Recap: Sunday’s 2023-24 OKC Thunder training camp

Here’s a quick recap of Sunday’s Thunder training camp as Mark Daigneault, Kenrich Williams and Aaron Wiggins spoke to media.

The Oklahoma City Thunder held the final day of training camp on Sunday ahead of their preseason opener against the San Antonio Spurs on Monday, Oct. 9.

After camp, Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault and wings Kenrich Williams and Aaron Wiggins spoke with the media.

During the session, Daigneault revealed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander will miss their preseason opener for rest purposes, and Vasilije Micic will miss it due to an ankle sprain.

Practice footage was also recorded and tweeted by media who were in attendance on Sunday.

Let’s recap what the trio had to say as the 2023-24 training camp comes to a close.

OKC Thunder 3 goals: What Kenrich Williams has to accomplish in 2023-24 season

Here are 3 goals Kenrich Williams can achieve for this upcoming season.

In this continuing series, Thunder Wire assigns three goals to each of the 21 players, per Spotrac, that make up the Oklahoma City Thunder roster.

The Thunder’s season kicks off on Oct. 25 against the Chicago Bulls. After a surprising 40-42 campaign that ended a win shy of the playoffs, OKC enters this year with playoff aspirations.

Let’s assign three goals for Kenrich Williams. The 28-year-old wing had his season cut short last year when he underwent season-ending wrist surgery in March. Before then, he played a valuable role as OKC’s first wing off the bench who spot-started when needed.

Expect a similar type of role for him this upcoming season. It’s evident the Thunder value Williams highly due to his profile on and off the court.

Kenrich Williams undergoes second wrist surgery to remove hardware

Kenrich Williams suffered the season-ending wrist injury in March.

The Oklahoma City Thunder announced on Tuesday that veteran wing Kenrich Williams underwent a second planned procedure to remove the hardware on his left wrist.

Williams suffered a season-ending scapholunate ligament rupture on his left wrist in March.

The second procedure was done in New York by Dr. Michelle Carlson. Williams’ rehab timeline remains the same as he continues to prepare for the 2023-24 regular season.

In 53 games this past season, Williams averaged eight points on 51.7% shooting, 4.9 rebounds and two assists. The Thunder desperately felt his absence during the final two months of the season. Their depth took a major hit in their bid for a playoff spot that came up just short.

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2022-23 Thunder player grades: Kenrich Williams

Handing out a final grade for Kenrich Williams’ 2022-23 season.

The 2022-23 Oklahoma City Thunder’s season ended with the play-in tournament loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves, which means it’s time for reflection.

Being one of the biggest overachievers in the league, the Thunder finished with a 40-42 record after being predicted by many to have high lottery odds.

Now that the season is in the books, let’s go back and evaluate all 19 players who suited up for the Thunder this season. Grades will be handed out to every player in terms of what their expectations were heading into the season and how they lived up to them.

The sixth player in this installment is Kenrich Williams, who was a steady hand in OKC’s rotation before suffering a season-ending wrist injury in March.

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(Editor’s note: We are starting individual grades for all players from the 2022-23 Oklahoma City Thunder. To access other reviews as part of this ongoing series, click here.)

Kenrich Williams underwent season-ending wrist surgery

OKC Thunder G/F Kenrich Williams underwent wrist surgery expected to miss the remainder of the season.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s rotation will be different for the rest of the season following the injury to swingman Kenrich Williams. The 28-year-old was injured in Oklahoma City’s March 2 game against the Sacramento Kings, diagnosed as a scapholunate ligament rupture in his left wrist.

Williams underwent successful surgery on his left wrist in New York on Tuesday. The veteran is expected to make a full recovery but will be sidelined for the rest of the 2022-2023 regular season.

Williams ends the season averaging 8 points, 4.9 rebounds and two assists in 22.8 minutes over 55 games. He signed a three-year, $20.01 million extension earlier in the season as he is expected to play a long-term role in the team’s plans.

Williams is a captain on the team and was asked during the press conference following the game he suffered the injury about lifting the younger players following a bad loss.

