Inside the dogpile: Thunder explain play call that set up Lu Dort’s game-winner

After Lu Dort’s buzzer beater to beat the Spurs, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Al Horford, Mark Daigneault and Dort explained the final play call.

As Lu Dort’s shot from the corner reached the hoop as time was expiring, the second-year wing slid to the floor. He saw the ball going in the hoop. Teammates sprinted over to pound on his chest and celebrate.

Basket. Game. The Oklahoma City Thunder took down the San Antonio Spurs 102-99 with Dort clinching the victory.

After the Thunder forced a Patty Mills turnover on the previous possession, head coach Mark Daigneault called a timeout to set up a play with 3.9 seconds remaining. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander inbounded to Al Horford, who drove and kicked it out to the wide-open Dort — but that wasn’t exactly the plan.

The coach and those three players described the set-up of the play and what actually went down.

Daigneault: “On the last play, Shai was the inbounder and we ran some action. It’s supposed to be a two-man game between he and Al, which includes him just taking a cut.”

It made sense that the Thunder would try to get the ball to Gilgeous-Alexander. The third-year guard finished with 42 points, a career-high, and he broke his previous mark during the middle of a 21-point third quarter.

Daigneault: “But (Jakob) Poeltl went for the steal and Al drove the ball and made the right play.”

Horford: “The Spurs were being aggressive, I believe they probably had a foul to give. I know that defensively, they probably wanted to get a steal.”

Gilgeous-Alexander had inbounded the ball and then taken a step toward Horford, looking like he may get the handoff and screen for a shot.

He didn’t get the chance, but even with 42 points, Gilgeous-Alexander wasn’t calling for the ball. He didn’t feel the need to take the final shot himself.

Gilgeous-Alexander: “If it needed to get to that, it would have got to that anyway, that was the way it was designed. Coach just tried to draw it up to get me an advantage early, to make the play easier on my end. It was like three seconds, four seconds on the clock, so I wouldn’t really have time to wind up.”

Instead, Horford took advantage of Poeltl attacking the ball on the inbound pass.

Horford: “I had different options. Once I saw that Poeltl overplayed, I just decided to go to the basket. As soon as I saw Lu’s defender commit, the ball was out.”

Dort: “I didn’t know where the ball was going to fall, so I was just ready to make the play.”

Dort caught the ball with two seconds left and all the space in the world in front of him. It was plenty of time to line up the shot.

He put it up. As it reached the hoop, he started to celebrate solo.

Dort: “It felt good when it left my hand. I was just staring at the ball the whole time. When it dropped in, I dropped too.”

Thunder teammates rushed to him to join him on the floor in jubilation. Dort laughed while explaining the dogpile.

Dort: “They were all yelling in my face. (Darius Bazley) was really close to my face, I was trying to get him away from my face. But it just felt great, seeing my teammates happy for me.”

Horford: “That was great, it really felt like a March Madness buzzer-beater type. You’re running, and emotions are flying high. A lot of energy, a lot of joy. Kind of surreal, you’re kind of shocked and happy, just a lot of emotions going on at the same time. Just so happy for Lu for hitting that shot.”

Dort: “That’s my first time making a game-winning shot. … You never know when it’s going to happen, and today was my day.”

VIDEO: Lu Dort hits buzzer-beater to lift Thunder over Spurs

OKC Thunder wing Lu Dort hit a buzzer-beater 3-pointer to give Oklahoma City the win over the San Antonio Spurs.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 42 points, a career-high. The Oklahoma City Thunder did not go to him for the final shot against the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday.

Instead, head coach Mark Daigneault had the star guard inbound the pass. He got it in to Al Horford as the Thunder players cleared out the opposite side of the court — all except Lu Dort.

If the Spurs were expecting Gilgeous-Alexander to take the final shot, it’s understandable. That’s what would have made sense. But instead, he was on the sideline, watching the play unfold as Horford created space to receive the inbound pass. The center got room and drove to the right. Help defense came at him — just as Daigneault drew up. Dort was ready. Bang. 102-99 final.

Oklahoma City got their second win in the last three games. In the end, the hero wasn’t Gilgeous-Alexander, who needed just three quarters to post a career-high — no, it was Dort, who finished with 16 points and hit four of the seven 3-point shots he attempted.

The second-year wing was outstanding in the clutch. He made three of his 3-pointers in the final 3:36 of the game.

Gilgeous-Alexander kept the Thunder in the game with a 21-point third quarter, and then Dort’s fourth boosted them over the Spurs. Oklahoma City improves to 13-19 on the season while the Spurs drop to 16-12.

Check back for reactions from the team.

