Indiana's Pascal Siakam went 1-on-1 against Boston's Derrick White as time was running out, backed into him a couple of times near the foul line, spun into the lane and then watched his shot kiss off the backboard and fall for what became a game-winner.
For the Pacers, it was joy.
There hasn't been much of that this season.
Monday night's 98-96 victory over the Celtics — one where Boston coach Joe Mazzulla answered every question in his postgame news conference by saying ''illegal screen" — sent Indiana's record to just 9-31 on the season, still the worst in the Eastern Conference. And that's even with the Pacers now on a three-game winning streak.
It's a far cry from seven months ago, when Indiana was in Game 7 of the NBA Finals and fully believing it was about to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder for the title. Then Tyrese Haliburton tore his Achilles in the first half, Myles Turner left in free agency and ... well, everything is different.
Except, that is, for Siakam. He was an All-Star last season, his third selection to the league's showcase game, and has even better numbers this season. And with the debut of another new All-Star format this season — U.S. vs. the World — the forward from Cameroon is hoping to get another invite.
''It's going to be an honor if it happens,'' Siakam said. "I'm not too focused on it. I just try to be the best player that I could be out there every single night. Some nights are going to be great. Some nights are not. But I just stick to the work and hopefully it comes with some accomplishments.''
Indiana coach Rick Carlisle has been campaigning. Siakam's heroics on Monday night made it easy to keep it going.