Hamidou Diallo had 10 assists on Friday. His previous career-best was 4.

OKC Thunder guard Hamidou Diallo set a career-best 10 assists against the Minnesota Timberwolves. His previous high was four.

By halftime against the Minnesota Timberwolves on Friday, Hamidou Diallo hadn’t just broken his previous record for assists in a game. He had doubled it.

Diallo, the de facto starting point guard with all the Oklahoma City Thunder’s usual options injured or in COVID-19 protocol, had eight assists in the first half of the game Friday and finished with 10. His previous career-high was four.

“The fact that you can put the ball in his hands that much over the course of a game, that’s not something I think that he would’ve handled as well in past seasons,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said.

“It’s certainly growth. I thought he did a good job of moving it tonight, he got off it early, he helped the offense function.”

Diallo wasn’t the only Thunder athlete who stepped into a playmaker role in the 106-103 loss on Friday, but he was a tone setter with the ball in his hands. His play helped OKC survive the absences of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Theo Maledon and George Hill and nearly get the win.

“Hami’s got a contagious attitude about him,” said big Isaiah Roby. “When he gets out on the court, he’s fun to play with. He’s going to make the right play.”

In Diallo’s first point/assist double-double, he scored 16 points on 6-for-13 shooting and had a steal to go with the 10 assists.

He has now scored double-digit points in eight games in a row. During that span, he is averaging 13.8 points, 3.9 rebounds and 3.3 assists.

“This year in general, he’s been getting an opportunity to, I feel like, handle the ball more, make plays, do different things,” said center Al Horford.

“It’s great for his confidence, it’s great for him understanding how he needs to play and how he impacts the game. He can not only attack, but he can create for others. We saw that side of him tonight.”

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Hamidou Diallo is starting. Who can take a second-unit playmaking role?

OKC Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault discussed who can take playmaking roles with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander out due to injury.

The knee injury to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander puts the Oklahoma City Thunder in an undesirable situation.

Beyond the fact that he’s the leader of their offense and the best player on the team, Oklahoma City is now down to just one true point guard and two true guards on the team.

Rookie point guard Theo Maledon and third-year shooting guard Hamidou Diallo will start in place of Gilgeous-Alexander and George Hill, who is out with a thumb injury.

The Thunder now have 10 active players. Coming off the bench will be some combination of Justin Jackson, Kenrich Williams, Darius Miller, Isaiah Roby and Mike Muscala.

None of those players are guards. There’s minimal NBA ball handling experience in that group.

When asked who would lead playmaking in the second unit, head coach Mark Daigneault said Jackson will get an opportunity and Williams will get an expanded role.

Jackson is probably the wingiest, most experienced ballhandler of that group. Now in his fourth year in the league, he plays more of a perimeter role than the other four, with the exception of Miller, who is primarily a catch-and-shoot guy on offense.

The Thunder will find ways to take that load off Jackson, though.

“And then we’ll try some things rotationally that kind of do a little more staggering than we’ve done to get different guys from the first unit playing with the second unit,” Daigneault said.

It may not even simply be staggering the minutes of Maledon and Diallo — the Thunder want to see how wing Lu Dort and forward Darius Bazley can handle playmaking roles.

“It allows us to see what our style of play looks like without our primary creator, and it allows us to learn about our system a little bit,” Daigneault said.

The starting lineup against the Houston Rockets on Wednesday will be Maledon, Diallo, Dort, Bazley and Al Horford.

Tipoff is scheduled for 7 p.m.

This post originally appeared on OKCThunderWire. Follow us on Facebook!

‘This team can be much better’: Thunder suffer another ugly first quarter, lose to Rockets

By the end of the first quarter, the Oklahoma City Thunder trailed the Houston Rockets by 24 points. They couldn’t make it a contest.

48-24.

Monday against the Houston Rockets was the fourth time in the last six games in which the opponent of the Oklahoma City Thunder either doubled OKC’s point output in the first quarter or were one basket away from doubling it.

A quick look back at the last two weeks:

Jan. 22: Clippers led 36-18 after one. Thunder lost 120-106.

Jan. 24: Clippers led 36-19 after one. Thunder lost 108-100.

Jan. 27: Suns led 32-17 after one. Thunder won 102-97.

Feb. 1: Rockets led 48-24. Thunder lost 136-130.

By the time the first quarter on Monday ended, the new-look Houston team was almost halfway to 100. The Thunder wouldn’t even reach 48 until there was just 1:30 left in the second quarter. It wasn’t a contest.