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SGA goes coast-to-coast in 4 seconds to beat buzzer, cap 21-point 3rd quarter

Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander set a career-high after just three quarters, and ended the frame with a layup that took four seconds.

BShai Gilgeous-Alexander went berserk in the third quarter against the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday, practically singlehandedly not only keeping the Oklahoma City Thunder in the game, but putting them ahead going into the final frame.

The day after Gilgeous-Alexander was left off the All-Star team, he posted 21 points in the third quarter alone and capped it by going coast-to-coast in just 4.1 seconds on the final possession of the quarter to beat the buzzer.

By the end of the third quarter, he had already posted 38 points, which set a career high for the third-year guard. The Thunder went up 76-73 on this play that ended the quarter:

Just absurd. He scored 21 of Oklahoma City’s 36 points in the third.

Gilgeous-Alexander finished the third quarter 11-for-17 from the field and had made six of the 10 3-pointers he attempted. He was 10-for-11 from the line, and also contributed seven rebounds and three assists in about 30 minutes of play.

Oklahoma City will try to hold on in the fourth quarter and beat the Spurs, who are without DeMar DeRozan in this game. Tune to FOX Sports Oklahoma to watch the final quarter.

With Gilgeous-Alexander playing the way he is, it’s not something you’ll want to miss.

Aleksej Pokusevski had an absurd Harlem Globetrotters-like play in the G League

Aleksej Pokusevki had one of the craziest plays in the G League as he channeled his inner Harlem Globetrotter to get the ball to Moses Brown.

While people in most of the country on Monday morning were still finishing their coffee and breakfast, Oklahoma City Thunder rookie Aleksej Pokusevski was busy cooking up some magic on the basketball court.

Pokusevski and the OKC Blue tipped off the action in the NBA G League bubble on Monday with an 11 a.m. meeting against the Iowa Wolves, and the 17th overall pick produced one of the top plays to likely emerge from the season.

With just over six minutes left in the second quarter, guard Ty Jerome found himself handling the ball in transition. Pokusevski, who was near the rim, signaled for the ball for an alley-oop opportunity, but quickly ran out of room on the baseline.

Rather than turning it over, Pokusevski channeled his inner Harlem Globetrotter and smoothly tapped the ball back to Moses Brown, who finished with a layup in one smooth motion.

WATCH: OKC G Hamidou Diallo commits one of the strangest goaltends ever in 97-95 loss at Denver

The Thunder guard made an inexplicable play

There are moments made for “Shaqtin’ a Fool,” the place where NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal puts together some of the worst NBA plays you will ever see.

At the end of the third quarter in OKC’s 97-95 loss to Denver, Thunder guard Hamidou Diallo made arguably the most questionable play of the NBA season to date. Where did he end up? You guessed it:

This goaltend came on an end of the third quarter heave by Jamal Murray, and cut the Denver deficit to 9 heading into the fourth quarter. It was not only one of the strangest goaltends you will ever witness, but also ended up being the moment where momentum shifted towards the Nuggets. Seriously, what in the world is Diallo thinking?

Denver would go on to win thanks to a 12-0 run throughout the final four minutes that erased an eight-point OKC lead.

 

 

Mike Muscala’s five 3s helps Thunder score season-high 69 in first half

OKC Thunder big Mike Muscala made five 3-pointers and had 16 points to put Oklahoma City over the Portland Trail Blazers going into halftime.

Whatever Oklahoma City Thunder big Mike Muscala did over the last 24 hours after making only one of nine 3-pointers on Sunday night worked.

Muscala made five 3-pointers in the first half alone to help the Thunder take a 69-60 lead over the Blazers going into the third quarter.

That ties his full-game season high for 3-pointers. The 69 points that Oklahoma City scored is by far the most they’ve scored in a first half so far this season — the previous was 57.

Muscala had 16 points off the bench, a game-high. Overall, he went 5-for-7 from the field, all of which came from behind the arc, in his 11 minutes of play. He also made a free throw.

His first 3 of the game was the 300th of his career.

He spread his makes across the court, making two from the corner, one from straight on and two slightly angled.

Here’s his shot chart via ESPN:

With Muscala’s help, the Thunder took a nine-point lead into the half.

Oklahoma City is looking to break a three-game losing streak.

Guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, forward Darius Bazley and center Isaiah Roby all had 10 points for the Thunder.

Forward Carmelo Anthony led the Blazers with 13 points, while guard Damian Lillard had 12 and wing Gary Trent Jr. had 10.

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Thunder vs. Clippers game highlights, stats from OKC’s 108-100 loss

See highlights, stats and the video recap of the OKC Thunder loss to the Los Angeles Clippers.

