INDIANAPOLIS — Tyrese Haliburton would not be playing on Thursday if this were a regular season game. He probably would be sidelined for a week or two if this was December or January.
But this is June. It's the NBA Finals. The Indiana Pacers' season is on the line. That's why — even with a strained right calf — Haliburton is trying to find any way possible to play in the win-or-else Game 6 that awaits against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday night.
Will the Pacers' star guard and Olympic gold medalist play or not? That's the big question going into Game 6, and there probably won't be an answer until a few hours before the 8:40 p.m. Eastern tip-off time on Thursday night.
''I think I have to be as smart as I want to be,'' Haliburton said Wednesday. ''Have to understand the risks, ask the right questions. I'm a competitor. I want to play. I'm going to do everything in my power to play. That's just what it is.''
The good news for the Pacers: Haliburton did everything the team did in practice on Wednesday. The bad news: That only involved sitting through 25 minutes of film, a 30-minute walkthrough and then some light shooting while basically flat-footed the whole time.
''He'll go through the day tomorrow,'' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said Wednesday. ''Our prep session is tomorrow late afternoon. They'll get together and do some testing. That will determine whether he plays or not. If he doesn't play, we have a plan, obviously, if we're without him.''
Haliburton is trying every treatment he can think of right now in order to help his strained right calf, a diagnosis that was confirmed by an MRI exam on Tuesday. Hyperbaric chambers, needles, massage, electronic stimulation, special tape.
Whatever it takes.