“I didn’t think we had a lot of physicality on-ball or in our help,” head coach Mark Daigneault said. “They got into rhythm and they got really comfortable. Which, you know, they came into the game in a rhythm – they’ve won five in a row, they’ve played really well — we needed a little more pop tonight to stop them.”

This 30-point loss to the Rockets may have been the worst of the season for Oklahoma City. The Thunder lacked energy. Their defense struggled. They couldn’t produce plays offensively consistently. The Thunder have given up more than 120 points in three of their last four games, and the 2-2 record over that span feels like a microcosm of the season.

Sure, Oklahoma City is .500 in that stretch. But the wins are tight and the losses are ugly.

“So much of defense is predicated on energy and spirit and will. But we also chart our defense every single game to try to be a little more process-oriented. There was a game in Portland earlier in the week where we gave up a lot of points, our rating defensively wasn’t great, but we charted out really well and it was just a night where they made shots. Whereas the Nets game the other night, we didn’t chart out well,” Daigneault said.

“We try to focus on controllables after the game. Obviously the game’s emotional, no one likes to give up 130 points, 20-something 3s, or 30 3s, however many they made, but we need to find the stuff that we can control.”

This game had some of both. Most teams won’t shoot 28-for-52 from 3-point range and attempt 102 total field goal attempts. But the defense allowing the Rockets to get that many shots, Oklahoma City getting outrebounded, the team finding no answer for any individual player on Houston. Those types of things must be addressed in film sessions Tuesday before the rematch on Wednesday.

Daigneault was asked if the defense is in a slump.

“I think slumps are an emotional thing. We try to use process and try to use fundamentals to remove the emotion and really root down into the stuff that we can control,” he said.

Center Al Horford was asked directly if the defense over the last two games concerns him.

“It does. It does concern me,” he said. “This team can be much better.”

The good news is that the Thunder tend to do well after having time to review. Daigneault has impressed with his halftime adjustments. The second game against the Clippers was much, much better than the first. The Thunder and Rockets will have a day to prepare for the rematch.

“I’m definitely looking forward to it. We came out tonight, we didn’t have it, we didn’t make effort plays. It wasn’t the team we usually are on the defensive end, and it cost us the game tonight big time,” said guard Hamidou Diallo, who scored 15 points in 15 minutes.

“Try to come in here next game with a different mentality. That’s what it’s going to take to beat these really good teams.”

The bad news, for Oklahoma City at least, is that this isn’t the Houston team sans-James Harden that many expected when the trade was made. The Rockets are now 7-3 without Harden and have won six games in a row. This team is on fire.

None of that will have changed when the two meet Wednesday. Oklahoma City didn’t have an answer for Eric Gordon (25 points in 22 minutes), John Wall or Christian Wood (18 points apiece) or DeMarcus Cousins (17 points).

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 19 and couldn’t get going like normal. Nobody else on the team scored more than 15 points.

There’s quite a bit the Thunder need to work on before the next matchup.

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Bleacher Report grades Thunder’s start to season A-

Bleacher Report graded the OKC Thunder an A-, making Oklahoma City one of just eight teams in the NBA to receive a grade at least that high.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s season hasn’t quite gone the way it was expected from the outside. With a 6-7 record, they continue to hover around the eighth seed 13 games into the season.

For Bleacher Report, that’s the lone blemish on the season. And when the problem is you’re winning too many games, that’s not an actual problem.

B/R graded the Thunder an A- in an article published Thursday. Oklahoma City is one of just eight teams to be graded in the As.

Grant Hughes wrote:

“The only imperfection in the Oklahoma City Thunder’s performance shows up in the win column; they’ve got too many for a rebuilder focused on draft picks. OKC has so many incoming selections from other teams that it doesn’t really need its 2021 first-rounder to be great. but that’d still be nice in what’s supposed to be a deep draft.”

Hughes also notes, though, that with a bottom-five point differential, their record will start to dip.

“As that balances out, the welcome losses will come. Hooray!”

What Hughes likes more than the Thunder’s wins is the growth he’s seen from the players. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is putting up numbers that are only matched by James Harden, Stephen Curry, Kyrie Irving and Nikola Jokic (21.0 points, 6.0 assists and 5.0 rebounds on at least 60% true shooting).

Lu Dort’s improved shooting from deep has been noted, and the improvement of Hamidou Diallo and Darius Bazley has impressed.

“OKC’s longtime preference for rangy athletes it hopes to mold into actual basketball players is paying off.”

Oklahoma City may be in the early stages of a rebuild, but the team has continued to impress outsiders.

“The ground floor of a rebuild isn’t supposed to look this good or be this much fun.”

