2025 NBA Finals: How to watch the Indiana Pacers vs. Oklahoma City Thunder series with Hulu + Live TV

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder will play the Indiana Pacers at this year’s NBA finals, and you can tune into every game on Hulu + Live TV. (William Purnell/Getty Images)
William Purnell via Getty Images

The Oklahoma City Thunder are in their first NBA Finals since 2012. A win this year would give the Thunder their first-ever franchise trophy under their current name (they do have a championship title when they were the Seattle Supersonics), but MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his crew face serious competition against the Indiana Pacers. Tyrese Haliburton and the Pacers have proven they’ve got the determination; They’re chasing their first-ever championship title, too. 

Every game of the series will air live on ABC, which is available as part of a subscription to Hulu + Live TV. Hulu + Live TV is $82.99 per month without ads, but if you want to test it out, you can get a free 3-day trial before committing. 

Here’s a full rundown of the game schedule and how to get complete access to every game with a Hulu + Live TV subscription.

Date: June 19

Time: 8:30 p.m. ET

TV channel: ABC

Streaming: Hulu + Live TV

You can tune in to every game of the NBA Finals between the Indiana Pacers and the OKC Thunder on ABC, which is available with a subscription to Hulu + Live TV.

All games in the NBA Finals series between the Pacers and Thunder will air on ABC.

This year, the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers will play each other in the NBA Finals.

All times Eastern, winners in bold.

  • June 5 — Game 1, Indiana at Oklahoma City, 8:30 p.m (ABC)

  • June 8 — Game 2, Indiana at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. (ABC)

  • June 11 — Game 3, Oklahoma City at Indiana, 8:30 p.m. (ABC)

  • June 13 — Game 4, Oklahoma City at Indiana, 8:30 p.m. (ABC)

  • June 16 — Game 5, Indiana at Oklahoma City, 8:30 p.m (ABC)

  • June 19 — Game 6, Oklahoma City at Indiana 8:30 p.m. (ABC)

  • June 22 — Game 7, Indiana at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.* (ABC)

*if necessary

With a subscription to Hulu + Live TV, you can watch every game of the NBA finals – ABC is one of over 95 channels included with a regular subscription.

Live network television is just one perk of Hulu + Live TV. You can also access 95+ live channels like Fox, NBC, Bravo, FX, PBS, Nickelodeon, Lifetime and USA, too. Browse the options using the intuitive guide and even record live TV to unlimited DVR storage to watch any shows or sports events or your own time. Stream at home or on the go using the mobile app.

And if you change your mind, you can cancel any time before your next billing cycle.

Shohei Ohtani allows 1 run, throws 1 inning in 2025 pitching debut for Dodgers

Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani became a two-way sensation again on Monday against the Padres, pitching in a major-league game for the first time since 2023. 

His first pitch was a 97.6 mph fastball low in the strike zone, which Fernando Tatis Jr. fouled off. After three balls, Ohtani then got Tatis to swing and miss at a 98.3 mph fastball before the Padres right fielder hit a 99.1 mph inside fastball for a single. 

With Luis Arraez at the plate in a 1-2 count, Tatis advanced to second on a wild pitch, which was clocked at 100.2 mph. Arraez followed by lining a low 98 mph sinker to center field and advancing Tatis to third base. That put him in position to score on the subsequent sacrifice fly by Manny Machado

Ohtani probably should’ve had a strikeout on Machado, but the Padres third baseman was ruled to have checked his swing on Ohtani’s 1-2 sweeper.

Ohtani allowed only that one run on two hits. He recorded the second out by getting Gavin Sheets to ground out to second base with an 98.9 mph fastball inside. He got out of the inning with a 95.4 mph sinker that Xander Bogaerts grounded to third.

After leaving the mound, Ohtani didn’t go to the dugout to talk with coaches or trainers. He went straight to the rail to put on his gear and bat leadoff. He struck out swinging against Padres starter Dylan Cease.

