Sam Presti responds to anti-tankers calling the Thunder the black eye of the NBA

“Not everybody should be a publisher at the end of the day”

Oklahoma City Thunder general manager Sam Presti met with the media for over two hours to conduct his exit interview on Monday. One of the topics discussed is the Thunder becoming the face of tanking and how some media critics labeled the team as the “black eye of the league.” The Thunder finished the season with a 24-58 record and the fourth-best lottery odds; the team received significant criticism over the last few weeks of the season due to the handling of rotation minutes and the amount of players who sat out games.

Presti fired back and said that those who say such things are nothing but media pundits who are not fully informed about the rebuilding process and how to win as a small-market team in the current landscape in the NBA. Which is a strong argument to make, the Thunder will never be a free agency destination, so the only way the team can return to contention is through drafting young players with the chance of developing into stars under team control for several seasons. Here’s Presti’s full answer to the question as the Thunder continue to face scrutiny in some parts of the media for their shameless tanking efforts:

“Well, the first thing I would say we have a rebuilding team now. Other people can — they like to name things because they have certain opinions that they are trying to — it’s performance art. That’s what social media has become is performance art. We’re not going to get caught up in that.

Not everybody should be a publisher at the end of the day. No offense, but — and that’s not directed to anybody in here specifically.

But I do think there’s a difference between being opinionated and being informed. I’d rather be informed than opinionated. The information is we’ve gone — we went 12 years and we put everything we had into that. Like everything. We taxed the team, no pun intended, to the point where, like, financially the third smallest market in the NBA shouldn’t be asked to go to that level in order to compete. I think that’s one of the prevailing issues that the league is going to have to solve for, especially with the level of new ownership that’s entered the equation and where the trending is financially in terms of just the disparity in the payrolls.

But yeah, we’re going to set our own pace. We’re not going to watch the clock, like I said earlier.

Rebuilding in the West, go look at history. Go study how many drafts it takes. Find your team, find the one that you think is successful and then work back from there. How many years does it take to get to one playoff appearance in the West? How many years does it take to get to two, back to back? That’s a lot different.

If you’re watching the clock all the time, you’re going to make it — you’re actually going to end up making it longer. Like I said, to try to fix things quickly takes a very long time. We’re entering our second draft.

In context, it’s like, I don’t even know what to say to that. Do you know what I mean? I understand the question, but for us we’re like, okay, we’re — that doesn’t change our point of view on what we’re trying to accomplish.”

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OKC Thunder news: How Paul George’s COVID case could affect the Clippers first-round pick

PG catching COVID could create lottery chaos for OKC

The LA Clippers missing Paul George due to testing positive for COVID-19 could have massive ramifications for where its 2022 first-round pick — which the Oklahoma City Thunder own unprotected — could fall.

ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski broke the news on Friday morning, saying that George entered health and safety protocols due to a positive test. The Clippers are facing elimination with a game on Friday against the New Orleans Pelicans that determine the eighth seed who faces the Phoenix Suns in the First Round of the playoffs. The Clippers are forced to play this game after its loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves on Wednesday which determined the seventh seed.

According to ESPN’s Bobby Marks, if the Clippers win, then the Thunder will be picking 15th overall; if the Clippers lose, then the Thunder will have the 12th-best lottery odds on top of its own fourth-best lottery odds.

George averaged 24.3 points, 6.9 rebounds and 5.7 assists in 31 games this season. The Clippers will host the Pelicans on Friday night with a 9 p.m. CT tip.

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OKC Thunder news: John Hollinger lists Lindy Waters III as a reason to watch the Thunder

. @TheAthletic listed Lindy Waters III as a reason to watch the Oklahoma City Thunder this late in the season.

The Athletic’s John Hollinger listed Oklahoma City Thunder two-way player Lindy Waters III as one of his seven players who have made watching tanking teams tolerable. Waters III was signed on a two-way deal on Feb. 11 and had averaged eight points while shooting 36.3 percent from three on nearly six attempts in 25 games this season. With his two-way deal including next season, Waters III’s late-season play and ability to shoot from outside off the catch basically guarantees he will start the season with the Thunder.

