George Hill speaks to Undefeated about U.S. Capitol riot, NBA bubble protests

OKC Thunder guard George Hill, a leader of the NBA protests in the bubble, spoke to The Undefeated about Jacob Blake and the U.S. Capitol riot.

In August, George Hill was one of the leaders and most outspoken figures in the NBA bubble protests after the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a resident of Wisconsin, the home of Hill’s then-team, the Milwaukee Bucks.

Hill spoke about these protests from NBA players over summer and the riot inside the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday with The Undefeated.

On Tuesday, a Wisconsin prosecutor said he would not file charges against the officer who shot Blake in the back as Blake leaned into his car. Kenosha County District Attorney Michael Graveley said he could not disprove the officer’s argument of self-defense and fear that Blake would stab him with a knife that was found in his car, according to the Associated Press.

On Wednesday, as the House and Senate convened to count electoral votes, a Pro-Trump protest outside the Capitol building turned into a riot as protestors clashed with the small police force at the building and many in the mob eventually got inside, prompting an evacuation of the lawmakers.

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“It ain’t crazy. It’s the norm,” George Hill, now a member of the Oklahoma City Thunder, said to Marc J. Spears.

“What did you expect? Did you expect anything different? I’m not at all surprised about all of this. I knew this was going to happen.”

Spears asked Hill if he was referring to the Blake decision or the riot.

“I’m referring to all of it,” Hill answered.

Hill discussed other subjects, including about his work in the city of Milwaukee and the players’ reactions around him when he helped lead the strike of games. Spears asked if he received backlash from players around the league when the Bucks boycotted without discussing with other teams first.

“Everybody had mixed emotions. I would never throw anybody out there. I just know everybody didn’t agree on certain things and that is normal,” Hill said as part of his answer.

Hill also said he had a feeling that the Bucks would trade him after the season.

“I prepared myself that summer for me probably not being there. People thought I was probably crazy for thinking that. But I’m human. It is what it is. We’ve seen that many times,” he said.

Spears asked if he thought the trade was for off-the-court reasons. Hill answered:

“If it’s more than basketball, then they will live with that. If it wasn’t … we’ll never know. I’m sure they won’t flat-out come out and say it. So, it doesn’t really matter.”

Hill was also asked about Oklahoma City-specific areas. One such was about Julius Jones, 40, who was arrested on murder charges as a 19-year-old in 1999 and placed on death row in 2002 but has maintained innocence.

The guard said he has yet to get involved but is learning more about it.

“I’ve been talking to people who have educated me more on the situation before I jump into something and not know. We’ve been in talks,” Hill said.

He also said he plans to participate in the 100-year commemoration event of the Tulsa race massacre.

Read the full article at the Undefeated.

With 6 double-digit scorers, team play leads Thunder over Magic

With six OKC Thunder players scoring double-digits and none crossing the 20-point mark, it was team play that led them over the Orlando Magic.

There are some games where it’s tough to find the storyline.

Who was the storyline of the OKC Thunder 108-99 win over the Orlando Magic? Which player had the biggest impact? Was it Darius Bazley, who notched his second double-double of the season with a team-high 19 points and 12 rebounds? Was it George Hill, who made 13 points in the third quarter alone to help keep the Thunder in the game? Maybe it was Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, whose impressive passing helped all this happen and then he closed it out offensively.

Was the standout on the bench? Theo Maledon had his best game as an NBA player and Hamidou Diallo had 12 points and eight rebounds in 19 minutes.

It wasn’t one player who coaxed the Thunder to victory on Saturday night. OKC found a secret to winning a game when opponents aggressively defend Gilgeous-Alexander — the rest of the team has to answer.

“We had great balance tonight with how we played on both ends of the floor,” head coach Mark Daigneault said. “We got a lot of contributors, top to bottom.”

Orlando couldn’t find offensive power outside its best two scorers. Center Nikola Vucevic and guard Terrence Ross combined for 56 points, but the rest of the team shot just 18-for-66, a mark of 27%.

Meanwhile, as Gilgeous-Alexander went 4-for-16 through the first 45 minutes of the game, the rest of the Thunder went 32-for-65, slightly above 49%.

