Paul George has been key to the Pacers’ 2-1 series lead over Miami because of his ability to defend Dwyane Wade largely without help.

"Paul George is one of the top five most versatile defenders in the NBA," Indiana coach Frank Vogel said. "He's doing a great job on Wade. Wade had an off night (going 2 of 13 in Game 3). When he did get free he didn't knock down shots. We can't give Paul all the credit. Wade's too good of a player to have shooting nights like he had (Thursday), but Paul is just competing, he's growing by the day and we're just happy about what his future looks like."

Wade, who is shooting 31 percent in the series, connected on just 2-of-13 attempts in Game 3.

"I wanted to come out and be aggressive on (Wade) again and force him to make jump shots, and he wasn't making them. I guess that will be my plan for the next game," George said. "We just pressured; we pressured and executed on the offensive end. They tried to take us out of a lot of our stuff, but we just made plays."