Tyrese Haliburton arrived for a photoshoot in a Las Vegas casino last summer holding onto a pair of silver-tipped cowboy boots and a grudge.
Before the Indiana Pacers guard slipped into a denim outfit and in front of a magazine’s camera, he rattled off all he was grateful for: consecutive appearances at the league’s All-Star game, a contract that would pay him an average of about $52 million annually, and an invitation to play for the United States in the Paris Olympics.
Yet what Haliburton seemed especially thankful for was something else entirely — a perceived criticism that “everybody thinks my success in the first half of last season was a fluke,” he said.
For a player who had gone from effectively being cut from his teenaged travel squad to an NBA All-Star in less than a decade while fueled by collecting slights, it might as well have been like being handed a gift.
“I’m at my best,” Haliburton told me then, “when people are talking s— about me.”
One year later, the NBA is learning that still holds true.
Since being named the NBA’s “most overrated” player in April by an anonymous vote of his peers, as polled by The Athletic, Haliburton has authored a revenge tour that has landed Indiana in the Eastern Conference Finals for a second consecutive season. The Pacers are now four wins away from their first appearance in the NBA Finals in 25 years.
As Haliburton was making all five 3-pointers he attempted in the second quarter of Tuesday’s Game 5 against Cleveland — en route to 31 points in the series-clinching victory that knocked out the Eastern Conference’s top seed — none less than LeBron James referenced, and refuted, the overrated label.