“Something has clicked for him since graduating in 2020, especially as a shooter. Waters played 16 games for the Thunder’s G League team and shot the lights out, hitting 48.8 percent from 3, making 18 of his 19 free throws, and also converging enough 2s to land a spectacular 76.7 True Shooting mark. The 6-foot-6 guard was always a halfway decent athlete, so this shooting shift almost immediately marked him as a potential NBA player.

Since signing with the Thunder, he’s kept shooting it. Waters is launching 15.3 triples per 100 possessions, with more than three-quarters of his shots coming from beyond the arc. He’s made 36.3 percent while also grading out as a plus rebounder and a decent enough defender. If he can either score an occasional 2-point basket or lift his 3-point mark closer to 40 percent, the Thunder have a rotation sniper.”

Waters III’s development has been one of the more pleasant surprises for the Thunder this late into the season. If he can develop other areas in his game and not rely solely on his shooting, then there’s a legit shot at the Oklahoma State product sticking to the NBA and carving out a nice career. In fact, Waters III has been so good that Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault has limited his minutes recently due to the fear of him helping the team win games.

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OKC Thunder player grades: Thunder shifts focus to keeping fourth-best lottery odds with 94-98 win over Trail Blazers

The Thunder essentially won a game playing six guys with three of them on 10-day deals.

The race for the third-best lottery odds is essentially over as the Oklahoma City Thunder mount a fourth-quarter comeback to defeat the Portland Trail Blazers once again, 98-94.

Things were looking great entering the fourth quarter for the Thunder’s lottery odds. After 36 minutes, the Trail Blazers had an 82-67 lead and were well on their way to a win that would’ve really benefited the Thunder. If the lead held, then that means the Thunder would be just half a game back from the Detroit Pistons currently for the third-best lottery odds. Now, a 26-4 finish to the game that saw the Trail Blazers score just four points in the final 5:41 of the game has Thunder fans focused on keeping its fourth-best lottery odds as the Indiana Pacers are just half a game back.

This win has deflated the fanbase to say the least, with a real shot at getting top-three lottery odds just a couple of weeks ago, the Thunder going 4-3 in its last seven games as ruined any dreams of that happening. The Thunder threw everything at this game to maximize its odds to lose as it only played six guys essentially with three of them currently on 10-day deals. I mean, Lindy Waters III, a two-way player, was pulled after four minutes as he scored eight quick points for Pete’s sake. There was nothing else that the team could’ve done to lose this game and the Thunder have great synergy throughout the organization has really bit them in the butt hard these last couple of seasons in terms of draft lottery odds.

It’s a failure that the Thunder will not be able to get top-three lottery odds for the second straight season during this rebuild and creating a program that brings the best out of its players has proven to be a hinderance when it comes to losing games. Let’s take look at player grades.

OKC Thunder player grades: 110-101 loss to Pistons opens door for potential top-3 lottery odds

Top-3 lottery odds are back on the menu, boys.

In a must-lose game, the Oklahoma City Thunder fall to the Detroit Pistons, 110-101. And just like that, the Thunder are now just half a game back from top-three lottery odds with five games remaining in the regular season.

Losing this game basically gave the Thunder life once again after its top-three lottery odds chances were put on life support following the team’s win over the Portland Trail Blazers on Monday. But due to the Pistons’ upset win over the Philadelphia 76ers on Thursday, new life was breathed into the Thunder.

The importance of this game was clearly understood by both sides as the Thunder ruled out Aleksej Pokusevski and Tre Mann while the Pistons played Cade Cunningham, Isaiah Stewart and Saddiq Bey for just six to eight minutes each.