Ohtani finished with 28 pitches, 16 of them for strikes, with three swing-and-misses. Anthony Banda took over to pitch for the Dodgers in the second inning.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts announced to reporters on Sunday that Ohtani would open the game, pitching one or two innings. He can then stay in the game as the designated hitter, thanks to a 2022 MLB rule change.

Typically, a pitcher returning from injury would go on a minor-league rehab assignment to face live hitters and play in game conditions. But with Ohtani so crucial to the Dodgers’ lineup, the team couldn’t afford to be without his bat. 

The Dodgers’ original plan was for Ohtani to throw to live hitters in simulated game conditions. But Ohtani believes that pitching a bullpen session requires the same preparation as throwing in an actual game. Thus, the decision was made for him to do so under shorter circumstances.

Ohtani had not pitched since undergoing elbow surgery in September 2023. His recovery timetable was pushed back after he suffered a torn labrum in his left shoulder during the World Series and required surgery to repair that injury. 

In his MLB career as a pitcher, Ohtani has compiled a 3.01 ERA in 86 starts with a strikeout rate of 11.4 per nine innings over five seasons with the Los Angeles Angels. — Casselberry

Normally when a starting pitcher labors through a 28-pitch first inning and surrenders only one run, the frame’s conclusion is met with a sigh of relief that the hurler avoided more serious damage and can recuperate on the bench while his team hits.

Shohei Ohtani, of course, is not a normal starting pitcher. Once Ohtani finally completed his first and only inning of work in his highly anticipated return to a major-league mound — an arduous navigation of San Diego’s first five hitters that featured breathtaking velocity with some shaky command — there was no time to rest. After a check for sticky stuff by the umpire, Ohtani didn’t even bother to set foot in the dugout. He shuffled swiftly toward the on-deck circle to gather his protective gear and prepare to hit. 

His singular two-way duties have officially resumed.

Ohtani struck out against Dylan Cease after working the count full, the first of five consecutive punch-outs for the Padres’ ace in a bold demonstration of his own spectacular stuff. (Ohtani got his revenge with a couple of RBI knocks against Cease in his next two at-bats.) But Ohtani’s return to pitching in the big leagues was the undisputed headline Monday and served as a refreshing reminder of his unfathomable physical ability on the mound — even if it’s clear he’s still shaking off some rust.

It had been 663 days since Ohtani had appeared on the mound in a major-league game. A second elbow surgery, a $700 million contract, a 50 HR/50 SB season and a World Series title later, he was back pitching, this time as a Los Angeles Dodger. From a pure stuff standpoint, it sure looked like the Ohtani of old. He ran his heater up to a sizzling 100.2 mph and averaged 99.1 mph on his four-seamer. He ripped off 10 sweepers with hellacious horizontal movement and one splitter at 91 mph that tumbled sharply. 

Although he coaxed only three total whiffs from Padres hitters (plus that missed call on the check-swing from Machado), Ohtani’s stuff looked crisp. It was his command that faltered and enabled the Padres to produce a run, which is no huge shock considering his extended layoff and the fact that Ohtani hasn’t ever been a pinpoint command artist anyway. That element of his game will round into form with more reps at the highest level, but it was encouraging to see the raw ferocity of his arsenal firmly intact.

Beyond the elite velocity, the most notable takeaway from Ohtani’s Dodgers pitching debut was his balanced use of two fastballs: nine four-seamers and eight sinkers. Ohtani introduced the sinker back in 2022, and it accounted for roughly 6% of his total pitches in 2023. Rarely have we seen him use both heaters so evenly in an outing. That could merely be the product of the small sample, or it’s possible that Ohtani was so amped to be back that he wasn’t executing either fastball grip especially intentionally. 

But if this was a purposeful introduction of a more diverse fastball attack, that’s an intriguing wrinkle to monitor as Ohtani continues to build up his workload and find his footing in the Dodgers’ rotation. — Shusterman

Rafael Devers debuts with Giants at DH, happy to do so: ‘I am here to play wherever they want me to play’

Rafael Devers is officially a San Francisco Giant. And he doesn’t care where on the field he plays.