“Just keep going. It’s one game. Everybody goes through it. I go through it was a part of the game. This is the beauty of the game.” said Williams. “You get a chance to come back tomorrow and play the game that we love to play. And I’m I know for sure those guys will respond well tomorrow, so not worried about that.”

The Thunder are still in range of postseason contention but will need to leap several teams with time running out on the year.
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Kenrich Williams out for remainder of the 2022-23 season with wrist injury

Kenrich Williams will remain out for the remainder of the season with a wrist injury.

The Oklahoma City Thunder announced on Thursday that forward Kenrich Williams will undergo wrist surgery to repair a scapholunate ligament rupture and will miss the remainder of the 2022-23 season.

Williams suffered the left wrist injury against the Sacramento Kings this past Tuesday and was ruled out for Wednesday’s game against the Los Angeles Lakers with a left wrist sprain.

The 28-year-old has played an important role in the Thunder’s success this season as a veteran wing off the bench. Without Williams, OKC’s depth takes a huge hit.

In 53 games this season, Williams averaged eight points on 51.7% shooting, 4.9 rebounds and two assists. The Thunder (28-34) have 20 games remaining in their regular season.

Williams is set to begin a four-year, $27.2 million extension next season that keeps him with the Thunder until 2027 if they choose to pick up his 2026-27 team option of $7.2 million.

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Player grades: Thunder can’t overcome Lauri Markannen’s 43 points in 120-119 OT loss to Jazz

Player grades for the Thunder’s 120-119 OT loss to the Jazz.

The basketball circled around the hoop before ultimately rimming out.

With a chance to hit an overtime game-winner, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander launched a quality elbow mid-range jumper that didn’t fall in a 120-119 overtime loss to the Utah Jazz.

It was a decent look considering the circumstances, but that didn’t make this one-point loss any easier to stomach.

“The locker room was disappointed, which is a good thing,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said. “It means we’re invested in the game. The best part about that one is I thought a lot about what we can control in the fourth quarter and overtime let us down. It wasn’t one we can write off on luck and those are the best losses. … We gotta look in the mirror on that one because there were a lot of things we could’ve done better.”

While Gilgeous-Alexander had a chance to decide the outcome of this back-and-forth contest, the previous two possessions arguably had bigger influences on the result.

Let’s take a look at them.

After forcing himself to the free-throw line, Gilgeous-Alexander, a 91.2% shooter, went an uncharacteristic 1-of-2 from the charity stripe to give the Thunder just a two-point lead with 12.1 seconds left in overtime.

On the next possession, Lauri Markkanen, who went toe to toe against his fellow All-Star with 43 points and 10 rebounds, drew a three shot foul on Lu Dort off a curl. The Thunder challenged the call but were not able to get it reversed. Markkanen made all three free-throw attempts to give the Jazz the game-winning points.

While fans will harp on that foul call as the reason the Thunder lost, a poor final 17 minutes of the fourth quarter and overtime merit greater  responsibility for the disappointing loss.

Entering the fourth quarter, the Thunder held an 86-78 lead. With 7:17 left, the Thunder maintained the eight-point advantage.

From that point, the Jazz outscored the Thunder, 35-26, in the final 12 minutes, which included 14 points in overtime.

The Thunder struggled to score efficiently. They went 45-of-112 (40.2%) from the field and a poor 8-of-37 (21.6%) from 3. The saving grace for the offense was OKC’s ability to get to the free-throw line, where it went 21-of-27 (77.8%).

Meanwhile, the Jazz also struggled on offense as they shot 42-of-100 (42%) from the field and 13-of-48 (27.1%) from 3. Similar to their opponent, the Jazz went 23-of-27 (85.2%) from  the free-throw line.

Despite playing against one of the best young rim-protecting bigs, Walker Kessler — who finished with seven points, 18 rebounds and seven blocks — the Thunder stuck to their brand of basketball. They went 30-of-64 (46.9%) inside of the paint.

