OKC Thunder players react to Team USA gold finish in 2024 Olympics.
For the fifth straight time, Team USA has won the gold medal. The 2024 Olympics concluded with USA’s 98-87 win over France in the men’s basketball tournament.
Stephen Curry led the way with 24 points and shot 8-of-13 from 3. LeBron James and Kevin Durant contributed with 29 combined points between two superstars.
The 11-point win capped off a dominant run by the USA. It went a perfect 6-0 during the Olympics and was the clearcut top squad. A deep roster filled with All-Star players made it the heavy favorite.
A couple of Oklahoma City Thunder players celebrated the USA’s win. Jalen Williams and Jaylin Williams shared their reactions on social media. There’s a decent chance the former is invited to join the squad in 2028.
In four years, there’s a decent shot that several Thunder players will be part of the Olympics in LA. Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren have strong cases to be on the USA’s squad while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Lu Dort should be invited back to Canada’s roster.
The U.S. men’s basketball team locked up the Olympic gold medal on Saturday evening in Paris with an exciting 98-87 victory over host country France. The Americans got big performances out of LeBron James, Steph Curry and Kevin Durant over the course of the tournament, but naturally not everyone on the team got equal playing time.
Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton saw action in just three of the United States’ six games, playing a combined 26 minutes total. Following the gold medal victory over France, Haliburton took to social media for the most perfect post.
“When you ain’t do nun on the group project and still get an A,” he shared alongside a picture of himself holding his medal.
Steph Curry was on another level on Saturday night in Paris as he led the U.S. men’s basketball team to victory over the home favorite French squad, 98-87. Curry went 8-for-13 from three in the game (62.5%), including a late barrage that saw him hit four from deep over a 1:13 span. That late run turned a close game into a done deal and got the long time Golden State Warrior his coveted gold medal.
The flurry of excitement (and threes) made a lot of NBA and basketball fans finally get to enjoy202 just how good the Warriors have had it over the years with Curry at the helm.
After hate watching the warriors for like 9 years itâs nice for Curry to be on my side for once đđ
Hang it in the Louvre. You’re already right there.
Steph Curry had his Olympic moment on Saturday night in Paris as the sharpshooter hit four threes down the stretch against France to lock up the gold medal for Team USA.
Curry was electric in his first Olympic games, helping lead a comeback against Serbia in the semifinals before his flurry of treys in the title game.
While his late game heroics were incredible, it was one picture from earlier in the matchup that got people talking online. Framed like a painting you’d see in the nearby Louvre in Paris, it shows France’s young 7-foot-4 superstar Victor Wembanyama closing out on Curry just after he’s released a high-arcing shot.
On Friday, 16-year-old Quincy Wilson made history as he became the youngest male track and field athlete to compete in the Olympics. The sophomore at Maryland’s Bullis School ran the first leg of the 4×400 relay, helping the men’s team qualify for Saturday’s finals.
One day later, he’s an Olympic gold medalist. The U.S. relay team of Christopher Bailey, Vernon Norwood, Bryce Deadmon and Rai Benjamin set a new Olympic Record in the event with a 2:54.43. As a member of the team, Wilson gets to take home the hardware, too.
It was a disappointing day for Americaâs best as Team USA was shut out of the podium in Paris. With the top two players in the world on the three-player U.S. squad â plus Rose Zhang! â odds were high that someone would clinch a medal.
Alas, it wasnât to be.
Zhang, who began the day two back of the lead, played in the final group alongside Lydia Ko and Morgane Meatraux but struggled to a closing 74 that included a double-bogey on the ninth, a par 5. Zhang led the Americans with a T-8 finish.
âTakes a lot of resilience to get the job done or to even be in contention,â said Zhang of her Olympic debut. âReally proud of how hard I fought, and I think there’s just a lot more coming and pretty excited for what I can work on and what I can improve on.â
Korda made two bogeys and a double over the last five holes to card a 75. The 2021 gold medalist plummeted to a share of a 22nd.
âI think recently what’s been happening to me is I make a mistake and then I make another mistake on top of it,â said Korda.
âNeeding to control that bit of it where I don’t compile all the mistakes, which that’s what I’ve been kind of doing recently.â
World No. 2 Lilia Vu had it going early in the week but took a nosedive as the week wore on. The two-time major winner closed with a 74 to finish tied for 36th.
The 2024 Olympics golf competitions are in the books and the U.S. leaves Paris maintaining its big lead on the medal table.
