearance during their first decade in the NBA, losing both games to Philadelphia.