The Giants introduced their new star slugger on Tuesday, two days after acquiring Devers in a trade from the Boston Red Sox. The deal took place after a public falling out in Boston in which the Red Sox removed Devers from his longtime position at third base and put him at designated hitter. 

Devers isn’t projected to play at third in San Francisco, either. That job belongs to five-time Gold Glove winner Matt Chapman. But Devers isn’t worried about it. He was the designated hitter for his Giants debut against the Cleveland Guardians, a game the team lost 3-2 on Tuesday at Oracle Park.

Here’s what Devers had to say on the subject at his introductory news conference.

“I’m here to give my 100 percent,” Devers said through his interpreter. “I don’t put any buts. They’re the men in charge.

“I am here to play wherever they want me to play.”

Devers went 2-for-5 in the loss with an RBI double in the third inning.

Had Devers provided the same answer to the same question in Boston, he might still be a member of the Red Sox. Instead, he’s taking a new approach with his new team that acquired him to compete in a loaded NL West.

Before joining the Giants, Devers played his entire eight-plus season MLB career with the Red Sox. He’s a four-time All-Star who very well could earn his fifth selection this season. He was the last remaining player on the roster from Boston’s 2018 World Series championship team. 

But the relationship between Devers and the Red Sox grew strained this winter after Boston acquired third baseman Alex Bregman in free agency. That signing presented the Red Sox with an obvious baseball decision.

Bregman is a Gold Glove third baseman. Devers, by multiple advanced metrics, is one of the worst third basemen in the sport. The obvious move was to place Bregman at third and move Devers — an All-Star slugger — to designated hitter.

But Devers made clear in no uncertain terms during spring training that he had zero desire to cede third base to Bregman.

“Third base is my position,” Devers said in February, per MLB.com. “It’s what I’ve played. I don’t know what their plans are. I know we had a conversation. I made it clear, kind of what my desires were, and whatever happens from here, I don’t know.”

Devers then responded “no” when asked if he was open to playing designated hitter.

Rafael Devers is slated to start his Giants career as San Francisco’s designated hitter. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ultimately, Red Sox manager Alex Cora made the proper baseball decision, and Bregman took over at third. Devers, the veteran leader of the clubhouse, was moved to designated hitter against his wishes. 

Devers might not have been happy with the move. But he continued to perform, with a .272/.401/.504 slash line with 15 home runs and 58 RBI through 73 games. Then came Sunday’s stunning news. A Red Sox team in the midst of a five-game winning streak and in the thick of the AL playoff race dealt Devers to the Giants.

Despite his dissatisfaction, Devers reportedly did not demand a trade. It added up to a stunning decision by the Red Sox that prompted questions Monday for chief baseball officer Craig Breslow and CEO Sam Kennedy.

“We worked at it, we had a different vision for him going forward than he had,” Kennedy told reporters during the news conference. “We couldn’t get there, what we felt we needed from him that would be in the best interest of the ball club.

Breslow floated the idea that trading Devers for pitchers Jordan Hicks (4.23 career ERA) and Kyle Harrison (4.48 career ERA) and some minor leaguers would make the Red Sox better this season.

“I do think there’s a real chance that at the end of the season, we’re looking back, and we’ve won more games than we otherwise would have,” he said.

As for whether Devers requested a trade, Breslow said this:

“There were times during the course of conversations with Raffy’s camp where they had indicated that perhaps a fresh start would be best for both sides,” Breslow said. “And we were committed to trying to work through this.”

Whatever the reason, the Red Sox are moving into a new era focused on rookie slugger Roman Anthony and other top prospects. With Devers in San Francisco, the Red Sox are off the hook for the remaining eight-plus years of his 10-year, $313.5 million contract

Top prospect Roman Anthony powers Red Sox past Mariners with 1st career home run in 1st game after Rafael Devers trade

Times are tumultuous for the Red Sox

But there was reason to celebrate on Monday in Boston. Top prospect Roman Anthony hit his first career home run. It helped spark a 2-0 victory for the Red Sox over the Seattle Mariners. 