The Oklahoma City Thunder lost to the Los Angeles Clippers for the second game in a row, but the 108-100 loss on Friday looked a lot better than the 120-106 defeat on Friday.

George Hill’s three straight 3-pointers in the fourth quarter cut the deficit to single-digits and put OKC in position to strike worry into Los Angeles. He finished the game with 22 points, just shy of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s team-high 23.

Kawhi Leonard scored 34 and was instrumental to the Clippers pulling ahead, particularly with Paul George scoring just 11, a season-low for the former Thunder star.

See highlights and stats of the Sunday game below.

Coverage: Thunder’s improvementsGeorge Hill’s aggressivenessPhoto gallery

https://embed.sendtonews.com/oembed/?SC=2Ja4rvzfox-1123217-8384&format=json&offsetx=0&offsety=0&floatwidth=400&floatposition=bottom-right&float=on

OKC Thunder (6-9)

Player MIN PTS REB (Off.) AST ST/BL FGA-FGM 3PA-3PM FTA-FTM
Isaiah Roby 26 10 10 (3) 3 1/0 5-10 0-2 0-0
Darius Bazley 29 9 11 2 0/0 4-7 1-3 0-0
Lu Dort 31 4 1 (1) 3 1/0 2-10 0-6 0-0
George Hill 28 22 0 2 2/0 9-12 3-4 1-1
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander 37 23 6 (1) 7 0/0 8-16 1-3 6-6
Aleksej Pokusevski 17 2 4 0 1/1 1-8 0-3 0-0
Mike Muscala 22 7 8 (3) 1 0/1 3-12 1-9 0-0
Theo Maledon 17 2 2 1 0/0 1-5 0-3 0-0
Kenrich Williams 14 7 4 (2) 1 0/0 3-6 1-1 0-0
Hamidou Diallo 20 14 5 (2) 2 2/0 6-9 0-1 2-7

Los Angeles Clippers (13-4)

Player MIN PTS REB (Off.) AST ST/BL FGA-FGM 3PA-3PM FTA-FTM
Nicolas Batum 36 7 3 2 1/0 3-7 1-5 0-0
Kawhi Leonard 36 34 9 (1) 8 0/0 14-24 4-9 2-2
Serge Ibaka 22 17 6 (2) 1 0/0 7-8 2-2 1-2
Patrick Beverley 13 7 4 (1) 3 2/0 2-7 1-5 2-2
Paul George 33 11 5 4 1/0 4-13 2-8 1-2
Patrick Patterson 12 0 0 0 0/0 0-4 0-4 0-0
Ivica Zubac 24 10 11 (2) 1 0/2 5-6 0-0 0-0
Reggie Jackson 20 14 0 1 0/0 4-8 2-4 4-6
Lou Williams 14 5 1 1 0/0 1-9 1-4 2-2
Terance Mann 4 0 3 (1) 1 0/0 0-1 0-1 0-0
Luke Kennard 24 3 3 (1) 4 0/0 1-5 1-4 0-0
Amir Coffee 0 0 1 0 0/0 0-0 0-0 0-0

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Thunder vs. Clippers game highlights, stats from OKC’s 108-100 loss

See highlights, stats and the video recap of the OKC Thunder loss to the Los Angeles Clippers.

The Oklahoma City Thunder lost to the Los Angeles Clippers for the second game in a row, but the 108-100 loss on Friday looked a lot better than the 120-106 defeat on Friday.

George Hill’s three straight 3-pointers in the fourth quarter cut the deficit to single-digits and put OKC in position to strike worry into Los Angeles. He finished the game with 22 points, just shy of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s team-high 23.

Kawhi Leonard scored 34 and was instrumental to the Clippers pulling ahead, particularly with Paul George scoring just 11, a season-low for the former Thunder star.

See highlights and stats of the Sunday game below.

Coverage: Thunder’s improvementsGeorge Hill’s aggressivenessPhoto gallery

https://embed.sendtonews.com/oembed/?SC=2Ja4rvzfox-1123217-8384&format=json&offsetx=0&offsety=0&floatwidth=400&floatposition=bottom-right&float=on

OKC Thunder (6-9)