Scottie Scheffler shot a final-round 62 in the men’s competition at Le Golf National to clinch the top prize by a shot over Great Britain’s Tommy Fleetwood, who won his nation’s second-ever silver medal. Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama won bronze, the second-ever medal in golf for his country.
Lydia Ko won gold in the women’s competition and has completed the trifecta, after winning silver in 2016 and bronze in 2021. She also accounts for all three of the medals New Zealand has won at the Olympics.
With Germany’s 2024 silver, courtesy of Esther Henseleit, there are now 11 nations that have earned a medal in the five renditions of golf in the Olympics. The first two times were 1900 and 1904, then there was a 112-year hiatus before returning in 2016.
At 27 years old, Lydia Ko has put together one of the best careers in the history of the LPGA. In 2016, she won silver in Rio. Five years later, she earned the bronze medal in Toyko. And on Saturday, Ko captured the gold medal in Paris and a spot in the LPGA Hall of Fame, arguably the hardest hall to get into in sports.
Ko buried a birdie putt on the par-5 18th to cement her two-stoke victory over Esther Henseleit of Germany, who won the silver. Xiyu Lin of China took home bronze.
Earlier in her career, Ko stated she wanted to retire by 30. Will she play for a few more years, or will she call it quits now that she’s achieved a Hall-of-Fame resume?
Check out some photos of the emotional scene from the 2024 Olympics at Le Golf National below.
Thereâs something raw about the Olympic podium. Cameras get so close to the athletes that fans a world away can watch as a single tear spills out of the eye, rolls down the cheek and hangs at the bottom of a chin. That was the scene for Lydia Ko, who was overcome with emotion at the weight of the moment. The tears appeared to start before sheâd even holed her final birdie putt.
Ko didnât just win Olympic gold, she played her way into the LPGA Hall of Fame, arguably the toughest Hall in all of sports, accomplishing her ultimate goal.
Eight years ago, when she won silver in Rio, she wanted to cry, but then looked over at Inbee Park, whoâd won gold, and didnât see any tears. How could she cry if Inbee wasnât crying?
Ah, but it was Koâs party this time. Let it rain.
âI mean, Cinderella’s glass slippers are see-through and my podium shoes are also see-through,â noted Ko. âI guess that’s something that we have going for us. I feel like I’m part of this fairytale.â
When Ko won the U.S. Womenâs Amateur a dozen years ago, she told the press that she wanted to play college golf. Her idols at the time were Michelle Wie and Lexi Thompson, but she didnât want to follow their career paths.
Two weeks later, Ko won on the LPGA as a 15-year-old and that college golf dream went poof. She was far too talented for that route. Instead, golf fans watched the bespectacled Ko break records and wins hearts as a young teen, making the game look breathlessly easy.
So much life has transpired for Ko since she earned her first LPGA Hall of Fame point as a wunderkind. Now married and perhaps on the verge of retirement, Ko played her way into the LPGA Hall of Fame at age 27 in perhaps the coolest way possible.
While it looked for a while on Saturday at Le Golf National that it would be a runaway victory, the fight for Koâs 27th Hall of Fame point went down to the wire on what she called the most difficult Olympic test yet. She won by two over Germanyâs Esther Henseleit with a birdie on the 72nd hole.
Now a three-time Olympic medalist, having won silver in Rio and bronze in Tokyo, Koâs podium sweep might not ever be repeated in the modern game.
Ko becomes the 35th player to qualify for the LPGA Hall of Fame and the first since Inbee Park in 2016. Lorena Ochoa got in two years ago after the tour removed the stipulation that required 10 years on tour, but she reached 27 points in 2008.
How tough is it to get into the LPGA Hall? Consider that legends like Laura Davies, Hollis Stacy, Sandra Palmer and Dottie Pepper arenât in it.
JoAnne Carner, an eight-time USGA champion who won 43 times on the LPGA, remembers well the difficulty of playing her way into the LPGA Hall.
âI think I choked either three or four tournaments where I had the lead,â said Carner, who remembers one event in particular that she led by eight after 36 holes and couldnât get it done.
âThen I finally got mad and said Iâm going to get this over with.â
At 27 years, 3 months and 17 days, Ko is now the youngest to enter the Hall under its current criteria. Karrie Webb actually reached 27 points at age 25, but had to wait until 2005 (age 30) before she reached the 10-year requirement.
Prior to the final round in France Ko, whoâd deleted her social media accounts for the week, re-watched the documentaries of Simone Biles and Mardy Fish. Sheâd written down a quote from Biles in her yardage book â âI get to write my own endingâ â and repeated it throughout the round.