The Memphis Grizzlies, Philadelphia 76ers and Utah Jazz all recorded A- on Bleacher Report, while the Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Clippers and Milwaukee Bucks got A grades.

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By the numbers: Thunder in the playoff hunt with one-sixth of season complete

See interesting Oklahoma City Thunder stats through the first 12 games, including from Hamidou Diallo, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Lu Dort.

With a dozen games in the book, one-sixth of the NBA season is complete.

The Oklahoma City Thunder are 6-6 and in the playoff hunt through the early stages of the season.

What has allowed them to do this? Is it sustainable? Those are a couple questions we’ll address in this By The Numbers segment.

Role players including Hamidou Diallo and Lu Dort have taken bigger leaps than anticipated while rookie Aleksej Pokusevski has shown good defense. Guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is playing like the star that was expected of him when the team entered the rebuild this offseason.

Here are some defining numbers through the first 12 games. All statistics are as of Sunday morning.

OKC Thunder’s win streak comes to end in loss to San Antonio Spurs

The OKC Thunder had chances, but the turnover differential and lack of sustained run cost them the game against the San Antonio Spurs.

The three-game win streak of the Oklahoma City Thunder came to a close with a 112-102 loss to the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday.

It may have been a double-digit loss, but the Thunder actually had chances not only in the third quarter when they tied the game at 54 but in the final few minutes of the fourth quarter. If one or two shots had fallen, the late-game fouling could have looked different. For example:

Trailing 98-92 with 4:20 to play, guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander drove to the rim and passed the ball to guard Lu Dort near the middle of the floor. As defenders closed in, Dort quickly tapped it to center Al Horford, who was wide open in the corner. He couldn’t hit the 3.

Horford attempted another 3 with the Thunder down 104-100 with 1:54 to go. It wasn’t a great look, but he had a little space; it would have made it a one-point game. Instead, he missed, Patty Mills made a layup on the other end and the Spurs went up six.

With 41 seconds to go, Gilgeous-Alexander made a layup that cut the deficit to six. The Thunder forced a turnover in the backcourt, and forward Darius Bazley got a wide open 3. Nobody around him as he pulled up in an attempt to cut the deficit to 3. No good.

“We certainly had our chances but obviously wasn’t enough tonight to get over the top against a team like that, the way they played, especially,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said.

That turnover forced with about 40 seconds was a rare one. It was one of only four the Spurs committed the entire evening.

That’s low, even against the Spurs, who average a league-low 10.2 turnovers a game.

While Daigneault credited San Antonio’s style of play for that, guard Hamidou Diallo said he expected better of the Thunder.

“I feel like that’s on us. We’re long, we’re athletic. We make teams turn the ball over. We make teams make quick decisions,” Diallo said. “Tonight, we weren’t in their bodies enough, we weren’t the aggressors, and it showed.”

Perhaps the biggest difference from Oklahoma City’s recent wins compared to this loss was the bench unit not putting together a surge in the second quarter.

Over the last three games, the starters began the game slowly, but the bench came through in the second to pull them back in. Tuesday was opposite – at the end of the first quarter, the game was tied, but the Thunder only scored 17 in the second points.

San Antonio outscored the Thunder by eight that quarter. Over the other three quarters, the Spurs outscored OKC by a total of two points.

Diallo was once again excellent off the bench, scoring 16 points in 21 minutes. He was 5-for-9 from the field and 6-for-6 from the free throw line. The rest of the bench, though, only combined for 20 points.

This isn’t an attempt to place the blame on them. If a team’s hopes of winning rest upon the shoulders of the second unit making a run, it’s tough to pull out victories.

But in Oklahoma City’s recent wins, the bench has put together runs in the second quarter that get the Thunder back in. They were unable to Tuesday.

The starters were good tonight, with all five scoring double-digit points and Gilgeous-Alexander leading the way with 20, but outside a run in the third quarter, they couldn’t put together a big push that the Thunder have had over the past week.

On Tuesday, they got consistent solid play from the starters. Some games that’s good enough. Some games, it isn’t.

Offensively, the Thunder starters were close to equal to the Spurs. Oklahoma City starters shot 44.23% from the field while the San Antonio starters shot 44.26%. The Thunder were 5-for-18 from 3 while the Spurs were 5-for-17. Bazley was the only Thunder starter with a negative plus-minus.

But the minute differential played a big factor, as three OKC starters played fewer than 30 minutes while only one Spur starter did. Due to that and the turnovers (seven for the Thunder starters, four from the Spurs), OKC starters attempted 52 shots while San Antonio’s took 61.

