Central Notes: Sheppard, Pacers, Bulls, Strus

After starting Pacers swingman Andrew Nembhard found himself in foul trouble during Indiana’s Game 3 playoff series loss to Milwaukee, reserve guard Ben Sheppard found himself playing more minutes than he had in the contests prior.

Across six minutes in the contest’s opening half, Sheppard notched a plus-6 plus-minus and nailed a triple. He went just 1-of-4 from the field in the second half, but finished with a plus-3 for his 15:26 cumulative minutes of action.

Per Dustin Dopirak of The Indianapolis Star, head coach Rick Carlisle hinted that he may want to play Sheppard more going forward.

“Time to get him involved,” Carlisle said. “He did some really good things in the first half…. He gives us another guy to chase Lillard around a little bit. Look, we need all hands on deck. We need everybody. Guys are gonna have to be able to come in and possibly play short minutes from time to time to help us with matchups, to help us with rebounding, to help us with spacing. You name it.”

There’s more out of the Central Division:

  • A lot went wrong in the Pacers’ 117-101 Game 3 defeat, as Dopirak details in another piece. Two-time All-Star Indiana guard Tyrese Haliburton believes that the foundation of the trouble was the team’s defense. “We have to do a better job of rotating,” Haliburton said. “I gotta do a better job of staying down on shot fakes. Ground and contest, second-jumper contest. It starts with me. That was my matchup to start the game, so I gotta be better, but we were rotating and I thought we had a couple of miscommunications that led to some open ones and he got hot.” Dopirak also notes that the club leaned too heavily on isolation scoring for All-Star forward Pascal Siakam.
  • The first round of the playoffs are already pinpointing the major problems in longtime Bulls president Arturas Karnisovas’ team construction, opines Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times. Chicago’s fast-paced offense and disinterest in defense both look suspect now.
  • Cavaliers swingman Max Strus has emerged as a perfect role player for the team as it gears up to sweep Miami, writes Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com.
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