Pacers president confirms star’s absence for 2025-26 season

Basketball

Speaking on Monday to reporters, Pacers president of basketball operations Kevin Pritchard confirmed that star point guard Tyrese Haliburton, who tore his right Achilles tendon during Game 7 of the NBA Finals last month, will miss the entire 2025-26 season.

“I have no doubt that he will be back better than ever,” Pritchard said. “… He will not play next year though. He would not jeopardize that now. So don’t get any hopes up that he will play.”

Pritchard’s update doesn’t come as a real surprise, given how late in the spring Haliburton’s injury occurred. He suffered the Achilles tear on June 22 and underwent surgery the following day.

It typically takes upward of a full calendar year for players to fully recover following Achilles surgery. By the time the NBA postseason tip-off next April, Haliburton will be fewer than 10 months into his recovery process. There’s no guarantee Indiana will make a deep playoff run, or even make the playoffs at all, without him available in 2025-26.

Pritchard said Haliburton’s absence will create “opportunities to grow” for some of Indiana’s players. While Andrew Nembhard and T.J. McConnell are the top two candidates to take over point guard duties, it wouldn’t be a surprise if Bennedict Mathurin also assumes more of a ball-handling and play-making role as he enters the final year of his rookie scale contract.

As Dustin Dopirak of The Indianapolis Star relays, Pritchard went on to joke that Haliburton will have to serve as his general manager until he’s healthy and that he’ll “probably be better than (actual GM) Chad (Buchanan).”

Haliburton has expressed no regrets about trying to play through a calf injury to win a championship, suggesting he’d do it the same way over again if he could, even knowing he’d suffer a far more significant injury. 

Pritchard doesn’t share that sentiment, Dopirak notes, even though the Pacers’ top basketball executive believes the club would have won Game 7 if Haliburton didn’t get hurt.

Read More Marquis Schildgen

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