Then the star guard took over. He hit a tough, off-balance look just inside the free throw line with a defender draped on him for an and-one to give the Thunder a seven-point lead with 2:30 to play. He drove and made the right passes after attracting defenders, finally culminating with a kickout to Al Horford. The center hit Aaron Gordon with a jab step before pulling up for 3 to take an 8-point lead with 50 seconds left.

Oklahoma City played stupendous defense in the fourth quarter, limiting the Magic to 17 points and Vucevic, who had 26 entering the quarter, to just four. Orlando only scored eight points in the final 8:30 of the game.

“The coaches, they really harped on us being in position to make it difficult for him. When you have a guy like Vucevic, you have to make sure that your whole team is there helping and in the right positions,” Horford said. “We made the double-teams when we needed to, we kept him guessing.”

It was a back-and-forth first three quarters until Maledon hit a 3 early in the fourth to break a tie and then assisted a Diallo 3. Bazley hit a 3 off a Gilgeous-Alexander assist to go up 97-91 and then got a dunk off a Horford assist. Gilgeous-Alexander hit his and-one, and then Horford iced the game.

So, with six players scoring double-digits and another, Lu Dort, scoring nine, this wasn’t a one-man show. There wasn’t a single player who was the storyline.

It was unselfish offense with swing passes and hockey assists, team defense and effort that pushed Oklahoma City to its second win of the year.

“We just played this team, and we came up short. I think we could’ve won the last one,” Bazley said, referencing OKC’s Tuesday loss to Orlando.

“I think everyone knew what it was going to take to beat this team. They weren’t just going to give us the game, we had to go and take it”

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Thunder guard George Hill erupts for 13 points in 3rd quarter

OKC Thunder guard George Hill took over in the third quarter, scoring 13 points in under eight minutes to help keep up with the Magic.

Nikola Vucevic was dominating for the Orlando Magic, but Oklahoma City Thunder guard George Hill matched the center on the score sheet step for step in the third quarter.

Hill scored 13 points in just under eight minutes to help the Thunder keep up with the Magic. He went 5-for-7 from the field — one of his misses came at the shot clock buzzer on a broken possession — and hit two 3s and an and-one.

When he was subbed out with 4:12 to go, the Thunder trailed 72-69.

Vucevic had 10 points for the Magic during the third quarter, helping them briefly back the lead after the Thunder led by one at halftime. He was up to 26 points on the day.

Hill had 18 points on 7-for-11 voting and five assists when he came out in the third quarter.

Over the guard’s first three games for the Thunder this season, he averaged 14.3 points on 55.2% shooting on 9.7 attempts from the field and 46.2% from 3 on 4.3 attempts.

The Thunder, 1-3 on the season, are looking to end their three-game losing streak. To do so they’ll have to take down the 4-1 Magic, who defeated Oklahoma City on Tuesday.

Oklahoma City leads 84-82 after three quarters.

The game can be watched at FOX Sports Oklahoma or on League Pass for those outside the area.

Horford, Hill returning to Thunder lineup after missing 1 game

OKC Thunder players Al Horford and George Hill will return to the starting lineup against the New Orleans Pelicans on New Year’s Eve.

The Oklahoma City Thunder (1-2) will have its usual starting lineup on the court on Thursday night against the New Orleans Pelicans (2-2).

Center Al Horford and guard George Hill will be back after missing the game against the Orlando Magic on Tuesday, head coach Mark Daigneault said during the pregame Zoom press conference.

Horford was out for rest purposes Tuesday on the second night of a back-to-back.

Hill missed the game due to neck spasms.

Oklahoma City lost 118-107 on Tuesday without those two and will look to even its record at two wins and losses apiece against the Pelicans.

Horford in particular will be important against New Orleans, who has Steven Adams and Zion Williamson at the center and power forward positions, respectively. The Thunder struggled to defend the post against the Magic without Horford in the lineup.

The Thunder’s 3-point shooting was also worse against the Magic than it was against Utah. Horford and Hill alike will look to help that.

The full starting lineup will be Hill, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort, Darius Bazley and Horford.

The Pelicans’ lineup for all four of their first games was Lonzo Ball, Eric Bledsoe, Brandon Ingram, Williamson and Adams. Their lineup against the Thunder has not been officially announced.

Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Chesapeake Energy Arena.

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Report: OKC’s Al Horford out, George Hill questionable against Magic

OKC Thunder center Al Horford will be out for rest while George Hill is questionable due to neck spasms, according to Joe Mussatto.