The win came in Boston’s first game after the stunning trade of All-Star slugger Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants. Starting pitcher Lucas Giolito threw six shutout innings and was credited with the win.

Boston dealt Devers to the Giants on Sunday, sending the ninth-year Red Sox veteran across the country in a trade that sent shockwaves across MLB. Devers was the last remaining member of Boston’s 2018 World Series championship team and appears to be on pace for his fifth straight All-Star appearance amid another standout season at the plate.

If he does make the All-Star Game, he’ll do so as a Giant. The trade prompted hard questions for Red Sox executives Craig Breslow and Sam Kennedy about the state of the organization prior to Monday’s game. 

Once their media availability was over, it was time to get down to baseball. And for a night at least, baseball for Boston was a success, thanks in part to the No. 1 prospect.

Anthony came to the plate with the bases empty in the top of the first inning. On a 2-2 count, Mariners starter Logan Gilbert threw a 96 mph fastball to the upper outside corner of the strike zone. Anthony reached across the plate and pulled a deep fly ball that carried over the right-center-field wall. 

The home run was the first of Anthony’s MLB career in his seventh game since Boston called him up for his big-league debut on June 9. It gave the Red Sox a 1-0 lead that they never relinquished.

The Red Sox had won five straight games since Anthony’s call-up, including a three-game sweep of the New York Yankees, before trading Devers. Monday marked their sixth straight victory, and they improved to 38-36.

Questions will continue to swirl around why Boston chose to deal Devers as its season was starting to point up. But Red Sox fans can at least look forward to watching Anthony for the foreseeable future.

Giancarlo Stanton makes 2025 Yankees debut, going 2-for-4 vs. Angels

The New York Yankees — already one of the best teams in the American League — just got stronger. Designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton made his 2025 season debut Monday against the Angels

He went 2-for-4 with a single and a double before being substituted for a pinch runner in the ninth inning. The Yankees lost 1-0 in 11 innings.

Stanton, 35, is returning from injuries to both his elbows. He was shut down during spring training due to tendonitis in his elbows. He received PRP injections to help the issue in March and has made steady progress since then.

He started a rehab assignment Thursday and played in three minor-league games. Stanton had three hits in those contests, including a double.

Stanton’s return creates a potential roster crunch for the Yankees. With him expected to primarily fill in at designated hitter, the team will need to get creative with lefty slugger Ben Rice’s playing time. Rice hasn’t hit for a high average in 2025 but has been a solid source of power. The 26-year-old is slashing .227/.311/.460 with 12 home runs in 239 plate appearances. Rice, who played catcher in the minors, could see time at that position with Stanton back.

Since joining the Yankees in 2018, Stanton has experienced an uneven tenure. While he put up strong numbers with the team between 2018 and 2021, injuries have often kept him away from the field. Injuries remain an issue for Stanton — he has averaged 108 games over the past three years — but he has also started to see some age-related decline, hitting .212/.291/.454 since 2022.

Despite that, Stanton still has moments when he looks like a power-hitting superstar. He played a major role in the team’s playoff success last season, slugging .273/.339/.709 with seven home runs in 14 postseason games. That performance wasn’t enough to lift the Yankees over the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 2024 World Series, however. 

Stanton’s return comes at a crucial time for the Yankees. While the team has the second-most wins in the American League, it just got swept by the division-rival Boston Red Sox in three games. 

Any sadness about that series was immediately erased when the Red Sox shockingly traded slugger Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants on Sunday. That, combined with Stanton’s return, should give the Yankees the boost they need to get back on track vs. the Angels.

Red Sox ‘could not find alignment’ with Rafael Devers, leading to trade, execs Craig Breslow, Sam Kennedy say

Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow and team president and CEO Sam Kennedy met with reporters on Monday to address Sunday’s surprising trade of Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants

With the team beginning a nine-game West Coast road trip in Seattle (which includes three games against the Giants from June 20 to 22), Kennedy and Breslow issued statements and then took questions from reporters over a streaming video call.