The Spurs made their push in the second quarter and then countered a Thunder run in the third. The closest thing to a sustained run after that was when guard George Hill scored six points between the 3:46 and 2:25 mark in the fourth quarter to cut the deficit to four.

Against the Spurs on Tuesday, it wasn’t enough. Oklahoma City couldn’t extend its win streak.

“When you play a team like that, you have to be clicking on all cylinders,” said Hill, who finished with 12 points.

“We had points in the game where we weren’t communicating very well, weren’t doing the extra effort, the extra thing and covering for each other. When you’re playing a team as good, a systemized team like San Antonio, you have to really be dialed in together.”

Kevin Durant praises Hamidou Diallo, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Kevin Durant said Hamidou Diallo “changed the momentum” of the game for the OKC Thunder.

The Oklahoma City Thunder were flat to start the game against the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday, trailing 41-29 after the first quarter and then falling behind by 15 on the opening possession.

Then, Hamidou Diallo took over.

The backup guard scored nine points in a row to put the Thunder back in the game.

Over on the Nets bench, Kevin Durant was watching.

“Hami Diallo came in and gave them a huge spark off the bench,” Durant said. “Just changed the momentum for the team.”

The Thunder guard finished with 25 points on 10-for-14 shooting and had four assists and four steals.

It was the first time in his career that he had broken the 20-point mark in consecutive games.

Diallo wasn’t the only Thunder guard who went off. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored a season-high 31 points, some of which came with Durant guarding him.

“He’s gonna give you what he gives you every night,” Durant said.

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The Nets star also called out Al Horford for having “played his best game of the season” on Sunday.

Horford had 22 points in 28 minutes and grabbed six boards.

The three of them led the Thunder to a 129-116 victory over Brooklyn.

“They played with each other and played with a nice rhythm, and you’ve gotta give them credit,” Durant said.

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Hamidou Diallo accomplishes promising feat for 1st time in his career

Hamidou Diallo had a very good weekend in New York City.

There’s nothing like home cooking, and Hamidou Diallo proved that yet again with his second strong performance in as many games.

The Oklahoma City Thunder scored what could fairly be described as a feel-good win on Sunday night when they pulled out a comeback win against former Thunder Kevin Durant, whose Brooklyn Nets were no match for Diallo and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

To the tune of a 129-116 victory, the Thunder completed its five-game road trip having gone 4-1. For Diallo, the last two contests — against the Knicks on Friday and Nets on Sunday — were especially meaningful. Hailing from New York City’s borough of Queens, he was on friendly turf.

Comfortable, his play was quite impressive.

As it turns out, Diallo, who tallied 23 points and 11 rebounds against the Knicks on Friday, followed up his effort in that contest with 25 points, three rebounds, four assists and four steals against the Nets on Sunday.

For Diallo, per the Thunder’s public relations department, it was the first time in his three-year career that he recorded back-to-back 20-point games.

Aside from the strong play from the New Yorker, head coach Mark Daigneault has to also be very happy with the production of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Obviously the cornerstone upon which Sam Presti is attempting to rebuild his team, Gilgeous-Alexander also turned in a strong effort in Brooklyn. He ended Sunday night’s win with 31 points, six rebounds and seven assists.

In a great coincidence, according to ESPN Stats & Info, on Sunday night, Diallo and Gilgeous-Alexander became the first set of Thunder teammates younger than 22 years old to score 25 points or more in the same game since 2011.

The last duo to do so? Russell Westbrook and (you guessed it) Kevin Durant.

Strong play from Gilgeous-Alexander isn’t anything new. He’s clearly an emerging young star in the NBA.

Diallo, though? He isn’t regarded nearly as highly.

After a very productive weekend in New York, though, it’s fair to wonder whether the Thunder have a new 1-2 punch.

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3 Thunder players score season-highs in beatdown of Nets

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander poured on 31 points against Kevin Durant and the Brooklyn Nets as the OKC Thunder won their fourth game of the roadtrip.

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Hamidou Diallo sat down for his postgame Zoom press conference donning cap with a New York Yankees logo.

This weekend, he was the king of his home state. He scored 23 points against the New York Knicks on Friday before posting 25 against the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday in a 129-116 win.

Diallo was one of three Thunder players who set a season high in scoring in the huge win over the Nets and Kevin Durant.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored the first seven OKC points of the game and finished the first quarter with 14 points. In total, he had 31, the first time he’s passed the 30-point mark this season.

Some of it was with star forward Kevin Durant, listed at 6-foot-10, guarding him.