The Oklahoma City Thunder will be without starting center Al Horford in the Tuesday night game against the Orlando Magic, according to The Oklahoman’s Joe Mussatto.

Horford will sit on the second night of the back-to-back. Mussatto also said guard George Hill is questionable due to neck spasms.

On Monday, Horford played 29 minutes in the 110-109 loss to the Utah Jazz.

The center has been a very important part of the Thunder this season. His box score stats don’t properly reflect his game, as he has had strong impact on both sides of the ball.

Mike Muscala will likely be starting in his place. Muscala, who only got spot minutes for Oklahoma City last season, has played very well over the Thunder’s first two games. His 11.5 points average would be by far a career high if he continues, and he has made five of 11 3-pointers.

Behind him, it gets murky. Moses Brown, a 21-year-old who last year played nine games for the Portland Trail Blazers, could see his first action of the season.

Aleksej Pokusevski could play center as well, though head coach Mark Daigneault has said he wants to develop the 19-year-old at wing before moving him around positionally.

Darius Bazley is also an option. He played center at times last year and the Thunder could go small ball with him at the 5 against Orlando.

As for Hill, the Thunder would have options if he cannot play. Daigneault could insert a guard or a wing at the starting position. The starting lineup already has a primary ball handler alongside Hill in Gilgeous-Alexander, and Dort can play the 2 or 3.

Based on minute allocations and performance in the first two games, Hamidou Diallo would be a logical candidate for the starting spot.

Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m. Watch at FOX Sports Oklahoma.

Thunder fend off Hornets comeback as Gilgeous-Alexander hits game-winner

The OKC Thunder dominated most of the second half and then Shai Gilgeous-Alexander hit the game-winning shot against the Charlotte Hornets.

After dominating the majority of the second half Saturday, the Oklahoma City Thunder struggled to put the game away against the Charlotte Hornets.

In the end, third-year guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was the hero, hitting the game-winning shot with 1.4 seconds left to push the Thunder to a 109-107 victory in Oklahoma City’s first game of the same.

“Obviously the last two minutes was a weird experience, an emotional experience,” said head coach Mark Daigneault, who picked up his first win as an NBA head coach. “But we played a 48-minute game and our guys did a really good job of that.”

In those final two minutes, the Thunder let what had been a 13-point lead with 2:13 remaining slip away. Gilgeous-Alexander committed three turnovers and Darius Bazley had one of his own all within a 33-second span. Oklahoma City made four trips to the free throw line over the final 40 seconds of the game, but made only one of two free throws in three of those four trips to the stripe.

Charlotte did their part in catching up, going on an 18-5 run and making a 3-pointer on four consecutive possessions, the final of which tied the game. Gilgeous-Alexander clinched the win on the next possession.

From the outside, it looked like a very specific area of where last year’s Oklahoma City team would have thrived and not allowed the opponent back in.

On paper, this year’s Thunder team lacks the poise and experience under pressure that guys on last year’s roster had. The Hornets were successful in their full-court coverage, and they forced turnovers that allowed them to claw back into it. Gilgeous-Alexander is a blossoming star, but he’s still in his third year. Two other starters are second-year players, a departure from last year’s unit led by two veteran ball handlers in Chris Paul and Dennis Schroder.

Head coach Mark Daigneault called that notion “hindsight bias” while acknowledging his team can improve in its late-game situations.

“We have great players on this team. It’s an experience we can learn from … There’s things that we could’ve done better down the stretch, and you give Charlotte credit — they played all the way through the finish line tonight, and it just goes to show what happens when you do that,” Daigneault said.

“But we’ll learn from it. I’m confident in the guys we have this year on this team and our ability to handle those things. We could’ve handled it better tonight, but hopefully we learn from it and we handle it better next time.”

So far, this article sounds negative. That shouldn’t be the case, and it shouldn’t be how this game is remembered in the morning.

Outside a handful of minutes in the second quarter and the final couple minutes of the game, Oklahoma City played a very, very good game. They beat down a team that made two big additions this offseason in Gordon Hayward and No. 3 overall pick LaMelo Ball. They defeated a team that has playoff expectations in the Eastern Conference.

The Thunder beat a team who very well may be in the playoff hunt. If there’s one takeaway, it can be that.

