Jun 22, 2025; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton (0) is assisted after an apparent injury following a play against the Oklahoma City Thunder during the first half of game seven of the 2025 NBA Finals at Paycom Center. Jun 22, 2025; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton (0) is assisted after an apparent injury following a play against the Oklahoma City Thunder during the first half of game seven of the 2025 NBA Finals at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

The NBA has a problem with soft-tissue injuries. Achilles’ tears, to be exact.

Three of the league’s biggest stars — Damian Lillard, Jayson Tatum, and Tyrese Haliburton — have all suffered the same devastating injury. And Haliburton’s injury came in the most high-stakes setting imaginable in Game 7 of the NBA Finals. It’s no longer a fluke. It’s a trend.

Achilles tears have quietly become the most ominous injury story in basketball. Eight NBA players went down with them during the 2024–25 season alone — three from the Indiana Pacers, the league’s fastest-paced team. Haliburton. James Wiseman. Isaiah Jackson. No team plays with more pace than Indiana — no pun intended — and no team has felt the consequences more directly.

Jay Williams sees the connection. And not just with the Pacers but with the league as a whole.

This season’s surge in Achilles injuries has sparked a wider conversation about where the NBA is headed.

Faster play means more possessions, sharper cuts, constant stops and starts, all of which take a toll. That’s especially true for players who carry heavy offensive loads while adapting to a game defined by full-court pressure, spacing, and an emphasis on threes. As teams chase speed and efficiency, the risk of soft-tissue injuries like Achilles tears is becoming impossible for the league to overlook.

Williams used Haliburton’s injury as a moment to zoom out. On Monday’s First Take, he laid out why he thinks this is part of something bigger.

“This pace and this year’s pace for the NBA — 108.9 — is faster than any other season since the early ’70s,” he said. “And eight Achilles tears this season that we just went through. To me, that’s not a coincidence. That’s more of a trend we’re starting to see with what’s happening in the sport… And it brought me back to that [Kevin Durant] moment. You know, we talk about that Game 5 against Toronto in Toronto, where we saw it. You talk about Jayson Tatum, Dame. I just think as it relates to protocols and as we have more pace and space, as we have more ‘expand the court,’ more 3’s, it increases the problem of soft-tissue injuries like this.

“I think the NBA’s going to have to find different ways, protocols, to minimize these types of things that are occurring. Because the trend is going up and up and up.”

Williams isn’t alone in raising the alarm, but he may be among the first to frame it so directly. He’s not saying the NBA should slow down or change the way it’s played. He just thinks the league needs to figure out how to better protect players when the game moves this fast all the time. As pace keeps ramping up, there’s got to be smarter medical protocols, training, and rest, or else these injuries will keep piling up.

If this keeps happening, the real question won’t be how fast teams can play but how long their best players can actually stay healthy.

About Sam Neumann

Since the beginning of 2023, Sam has been a staff writer for Awful Announcing and The Comeback. A 2021 graduate of Temple University, Sam is a Charlotte native, who currently calls Greenville, South Carolina his home. He also has a love/hate relationship with the New York Mets and Jets.