“Obviously Kevin Durant is one of the better players in this league, and me being a competitor and a guy that ultimately wants to be one of those guys, I love challenges like that,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “I just wanted to compete. We was gonna have to guard him, and he was gonna have to guard me. We was gonna find out. It was nothing but competition.”

His 14 points in the first quarter was good. The bad part was that those 14 points accounted for almost half of the Thunder’s 29 total, while the Nets tallied 41.

Then the bench came through for the third game in a row.

The Thunder went on a 10-3 run to open the quarter. Actually, let me rephrase – Diallo went on a 10-3 run to start the quarter.

After Nets forward Taurean Prince hit a 3 to open the quarter, Diallo answered with a 3 of his own. He then stole the ball and got to the free throw line off the fast break. He hit another 3 and then worked quickly in transition off a defensive rebound to get another shot at the rim.

The Thunder cut the lead to six, which was also the deficit at the 6:55 mark when center Al Horford checked into the game.

Horford went on an 8-2 run on his own to tie the game up at 51. He scored 22 points, a mark he had only reached one time since Nov. 4, 2019.

“We pushed Al’s button a couple times to get him a couple post-ups just to give him some balance to his game,” Daigneault said. “Obviously he’s done a great job popping for us.”

The Thunder went into the half trailing 63-57. They would trail by as many as eight in the third quarter before embarking on a 25-9 run. Lu Dort had nine points during this stretch and Horford had seven.

By the end of the frame, Oklahoma City had put up 37 to Brooklyn’s 19 and broken the game open for a 94-81 lead. Those 37 points were the highest the team had scored in a quarter this year, and made up for the 41 that the Nets had in the first quarter.

The Thunder rode out the fourth quarter for a win, building a lead as large as 18 before winning by 13.

Oklahoma City entered the game with the second-fewest points per game in the league and had only crossed the 110-point mark one time. They dominated the final three quarters against the Nets.

“The game got dicey a little bit early … I just didn’t think we had the best energy in the first quarter,” Daigneault said. “We came out of halftime, we kind of committed to having a different level of energy on offense and on defense … All 10 guys that touched the floor in the third did an unbelievable job of amping it up.

Forward Isaiah Roby, who played in place of big Mike Muscala, had 13 points in 19 minutes off the bench. Muscala was active but Daigneault had wanted to get Roby more minutes, so he thought this game, coming off a rib injury against the Knicks, was a good one to rest Muscala during.

Dort finished with 13 points and point guard George Hill had 14.

Durant finished with 36 points and 11 rebounds while taking 15 free throw attempts. Caris LeVert had 21 points.

In the end, Gilgeous-Alexander made the biggest difference. He was aggressive inside, finshing nine of his 11 made field goals in the paint, and went 7-for-8 from the free throw line. He also had seven assists and six rebounds.

Normally cool and collected, Gilgeous-Alexander was animated during points of this game as he racked up his numbers.

“Shai’s going to get going and he’s going to talk about it, and he’s going to bring the swag to the game each and every day,” Diallo said.

“He’s going to express himself. That’s just the type of player he is. He can definitely express himself when he wants to, and at times he can just do what he do very quietly and let his game speak for himself. But today he expressed himself.”

The Thunder can go home satisfied from a road trip in which they won four of five games.

“I think all of us across the board wanted the same thing: end the road trip the right way, get the W,” Gilgeous-Alexander said.

Video highlights: Diallo, Gilgeous-Alexander combine for 48 points in win over Knicks

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Hamidou Diallo led the OKC Thunder over the New York Knicks on Friday. See the highlights:

In a game against the New York Knicks that started slow offensively, two Oklahoma City Thunder guards broke out for strong performances on that end of the court in the 101-89 victory.

Thunder fans are growing accustomed to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander putting up big numbers. He had a double-double with 25 points and 10 rebounds after he started taking shots at the rim more aggressively in the second half. He picked up 12 of his points in the third quarter on 6-for-7 shooting.

“He’s carrying a heavier load than he’s ever carried,” head coach Mark Daigneault said. “There’s a smoothing process, I think, for that, in terms of when to be aggressive, when to facilitate, when to organize. And I thought tonight he just had an unbelievable balance.”

Here are Gilgeous-Alexander’s full highlights:

Game highlights: Video recap, box score

Hamidou Diallo had the best performance of his career in his return to his home state in the Madison Square Garden. He had 23 points and 11 boards, and he and Gilgeous-Alexander capped it off with an alley-oop.

“It’s something that I bring to the table,” he said of his energy. “Every given night, I gotta be the most competitive person on the floor and that’s a goal of mine.”

Here are Diallo’s highlights:

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