Here is a quick list of some positives to go along with it:

The third quarter. The Thunder at one point held the Hornets to 2-of-21 shooting, absolutely dominating the defensive end. Charlotte only scored 16 points that quarter — and not a single one came from Terry Rozier, Gordon Hayward or Devonte’ Graham, who combined for 0-for-11 shooting during that time.

That defense as a whole looked very good. Rozier scored 42 against the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Hornets’ opener but finished with 19 on 5-for-15 shooting against OKC. Hayward had 28 points and seven assists in his season opener, but against the Thunder, scored just 12 points. Graham finished with 14 on 4-for-16 shooting.

“I think we stopped letting them be comfortable. We got up into the ball a little bit more, we stopped fouling, we got straight up at the rim,” guard George Hill said.

The starting lineup. Up until the closing minutes, several of them had plus-minuses above 20. Even after the Hornets’ run at the end, their plus-minus showed that the starting lineup can compete with other solid teams.

Gilgeous-Alexander’s 24 points led the team, but Hill’s 21 points in 24 minutes on 8-for-9 shooting really stands out on the box score. Darius Bazley had a double-double, Lu Dort contributed 15 points – while showing the willingness to drive to the hoop and ability to finish or get to the free throw line – and Al Horford had only three points but he grabbed 13 boards.

With a bench that struggled, the Thunder desperately needed this kind of output from the starters. They got it.

Mike Muscala. Speaking of the bench, Muscala was the bright spot off it. Oklahoma City may not have even been in the game had it not been for his nine points in the first half when the bench struggled to score overall. He filled in well at the backup center spot as Horford got 29 minutes and was, along with Hill, often the first of the starters to the bench and the last back on the court.

Muscala finished with 14 points, a pair of 3s and overall solid defense. After limited play last year behind Steven Adams and Nerlens Noel, he can be expected to keep this role this season.

The rookies entered in the first quarter and showed confidence. At the risk of returning to negativity, they weren’t particularly good, but that’s not as important as the fact that they played real, meaningful minutes and showed areas of promise in a victory.

Aleksej Pokusevski’s 0-for-6 shooting, all of which were 3s, was not good, but his confidence is ideal. The disgust on his face when he was subbed off in the fourth quarter after missing three straight shots showed he knows he can and should be better. It wasn’t a look of defeat. It was a look of determination to be better.

As for Theo Maledon, he had a couple bad turnovers and struggled to score, but his passing skill is obvious after just one game and he played 20 minutes behind Hill. The two will see plenty of opportunities this year.

Daigneault said the energy and pressure of Charlotte, who was coming off a loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers, was intense, and it was a new NBA experience for the 19-year-olds who had only seen preseason play.

“It was great out have them out there and it was great experience for them,” Diagneault said.

In the post-game press conferences over Zoom, all four players who spoke emphasized a key message from Daigneault:

“Coach always says it’s a 48-minute game. And obviously we let our foot off the gas.” – Gilgeous-Alexander

“Coach talks about it all the time, it’s a 48-minute game, so we gotta play the full length.” – Bazley

“He always preaches it being a 48-minute game, which in this case, it truly was.” – Muscala

Hill’s variation may have been the best summary of the game:

“I think we played a complete 47-minute game, outside the last minute, but that all goes with it,” he said. “We’re a young team, they’re still learning, we’re still learning all together, and you’re going to have those hiccups. Shai made a big shot late to seal the game, but we live and we learn.”

The Thunder may be in a rebuild, but they’re 1-0.

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3 Thunder questions: How long will OKC wait before trading the veterans?

George Hill, Al Horford and Trevor Ariza are veterans rostered by the rebuilding Oklahoma City Thunder. Will they be traded this season?

As discussed in the second part of this mini-series, it’s a good thing the Oklahoma City Thunder has veterans such as George Hill and Al Horford on the roster to play the important minutes and help the youngsters develop.

But those two and Trevor Ariza are the three most expensive players on the roster, and it’s not particularly close. An organization that is A) collecting assets and B) dealing with revenue loss should want to trade them at some point this year.

Here’s a breakdown of the top salaries on the Thunder:

  • Al Horford: $27.5 million
  • Trevor Ariza: $12.8 million
  • George Hill: $9.6 million
  • Darius Miller: $7 million
  • Justin Jackson: $5 million
  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander: $4.1 million

Miller, for what it’s worth, is also a veteran and may end up on the trade block if he can reestablish himself as a knockdown shooter.

