Pacers Plan to Honor Paul George
Paul George had a standout seven-year career with the Indiana Pacers before moving on to other NBA franchises. Now, as a member of the Philadelphia 76ers, he’s speaking out about the lack of recognition he’s received from his former team since his departure.
Philadelphia 76ers star Paul George has shown different versions of his skills on each team. But the Indiana Pacers remain special. PG-13 started his career in Indianapolis after the team drafted him as the 10th overall pick in 2010.
Paul George recently returned to where to all began for him in Indiana with the Pacers, but yet again there was no acknowledgement of it by the organization.George was selected as the No.10 pick i
While he was unable to play in the game due to injury, and obviously not his first time back in Indiana, it was peculiar that the Pacers didn’t at least acknowledge their former star.
Paul George’s return to Indiana with the Philadelphia 76ers on Jan. 18 marked yet another chapter in his complex relationship with the Pacers. Though the star forward had a memorable seven-year stint in Indianapolis,
Philadelphia 76ers star Paul George opens up and gets candid on his disappointment with the Indiana Pacers organization.
Paul George has become the talk of the basketball world after expressing his disappointment over the Indiana Pacers' decision not to honor him with a tribute video.
Paul George admitted he still feels slighted by his former team, the Indiana Pacers, for never receiving a tribute video since his departure.
Dec 13, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Indiana Pacers forward Pascal Siakam (43) passes the ball between Philadelphia 76ers forward Paul George (8) and center Joel Embiid (21) during the second quarter at Wells Fargo Center.
Paul George expressed to Ky some dismay over the fact that he hasn't been honored as some other players have on returns to Indy. Per a league source, the Pacers' front office sees his concerns and intends to reach out to him - 8:39 PM From Nick Nurse's pregame availability: On Paul George's injury,
Dybantsa — the BYU-bound phenom who could be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 NBA draft — was at the San Antonio-Indiana games in Paris this week. His presence made sense for multiple reasons: he's made no secret that he'd like to play for the Spurs one day, and his father, Ace Dybantsa, used to play professionally in Paris.