Ultimately, the Thunder were finally able to out-tank a team in the caliber of the Pistons and it paid dividends. Any hope on staying in the race for top-three lottery odds required this game to be a loss and the franchise was able to do that by only having seven players active by the end of the game.

OKC Thunder player grades: Thunder basically seals fate with fourth-best lottery odds in overtime win over Trail Blazers

With OKC two games back from top-3 lottery odds and the Thunder & Pistons both having just seven games left in its seasons, it feels like the Thunder is stuck with the fourth-best lottery odds for the second consecutive season.

Despite this officially being a win in the books for the Oklahoma City Thunder, this felt like a massive loss for the fanbase. The Thunder were able to mount a fourth-quarter comeback to tie this game and win in overtime over the Portland Trail Blazers, 134-131.

To call this a gut punch is an understatement. Considering that both teams had injury reports longer than the total players who were actually active in this game, it was pretty clear that both franchises saw this game as a must-lose situation. It’s just impossible to even understand what else the Thunder could do to tank; all eight players available on Monday played significant G League minutes this season with one of them even returning from a fractured foot. There’s literally nothing left that the Thunder could do to lower its odds to win games. Yet somehow the Trail Blazers were able to outdo them in the tanking category and manage to blow an eight-point lead late in the game.

Just scrolling through Twitter, this win is really hitting the fanbase hard and is easily the low point of the season. Which is completely understandable. The Thunder have had serious chances to get top-three lottery odds for a few games now and they just can’t get there due to costly wins against the Orlando Magic and now the Trail Blazers. It’s deflating to see the entire purpose of the season vanish in thin air during just a three-game span.

Now it looks like the Thunder will most likely finish with the fourth-best lottery odds for a second consecutive season. Which makes the rebuild that much more complicated. Congrats to players like Isaiah Roby and Theo Maledon, who understandably played their hearts out as both try to carve out NBA careers, even if it’s not in Oklahoma City, but man, this one is going to sting a ton. The vibes on Twitter are the same ones of last year’s regular-season finale win against the LA Clippers, where the Thunder shot themselves in the foot with their lottery odds winning a meaningless game in the grand scheme of things. So for the same thing to happen twice in as many seasons is quite deflating as the fanbase knows that the route to returning to being a title contender is with elite talent drafted highly. Let’s take a look at player grades.

OKC Thunder players: The Thunder lose by winning its game against the Magic, 118-102

With a chance to attain top-two lottery odds, the shorthanded Thunder snap its 10-game losing streak with a win over the Magic.

Technically speaking, the Oklahoma City Thunder won its game against the Orlando Magic, 118-102. But in reality, this was one of the biggest losses of the season due to the reverse standings implications.

Thanks to a 10-game losing streak, the Thunder were able to make up a lot of ground and essentially lock up top-four lottery odds. The losing streak combined with the fact that the Magic and Detroit Pistons started winning games recently created a real possibility of the Thunder getting important top-three lottery odds. In fact, if the Thunder would’ve lost this game, it would’ve been tied for the second-best lottery odds with the Pistons after Detroit blew out the Atlanta Hawks.

Alas, the Thunder come up short of reaching the elusive top-three lottery odds. Now, that doesn’t mean that it’s over —  the Thunder are just one game back from the third spot with nine games left in the regular season. But for the Thunder to be so close to getting top-two lottery odds — even if it’s for one night — and to not get it is a tough pill to swallow for the fanbase who are tank enthusiasts.

In terms of the actual game, the Thunder were able to use a 20-2 run in the second quarter to claw back from a 13-point deficit and the team was able to grow a comfortable lead for the rest of the game. The Thunder were on cruise control for most of the second half and the Magic just continued to brick shots and play sloppy basketball when given the chance to mount a comeback.

The Thunder — who were missing Shai Gilgeous-Alexander due to a sore right ankle — were led by the likes of Tre Mann and Theo Maledon for this win. The Thunder essentially played this game with G League talent and were able to win against an NBA team — even if it’s one as bad as the Magic. Let’s take a look at player grades.