With Hill and Ariza on expiring deals, they would be logical trade targets for contenders. Ideally, the veterans would be moved at the deadline, so they get enough time with the team to make an imprint on the young players.

Will general manager Sam Presti pull off more positive deals for the Thunder?

Ariza is an interesting one to watch simply because, as of the latest reports, he has not reported to the team, and there have yet to be public indications about when he will join. Currently missing time for family matters, Ariza can serve as a veteran 3-and-D forward with 16 years of NBA experience.

He has, however, struggled on bad teams over the last two years. The Phoenix Suns signed him in 2018 and traded him midseason to the Washington Wizards, who let him walk in the offseason. He joined the Sacramento Kings on a two-year deal in 2019 and was traded to the Portland Trail Blazers midway through the year, where he played much better than his previous three stops.

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Will he join the Thunder? Will OKC waive him? Will Presti manage to land a second-round pick out of the Los Angeles Lakers (or whichever team does want him) in three months when contenders are rounding out their rosters?

You can add those questions to the general query in this headline.

Hill, meanwhile, has already been lauded as a strong leader in the clubhouse. He’s a candidate to stick around all season, but if the Thunder can either get a return while removing his salary or if they simply want to thank him by trading him to a contender, it’s logical to envision him on the move in March.

Horford’s outlook is foggier. If I had to bet, I’d say he stays for this entire season. With his contract, he would be hard to move midway through a season, and he has some work to do to prove he’s still worth that deal.

But he was the Thunder’s best player in the preseason. With three years left on his contract, he shouldn’t be someone Oklahoma City has to give up assets for to dump, even if they wait for the offseason before moving him to a team that didn’t land one of the prime free agents in the 2021 class.

This is the third of a three-article series heading into the Thunder’s 2020-21 season.

4 Thunder players out in final preseason game; George Hill to start

George Hill will start for the OKC Thunder, but four players will be inactive for the final preseason game against the Chicago Bulls.

Four Oklahoma City Thunder players will not be active for the final preseason game against the Chicago Bulls, head coach Mark Daigneault said prior to the game on Friday.

Guard Ty Jerome, forward Darius Miller and forward Josh Hall are all inactive for their third games of the preseason. Rookie guard Theo Maledon will not play due to rest purposes.

Daigneault declined to go into specifics about what is keeping Jerome, Miller and Hall sidelined, but said they are all on a return-to-play track and are doing workouts with the team.

He has previously described their conditions as “bumps and bruises.”

Daigneault does not believe any of them will be sidelined long-term.

All three players are new to the Thunder. Jerome, a second-year guard, was acquired from the Phoenix Suns in the Chris Paul trade. Miller was received from the New Orleans Pelicans as part of the Steven Adams deal, and Josh Hall signed as an undrafted free agent.

The three have yet to make their debuts for Oklahoma City.

Maledon, meanwhile, impressed in his two preseason games with the club. He posted 20 points in his first game, scored 11 in his second and is averaging just under 30 minutes per game.

It would be unsurprising if he has carved out a backup guard role to start the season.

In front of him appears to be George Hill, who will start for the Thunder on Friday. Hill scored 11 points in the preseason opener against the San Antonio Spurs but did not play last game against the Bulls on Wednesday.

GAME DETAILS: How to watch Thunder vs. Bulls

Joining Hill in the starting lineup will be Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort, Darius Bazley and Al Horford.

Oklahoma City is 1-1 in the preseason and is looking to close it out with a win over the Bulls, who beat them Wednesday. Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m.

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As one of the ’80s kids, George Hill jumps into leadership role

George Hill was born three decades before a couple of his Oklahoma City Thunder teammates and has eagerly jumped into a leadership role.

Thunder guard George Hill said he had a bit of a shock early in the Oklahoma City training camp.

“When we started to go around room yesterday, it started to be eye- opening for myself, having guys that were born in 2001 and 2000,” he said with a laugh Tuesday.

Hill was born in 1986. Entering his 13th year in the league, Hill is one of the oldest players on the Thunder. Surrounded by younger players, he has been looked to as a leader early in training camp.

Several teammates have already spoken highly about him with media.

“He’s a great guy. A competitor, and you can tell he has your best interest from the moment you talk to him,” said guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

“Guys like that are always easy to play with and listen to, and that’s why he’s a natural leader.”