While the efficiency wasn’t there, the volume was, and it led to a big free-throw shooting night for the Thunder.

Speaking of Kessler, he was fantastic for the Jazz. Outside of his impressive stat-line (which included him shooting and making his first three-pointer in the opening possession), he played a pivotal role for the Jazz in this home win at the end of regulation.

Trailing by two points with 16.1 seconds left, Kessler grabbed a pair of offensive rebounds during a hectic three-second period that saw him tie the game with a second-chance (third-chance?) layup.

On the other end with 4.1 seconds left, Kessler blocked an Isaiah Joe reverse layup drive to send the game into overtime.

The Jazz only out-rebounded the Thunder by four, but it felt like a lot more in the closing minutes of the game as they kept getting scoring opportunities.

In fourth quarter and overtime, the Jazz collected seven offensive rebounds compared to the Thunder’s two.

“I thought we kinda held them in check on the glass until late in the game,” Daigneault said. “I thought it was a factor — especially late.”

This loss stings, as Daigneault mentioned the quietness that filled OKC’s locker room, and it’s hard to blame them for feeling that way.

Entering Thursday, the Jazz trailed by the Thunder by just half a game in the standings. The team switched spots in the standings: the Jazz are 10th while the Thunder are 11th in the Western Conference.

The Thunder will have plenty of chances to amend this loss. They play the Jazz three more times in their final 24 games of the regular season — and considering how jam-packed the standings are, the Thunder are going to need every one of those games.

Let’s take a look at Thunder player grades.

Player grades: Sloppy offense causes Thunder to lose to Rockets, 112-106

Player grades for the Thunder’s 112-106 loss to the Rockets.

Heading into their next two games against the Houston Rockets, the Oklahoma City Thunder had a chance to get two easy wins on paper and get back to .500 for the first time since being 4-4 early in the season.

Instead, all the Thunder can do now is hope for a split after losing to the Rockets, 112-106.

The Thunder struggled out of the gates once again as they trailed the Rockets — who were missing their starting backcourt of Jalen Green and Kevin Porter Jr. — 34-25 following the first quarter.

A drowsy start by the Thunder matched the energy inside the Toyota Center.

After digging themselves into an early hole, it was a game of catch-up.

The Thunder eventually took over the lead in the third quarter due to an impressive 28-17 advantage. Alas, it wouldn’t hold as the Rockets enjoyed a 28-20 fourth-quarter scoring advantage that led them to the upset win.

“I thought they were more ready to play from the jump,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said. “We had a hard time. In the first half, they just played with a lot more force than we did… It wasn’t a 48-minute effort on our part and it was on theirs.”

A Kenyon Martin Jr. 26-foot three-pointer essentially sealed the game as the Rockets grew their lead to seven points with 3:05 left in the game. The following three Thunder possessions ended in two turnovers and a missed shot.

Those three possessions encapsulated the type of offensive woes the Thunder suffered on Wednesday.

It was an ugly offensive showing for the Thunder as they shot 38-of-103 (36.9%) from the field and an even uglier 12-of-43 (27.9%) from 3. While the Rockets didn’t shoot the ball much better, they dominated inside of the paint and outscored the Thunder 66-46.

The 20-point difference in points inside the paint essentially decided the game. The Rockets also took advantage of their size by dominating the Thunder on the glass, out-rebounding them 65-52.

“I thought they set the tone for the game in the first half and kinda had us on our heels,” Daigneault said.

Considering how well the Thunder have played — going 9-4 in January and entering playoff conversations — losses like these are hard to stomach for playoff aspirations.

The Thunder are the better team than the Rockets, yet — for whatever reason — have struggled to collect easy-on-paper wins against them. In the last two seasons, the Thunder are 1-5, which includes a blowout loss to them earlier this season.

Without Green and Porter Jr., veteran guard Eric Gordon led the way for the Rockets as he finished with a season-high 25 points on 8-of-17 shooting. Rookie forward Tari Eason also added a career-high 20 points and 13 rebounds off the bench.

