Short takes: Pacers' intensity, Hawks' mistakes key loss

The Indiana Pacers celebrate a 91-88 victory against the the Atlanta Hawks as Pero Antic (6) walks off the court after missing a 3-pointer that would have tied the game as the Hawks' Kyle Korver, left, reacts after Game 4 of an NBA Eastern Conference quarterfinal at Philips Arena in Atlanta, Saturday, April 26, 2014. Indiana's win ties the series. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/MCT) The reactions by Kyle Korver and Pero Antic tell the story for the end of Game 4 for the Hawks. (Curtis Compton)

The Indiana Pacers celebrate a 91-88 victory against the the Atlanta Hawks as Pero Antic (6) walks off the court after missing a 3-pointer that would have tied the game as the Hawks' Kyle Korver, left, reacts after Game 4 of an NBA Eastern Conference quarterfinal at Philips Arena in Atlanta, Saturday, April 26, 2014. Indiana's win ties the series. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/MCT) The reactions by Kyle Korver and Pero Antic tell the story for the end of Game 4 for the Hawks. (Curtis Compton)

I'll be back soon on the Hawks' 91-88 loss to the Indiana Pacers, which evened the playoff series at 2-2. Until then, here are my three "Short Takes" on the game:

1. WAKE-UP CALL? This wasn't necessarily a dominating performance by Indiana. They were being steam-rolled by the Hawks in the second quarter -- 19-8 to open the quarter, including 15-2 in one stretch -- and David West and Paul George both missed consecutive free throws down the stretch. But the Pacers finally showed a heartbeat in Game 4, and that could mean trouble for the Hawks the rest of this series. Because for all of the great things the Hawks have done, Indiana is a more talented team and if it can match Atlanta's effort, they'll win.

2. IT STARTS WITH WEST: Paul George led Indiana with 24 points. But the Pacers don't win Game 4 without forward David West. Indy has taken a pounding in the court of public opinion for seeming distracted and their perceived lack of effort in this series but don't include West in that mix. He worked hard at both ends of the court, and in the second quarter implored his teammates to get into the game and even yelled at the bench, "Let's go!" Eventually, Indy teammates caught on that this was a playoff series and it, you know, mattered. The Pacers battled the rest of the way.

3. OPPORTUNITY LOST: The Hawks will go back to Indy believing they should be holding a 3-1 series lead. They led by as much as 10 points in the third quarter. They led by five points 83-78 with four and a half minutes left. But they committed nine turnovers in the second half, shot poorly down the stretch and finally met up with an opponent that matched them in intensity. This team isn't talented enough to get away with mistakes in close games.