Head coach Mark Daigneault said that Hill took on the leadership role willingly, something that not all older players do.

“One mistake … is to expect that every player that’s got a lot of experience wants to take on a verbal and active leadership role. I think that’s something that those guys have to choose,” Daigneault said.

“But George enjoys that. He made that clear to us.”

Hill’s reasoning why he took on that role was simple and, to him, obvious.

“Well that’s my job,” he said. “To be a leader here in this locker room on and off the court as person, as player.”

Hill has only missed the playoffs once in his career. He has made the conference finals four times and appeared in the NBA Finals in 2018 with the Cleveland Cavaliers.

This year, though, the Thunder are rebuilding. They traded away most of their best players who drove the team to the playoffs last season, and, in the tough Western Conference, Oklahoma City is likely to miss the postseason.

Despite the odds of Hill missing the playoffs — if he doesn’t get traded during the season — he has jumped into his role and been a positive example early in training camp.

“He loves being in the guys’ ears, he loves putting his arm around a guy, he’s got a great way about him,” Daigneault said. “He earns a lot of respect because of the type of person he is and how professional he is. I’ve been very impressed with how he works for a guy that’s as proven as he is.”

Hill has one guaranteed year worth $9.5 million on his contract remaining, and then a non-guaranteed $10 million for next season.

He is a likely starter at guard next to Gilgeous-Alexander and can serve a role as an experienced playmaker to ease the burden on the third-year player and the rest of the group.

“To be that leader out here is much-needed with that young locker room that we have,” Hill said. “I’m looking forward to it, just talking to these guys about what I experienced, good and bad, on and off the floor.”

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Starting or off the bench? It’s ‘never been a big factor’ for George Hill

George Hill hasn’t discussed with OKC whether he’ll return to the starting lineup or keep the bench role, but he said it doesn’t matter.

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Over George Hill’s 12 seasons in the NBA, he has started the majority of games played in seven of them. He has missed the playoffs only one time.

Now, he goes from a role as a backup guard on the Finals-contending Milwaukee Bucks to a young Oklahoma City Thunder team embarking on a rebuild.

It’s a very different team with very different expectations and roster construction, but Hill expressed a positive outlook on the upcoming season.

“Even though the roster’s been shaken up a little bit, still have a good group of young men here willing to learn and compete night-in and night-out,” he said. “It’s going to be a great opportunity for me to come in and try to be a leader and try to help these young guys.”

His role as an experienced leader on and off the court is obvious, but what will his spot in the lineup be?

After starting the majority of games between 2012 and 2018, Hill came off the bench for the Bucks over the last season and a half. In 106 games, he averaged 21 minutes per game, a far cry from his 30-plus minutes per game in the mid-2010s.

He’s clearly one of the better guard options on the Thunder. Hill’s experience and basketball IQ makes him an obvious option in the starting lineup, and his career 3-point percentage of 38.4% provides shooting the Thunder have traditionally lack.

But for as many question marks as the Thunder have in their rotation, there are a handful of starting options.

Will Hill be one of them? The guard said he hasn’t discussed his role in detail yet with the Thunder coaching staff, and the individual workouts mandate has prevented Oklahoma City from doing group or five-on-five activities.

“We haven’t gotten into anything team-wise due to all the regulations and things we have to do,” Hill said.

As different as the lineup looks, most of the starting group is predictable.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander will start at one of the guard spots. Lu Dort can start at either shooting guard or small forward. Darius Bazley can be expected to start at power forward and Al Horford should be the center.

That leaves one spot on the court at either the guard or small forward position. If it’s not Hill, it would probably be Trevor Ariza.

Entering his 17th year in the league, Ariza is another veteran who has started the majority of his career. He could slot into the small forward role and be part of a versatile, defensive lineup.

Doing so would also allow the Thunder to bring a proven facilitator and playmaker off the bench instead of giving second-year guard Ty Jerome or rookie Theo Maledon all the backup point guard minutes.

It would also allow the Thunder to test Gilgeous-Alexander as the primary ball handler more often.

Hill, for what it’s worth, said he doesn’t care.

“I’ve never been a big factor on starting or coming off the bench, it really doesn’t matter to me,” he said. “I just want to compete night in and night out, do whatever the team asks me to do and do it at a high level.”

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