The fairytale in France wonât be the mic-drop ending it couldâve been. Ko still plans to compete in the Scottish Open next week followed by the AIG Womenâs British Open at St. Andrews.
But then what? Ko has said from the start of her career that she wonât play past the age of 30. She told Golfweek last fall that sheâd like to finish the psychology degree she started nearly a decade ago, perhaps at Stanford. Her sister and manager, Sura, has noted that Ko enjoys interior design.
Perhaps Ko doesnât even know herself yet when she might end her career. What she does know is that this is her final Olympics and she doesnât want to come to the end of her time on tour and ask herself, whatâs next?
âI want to have my second chapter, whatever the career may be, like, ready before I retire from competitive golf,â she said last year, âso that Iâm not lost.â
Ko hasnât won as many majors as one might expect, two in all, but in addition to her 20 wins on the LPGA, she has amassed an incredible record of historic feats, including the youngest to win on the LPGA, the youngest woman to win a major, youngest to get to 10 LPGA victories and now the youngest to enter the Hall.
But more than that, players, fans and media will note that the way she has carried herself as sheâs grown in the fish bowl is nothing short of remarkable. So much poise, humility and grace. She cheers for the competition no matter whatâs on the line â even the Hall of Fame.
Earlier this year in Bradenton Florida, LPGA officials set some champagne and roses next to the grandstand on the 18th at the Drive On, ready to celebrate Koâs entrance into the Hall. While Koâs ball nestled down next to the bubbly, Ko never got the chance to imbibe. Nelly Korda spoiled that party for Ko in a playoff.
Several weeks later in China, it looked like Ko might enter the Hall while much of the world was sleeping, in front of a small contingent of fans. That didnât seem quite right.
No, Ko needed to enter the Hall on such a grand stage, in front of some of the best crowds these players have ever seen. She deserved to have fans chanting her name as she walked up the 18th.
She was meant to have a golden moment that wonât likely be repeated. For there will likely never be another player quite like Ko.
Should OKC Thunder fans root for Team USA or France?
As the international tournament dwindles to two teams, the 2024 Olympics will conclude with a gold medal winner between either Team USA or France.
Canada failed to reach this stage after an upset loss to France in the quarterfinals. Its struggles to score outside of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led to its downfall.
Oklahoma City Thunder fans were likely split in their allegiances throughout the summer. Sure, most who lived locally likely cheered on the USA for obvious reasons, but Canada became the unofficial second squad to root for.
Gilgeous-Alexander and Lu Dort were starters for Canada. Both have been fixtures in OKC since 2019. It’s only normal for Thunder fans to root for their neighbors up north.
Considering the USA and Canada never matched up in group play and were on opposite sides of the bracket, being a double fan was easier for the Thunder faithful.
But heading into the knockout stage, it felt like a collision course between the USA and Canada was within the realm of possibility. Both went a perfect 3-0 in group play and were arguably the two best squads of the 2024 Olympics.
Gilgeous-Alexander talked about the possibility and sounded excited. He said it would’ve been a fun matchup and could stress test how far Canada’s program has progressed after historically struggling.
Instead, Canada fell in the opening round while the USA advanced to the championship contest against host country France.
Entering the semifinals post-Canada exit, the reasons to root for the USA are obvious. It represents this country and has been the most dominant program in basketball history. It’s only patriotic to hope LeBron James, Kevin Durant and Stephen Curry bring home the gold in their likely final run together at this stage.
But should Thunder fans consider playing devil’s advocate and root for France to make Canada’s loss look a bit prettier? It may be tempting, but the answer is probably not.
The sole reason Thunder fans followed Canada’s journey was Gilgeous-Alexander and Dort. Neither was assigned blame for its early exit against France.
Gilgeous-Alexander was phenomenal throughout the 2024 Olympics and graded out as one of the best players. Dort helped Canada overcome a disastrous run by Jamal Murray, who looked like a shell of his former self.
Canada’s early demise had more to do with the rest of the roster than those two. Its inability to have other scorers and true centers reared its ugly head in the final moments of its loss to France.
Thunder fans can root for whoever they want in this USA vs. France contest. Policing fandoms is unnecessary and sucks the joy out of sports. It should be an exciting matchup with compelling storylines. Can the former cap off a dominant run? Can the latter pull off the massive upset in its home crowd?
Either way, the result will not affect how productive the individual Olympic runs were for the Thunder’s Gilgeous-Alexander and Dort.
Despite the premature finish, it was a step in the right direction for Canada’s ambitions. Both should be back at this stage in 2028.