Both executives repeatedly emphasized that the team “couldn’t find alignment” with Devers on his future role and the best direction going forward. 

“We worked at it, we had a different vision for him going forward than he had,” Kennedy said. “We couldn’t get there, what we felt we needed from him that would be in the best interest of the ball club.”

Without that agreement, Breslow suggested that the Red Sox would be a better team without Devers, allowing the front office and clubhouse to move in the same direction with a “functional and complete team.”

“I do think there’s a real chance that at the end of the season, we’re looking back and we’ve won more games than we otherwise would have,” he said

Breslow explained that Devers and his representation did not formally request a trade. But during conversations regarding a move to designated hitter and then a possible position change to first base, Devers’ people indicated that perhaps a fresh start elsewhere might be best.

Additionally, Breslow declined to specify whether the Red Sox talked to any other MLB teams about a potential Devers trade. However, he indicated that conversations with various front offices provided an idea of what might be attainable in such a deal.

“We rightfully set a really high bar to execute a trade of this magnitude,” he said. “Making this move made more sense for us than not making it. If we didn’t get the return we were hoping for, we would not have made it.”

Breslow also acknowledged that he frequently asked himself if the situation with Devers could have gone better if he’d addressed a possible position change in the offseason. He added that he hopes the next time such a situation arises, he can manage it differently before relations deteriorate.

“I need to own the things that I could have done better,” he admitted.

Devers was moved to DH over his objections after Boston signed free-agent third baseman Alex Bregman in the offseason. Then, after being asked to move to first base following a season-ending injury to Triston Casas, Devers refused and publicly criticized Breslow for his decision-making.

Breslow said that manager Alex Cora was behind the trade and supported it, noting that they are in constant conversation about the team. He added that Cora was the best manager to handle the player and coaching staff reaction to such a disruptive move.

“He understands all of the dynamics here and what we’re trying to build here in the short term and the long term,” Breslow said.

The full media availability with Kennedy and Breslow can be viewed here.

MLB All-Star Game voting: Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani top vote-getters in first round of results

New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge and Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani are the leading vote-getters in the first round of MLB All-Star Game voting released Monday.

Judge has received 1,568,527 votes thus far through Phase 1 of voting, according to MLB. If that lead holds, he’d be the first player to finish as the top All-Star vote-getter in consecutive years since Alex Rodriguez in 2007-08. Ohtani has 1,398,771 votes and could certainly overtake Judge before this phase of voting concludes at 12 p.m. ET June 26.

The leading vote-getters for the American and National League at the conclusion of Phase 1 will automatically earn starting spots in the All-Star lineups, bypassing the next round of voting. 

Here are the current leaders in MLB All-Star voting by position: 

C: Cal Raleigh, Mariners
1B: Paul Goldschmidt, Yankees
2B: Gleyber Torres, Tigers
3B: José Ramírez, Guardians
SS: Jacob Wilson, Athletics
OF: Mike Trout, Angels
OF: Riley Greene, Tigers
OF: Aaron Judge, Yankees
DH: Ryan O’Hearn, Orioles

C: Will Smith, Dodgers
1B: Freddie Freeman, Dodgers
2B: Ketel Marte, Diamondbacks
3B: Manny Machado, Padres
SS: Francisco Lindor, Mets
OF: Teoscar Hernández, Dodgers
OF: Pete Crow-Armstrong, Cubs
OF: Kyle Tucker, Cubs
DH: Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers

Ohtani is one of five National League players with more than one million votes, along with Dodgers teammates Freddie Freeman and Will Smith, the Cubs’ Pete Crow-Armstrong and Francisco Lindor of the Mets. The only other American League player passed one million votes is the Mariners’ Cal Raleigh, who is tied with Judge for the MLB lead in home runs at 26.

The Dodgers have the most players leading All-Star voting at their position, with catcher Smith, first baseman Freeman and outfielder Hernández joining Ohtani. The Yankees, Tigers and Cubs each have two players among the current lineups based on voting.

