DDD-Sports > Basketball > The G6 curse in the finals may continue. It is difficult for the Thunder to reach the top even if they tie the seventh game at home?

The G6 curse in the finals may continue. It is difficult for the Thunder to reach the top even if they tie the seventh game at home?

When the finals are 2-3 behind, the teams that win the sixth game can often complete an incredible reversal? This rule has been verified in the last three finals where the situation has happened, and this year's Pacers are trying to replicate the miracle. In the 2010 Finals, the Lakers once fell behind 2-3 against the Celtics. In the sixth game, the Lakers, who fought back on the pressure, won the game and dragged it into tiebreak. In the final decisive battle, although Kobe made only 6 of 24 shots, Gasol became the key pillar with a dominant performance of 19 points and 18 rebounds, helping the Lakers narrowly defeat their arch-rival Celtics 83-79, breaking the curse of losing against the Celtics in the team history finals.

Three years later, in 2013, the Heat fell behind the Spurs 2-3 in the finals. In the final moments of Game 6, Ray Allen dragged the game into overtime with an anecdote three-pointer and reversed the victory. In the tiebreak battle, James scored 37 points and 12 rebounds, leading the Heat to defeat the Spurs 95-88 and successfully defended his title, completing the seemingly impossible redemption.

The most legendary reversal belongs to the 2016 Knights. In a desperate situation of falling behind 1-3, the Cavaliers won two consecutive games to force the series to tiebreak. In the decisive battle, James sent a nail-blocking block against Iguodala, Irving scored a three-pointer, and the Cavaliers defeated the Warriors, who set a record of 73 wins 93-89, becoming the first team in NBA Finals history to fall behind 1-3 but reverse the championship. James led the two teams with a comprehensive data average of 29.7 points, 11.3 rebounds and 8.9 assists per game.

Now, in the dilemma of falling behind the Thunder 2-3 in the 2025 Finals, the Pacers fought back at home in G6 and tied the total score to 3-3. This is the first time that the NBA Finals have ushered in a tiebreak final since the 2016 Cavaliers Battle. Although historical laws show hope, there is another cruel reality in tiebreaks: the away team in the finals tiebreaks only won 4 wins and 15 losses. Can the Pacers become the fifth team to win the away tiebreak, and continue to write the epic script of "winning G6 means winning the championship"? The answer will be revealed in the Thunder's final game. This tiebreak battle will start at 8:00 on June 23.

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