Player MIN PTS REB (Off.) AST ST/BL FGA-FGM 3PA-3PM FTA-FTM
Isaiah Roby 26 10 10 (3) 3 1/0 5-10 0-2 0-0
Darius Bazley 29 9 11 2 0/0 4-7 1-3 0-0
Lu Dort 31 4 1 (1) 3 1/0 2-10 0-6 0-0
George Hill 28 22 0 2 2/0 9-12 3-4 1-1
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander 37 23 6 (1) 7 0/0 8-16 1-3 6-6
Aleksej Pokusevski 17 2 4 0 1/1 1-8 0-3 0-0
Mike Muscala 22 7 8 (3) 1 0/1 3-12 1-9 0-0
Theo Maledon 17 2 2 1 0/0 1-5 0-3 0-0
Kenrich Williams 14 7 4 (2) 1 0/0 3-6 1-1 0-0
Hamidou Diallo 20 14 5 (2) 2 2/0 6-9 0-1 2-7

Los Angeles Clippers (13-4)

Player MIN PTS REB (Off.) AST ST/BL FGA-FGM 3PA-3PM FTA-FTM
Nicolas Batum 36 7 3 2 1/0 3-7 1-5 0-0
Kawhi Leonard 36 34 9 (1) 8 0/0 14-24 4-9 2-2
Serge Ibaka 22 17 6 (2) 1 0/0 7-8 2-2 1-2
Patrick Beverley 13 7 4 (1) 3 2/0 2-7 1-5 2-2
Paul George 33 11 5 4 1/0 4-13 2-8 1-2
Patrick Patterson 12 0 0 0 0/0 0-4 0-4 0-0
Ivica Zubac 24 10 11 (2) 1 0/2 5-6 0-0 0-0
Reggie Jackson 20 14 0 1 0/0 4-8 2-4 4-6
Lou Williams 14 5 1 1 0/0 1-9 1-4 2-2
Terance Mann 4 0 3 (1) 1 0/0 0-1 0-1 0-0
Luke Kennard 24 3 3 (1) 4 0/0 1-5 1-4 0-0
Amir Coffee 0 0 1 0 0/0 0-0 0-0 0-0

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SGA: George Hill’s aggressiveness against Clippers ‘makes everything easier’

The OKC Thunder nearly made a comeback against the Los Angeles Clippers after guard George Hill made three 3s in a row.

The near-Oklahoma City Thunder comeback against the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday was aided by George Hill.

The veteran guard made three straight 3s from 3:41 to 2:12 in the fourth quarter to cut the deficit from 17 to eight. He made the most shots on the team and was the only Thunder player to make multiple 3s. He even won a jump ball over 7-foot Clippers center Ivica Zubac.

Third-year guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said after the game that when Hill attacks offensively like this, the game gets easier for the Thunder.

“There’s times you have to tell him to be more a little bit more aggressive,” Gilgeous-Alexander said, “because when he’s in that mode, a little bit more aggressive, it makes everything easier for the rest of us.”

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Hill took over in that manner late Sunday, helping push the Thunder cut a double-digit deficit as low as six before the Clippers finally pulled away and beat OKC 108-100.

Hill finished the game with 22 points, second on the team to Gilgeous-Alexander’s 23, and a pair of assists and steals.

“It felt good. Just take advantage of every opportunity I get and continue to trust myself and try to do the best I can for this team,” he said.

Though the Thunder couldn’t pull out the win, Gilgeous-Alexander enjoyed watching that performance.

“It was great to see. Obviously, George is a great teammate, great player to have around, especially a young group of guys,” he said. “He just plays the right way every game.”

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Highlights: Kawhi’s 31 points, Paul George’s 29 combats SGA’s 30 in OKC loss

See highlights Los Angeles Clippers wings Kawhi Leonard and Paul George battling OKC Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Third-year guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 30 points for the Oklahoma City Thunder.

It was not enough, as Los Angeles Clippers stars Kawhi Leonard put up 31 and Paul George added 29 as L.A. handed the Thunder a 120-106 defeat.

Even with that loss, the performance of Gilgeous-Alexander is notable. It’s the second time he has scored 30 against his former team.

Head coach Mark Daigneault complimented him after the game.

“He was good at getting where he wanted,” he said. “He played with great pace as well. They were switching him, which gave him some isolation plays, but it’s not like he stopped the ball. He kind of played in the flow of the team.”

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On defense, though, the Thunder couldn’t consistently get stops, especially in the first half when the Clippers scored 70 over the first two quarters.

Leonard went 10-for-21 in the game and made all 10 free throws he attempted. He also had eight rebounds, three steals and a pair of blocks.

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George went 10-for-19 with three 3-pointers. He was best in the fourth quarter, getting to the line on three occasions and scoring 11 points during that frame.

He added seven rebounds and five assists and had a plus-17 overall in the performance.

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Oklahoma City will get another chance at the Clippers on Sunday.

Tipoff is scheduled for 3 p.m. Central Time.

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