Voting totals for the top five players at each position are available at MLB.com. The next phase of voting will go from June 30 to July 2, when starters will be announced. The remainder of the MLB All-Star rosters will be revealed July 6.

The 2025 MLB All-Star Game will be played at Atlanta’s Truist Park on July 15.

To Thunder fans — if you can, travel to attend possible championship clincher in Indiana

Something tells me productivity rates are at an all-time low in Oklahoma. On the cusp of an NBA championship, the Oklahoma City Thunder have traveled to face the Indiana Pacers for Game 6 with a 3-2 series lead in the 2025 NBA Finals.

This is the farthest the Thunder have gotten to the finish line. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has carried his MVP dominance over to the playoffs. Jalen Williams is fresh off the best game he’s ever played with 40 points in Game 5. Chet Holmgren has shaken off any rust from his hip fracture.

Throw in the Tyrese Haliburton calf strain, and everything is lining up for the Thunder to win on the road. Not ideal for local fans. But doable. To win a championship at any level, you need a sprinkle of luck. Thunder fans have received some of that with this NBA Finals matchup.

Credit the Pacers. They got hot at the right time. They returned to the NBA Finals for the first time in 25 years. But the talent disparity between the two teams has been front and center in OKC’s last two wins. No such thing as an easy NBA Finals opponent, but there’s a reason why most picked the Thunder to win in five games.

Thunder fans also received some luck with the proximity of the series. This is geographically the closest NBA Finals in league history. Only 744 miles separate Paycom Center and Gainbridge Fieldhouse. That’s only a 12-hour drive. Heck, for Oklahomans, that’s nothing. There’s even a Missouri Buc-ee’s that served as the halfway mark.

If you’re a Thunder fan and have the funds to do so, you must make the drive or flight to Indianapolis for Game 6. While they’re best set up to have an extensive window, winning a championship can often be a once-in-a-lifetime accomplishment. Sometimes, even never. Ask Russell Westbrook and James Harden. Neither has been back at this stage since 2012.

There’s a decent chance the Thunder clinch at Indiana. You gotta make the trip. It’ll be an all-time sports moment you’ll cherish for the rest of your life. It’s worth the risk of the Pacers forcing a Game 7. Even if it hurts your wallet, this is why you become a sports fan and let that consume most of your life.

The Thunder are on the doorstep of an NBA championship. Don’t regret not being inside the arena for the coinflip chance that they celebrate a season-long achievement. You’re never guaranteed to be back at this spot. It took 13 years to get this close again.

This article originally appeared on OKC Thunder Wire: To Thunder fans — travel to attend possible championship in Indiana

Golden State Warriors jersey history – No. 15 – Paul Neumann (1965-67)

The Golden State Warriors have had over 600 players don the more than 60 jersey numbers used by their players over the more than 75 years of existence the team has enjoyed in its rich and storied history.

Founded in 1946 during the Basketball Association of America (BAA — a precursor league of the NBA) era, the team has called home the cities of Philadelphia, San Francisco, Oakland, and even San Diego.

 To commemorate the players who wore those numbers, Warriors Wire is covering the entire history of jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team. For this article, we begin with the 11th of 27 players who wore the No. 15 jersey for the Warriors.

That player would be Golden State guard alum Paul Neumann. After ending his college career at Stanford, Neumann was picked up with the 29th overall selection of the 1959 NBA draft by the (then) Syracuse Nationals (now, Philadelphia 76ers).

The Newport Beach, California native would play the first four seasons of his NBA career with the Nats/Philadelphia 76ers before they traded him to the (then) San Francisco (now, Golden State) Warriors in 1965. His stay with the team would span three seasons, his last in the league.

During his time suiting up for the Warriors, Neumann wore only jersey No. 15 and put up 13.5 points, 3.2 rebounds, and 3.4 assists per game.

All stats and data courtesy of Basketball Reference.

This article originally appeared on Warriors Wire: Warriors jersey history – No. 15 – Paul Neumann (1965-67)