Martin Jr. had 18 points, seven rebounds and four assists. Alperen Sengun finished with 10 points, 12 rebounds and four assists.

The Thunder will get a chance to right the ship with a rematch against the Rockets at home on Saturday.

Let’s take a look at Thunder player grades.

Player grades: Thunder lose high-scoring affair to Hawks, 137-132

Player grades for the Thunder’s 137-132 loss to the Hawks.

OKLAHOMA CITY — Remember how the Oklahoma City Thunder scrapped by the Denver Nuggets for a 101-99 win just two days ago?

Well, it felt like they played a completely different sport on Wednesday in a 137-132 loss to the Atlanta Hawks.

It was pretty clear where this game was heading after the first quarter, as the Thunder led 43-39. This belief was reaffirmed at the half with a tied game of 77-77.

Then by the end of the third quarter, both teams scored over 100 points. Ultimately, both teams scored over 130 points in regulation.

After gutting out a scrappy win on Sunday, the Thunder needed more offensive fireworks on Wednesday in a loss.

“Neither team was playing defense,” Josh Giddey said. “It just became a battle of who could score more points.”

The Thunder scored 132 points on 53-of-102 (52%) from the field and went 15-of-34 (44.1%) from 3. The Hawks scored 137 points on 50-of-84 (59.5%) from the field and 11-of-29 (37.9%) from 3.

The biggest difference between both teams came from the free-throw line. The Hawks went 26-of-33 (78.8%) and the Thunder went 11-of-16 (68.8%).

The free-throw disparity adds to a recent disturbing trend for the Thunder, who have been outshot from the line 94-43 in their last three games.

“I thought those were plays they probably could’ve gotten. We’ll see the L2M report,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said when asked about not getting calls late in the game. “The thing that was disappointing is they told me — I did get an explanation in the first half and they said we’re shooting a lot of threes, and then you look down, and we took 15 to 20 more shots in the paint than they did and so if they’re going to give me that explanation, then I’d like that to be true.”

The high-scoring affair was main-evented by the battle of 2018 draft companions Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Trae Young. Gilgeous-Alexander finished with 36 points while Young finished with 33 points and 11 assists.

Before the season, Young was the viewed as the better player between the two. With Gilgeous-Alexander graduating to superstardom this season, it feels like public opinion is starting to shift in his favor.

Trailing 131-122 with 1:54 left, it felt like the game was about over. But a 10-4 flurry helped the Thunder make it a three-point game with 14.1 seconds left.

Alas, Gilgeous-Alexander missed a rare pair of shots near the rim and hopes of a comeback were evaporated.

“I think we let one slip tonight for sure,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “Offense was good enough, we just didn’t bring it defensively. They made us pay.”

Outside of Young’s dominant night, the Hawks also had four other double-digit scorers.

Dejounte Murray finished with 21 points. Bogdan Bogdanovic finished with 20 points. John Collins and Clint Capela each collected double-doubles. Capela had 18 points and 10 rebounds while Collins had 19 points and 10 rebounds.

Let’s take a look at Thunder player grades.

Shams Charania: Kenrich Williams will be part of the next Thunder contender

Kenrich Williams is here to stay.

Over the last couple of years, it has been heavily reported that Kenrich Williams wants to stay with the Oklahoma City Thunder for the foreseeable future.

The Athletic’s NBA insider Shams Charania re-emphasized this point when he reported both parties want to stay married, and that it’ll take more than a first-round pick for the Thunder to consider otherwise.

“They could trade him today for a first-round pick but they’ve held on to him. They signed him to a long-term deal. Just the vision to sign him, initially on a deal and now for the long term. Those are the type of guys you want to build with. When this team wins big, Kenrich Williams is going to be a big part of it.”

This past offseason, the Thunder signed Williams to a four-year, $27.2 million extension that kicks in next season.

Considering Williams is on the record with his desire to retire in Oklahoma City, this isn’t too surprising or anything new. With the Thunder already in the playoff race, the next contention window could open sooner than most anticipated — if it hasn’t already.

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