CLEVELAND — Tyrese Haliburton hardly resembled the player whose peers have deemed him overrated.
The dynamic Indiana point guard scored 22 points — including a go-ahead 3-pointer midway through the fourth quarter — had 13 assists and made crucial defensive plays that propelled the Pacers to a 121-112 victory over the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday night in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.
''We're definitely the heavy underdog, but we're trying to control what we can," said Haliburton, who was voted the NBA's most overrated player in a recent anonymous player survey by The Athletic. "It gives us a lot of momentum for sure, but this is the best team in our conference. They don't lose much.''
About the only thing Haliburton didn't do well was shoot 3-pointers. On a night when the fourth-seeded Pacers were 19 of 36 from beyond the arc, Haliburton was 2 of 6. But the second one ended up being decisive.
The Cavs went ahead 102-101 on a free throw by Max Strus before Haliburton's 3 ignited a 15-4 run.
Andrew Nembhard scored 23 points and made two of his five 3-pointers during the four-minute stretch when the Pacers pulled away.
''We had an exceptionally good shot-making night, but the key word is aggression. We've got to be in attack mode to beat this team," Indiana coach Rick Carlisle said.
All five Indiana starters scored in double figures. Aaron Nesmith and Pascal Siakam had 17 points apiece.