Thunder overcome 26-point deficit to beat Lakers, get 1st win of season

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander cooked, Darius Bazley found his rhythm and Russell Westbrook got ejected as the Thunder tied the franchise mark for biggest comeback victory.

Where do you want to point as the defining moment of the Oklahoma City Thunder’s 123-115 win over the Los Angeles Lakers, a 26-point comeback for OKC’s first victory of the season?

Maybe it was Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s buzzer-beater 3-pointer over Russell Westbrook to end the third quarter, capping 14 points in three minutes from SGA and giving the Thunder their first lead of the game.

Maybe it was Mark Daigneault’s late challenge of a foul call on Lu Dort after Dort fought his way around an Anthony Davis screen, recovered against Westbrook, and played good enough defense that, upon review, the call was reversed.

Perhaps it was the out-of-timeout play call in which Gilgeous-Alexander was simply a diversion, and instead Josh Giddey attacked Carmelo Anthony in the lane before dishing to Derrick Favors. Favors’ layup gave the Thunder a three-point lead with 31 seconds to play.

Or maybe it was a play that left the Oklahoma City crowd, for the first time, booing local hero Russell Westbrook.

After Favors put the Thunder up by three, Westbrook took the ball up court. There was no real Just four seconds after inbounding it, he chucked up a 3. It clanked off the glass.

Oklahoma City had breathing room, but when the Lakers trapped Gilgeous-Alexander deep in the backcourt, SGA passed to Darius Bazley. Bazley did not realize how low the shot clock had ticked and was hit with an eight-second violation.

The Lakers called another timeout. There was 17.7 seconds remaining to draw a play, get some space and shoot the 3-pointer they wanted to send the game to overtime.

Instead, inexplicably, Malik Monk used five seconds of the clock before chucking up a 3. It hit nothing but air.

Two timeouts resulted in nine seconds of game time, one bricked 3-pointer and one airball. The Thunder maintained their 3-point lead.

Giddey inbounded the ball, but instead of passing to Dort, he held on and went to the next option. His pass toward Kenrich Williams was off-target and went into the hands of Carmelo Anthony.

With less than 10 seconds in the game, Anthony stepped up for the uncontested look without taking any time off the clock. It was another airball.

And that was it for the Lakers. Oklahoma City finally succeeded in inbounding the ball and getting to the free throw line. Dort made two free throws. That should have been the game.

But the Thunder continued to press. Dort deflected an inbound pass out of bounds, and then Bazley stepped in front of the mulligan and picked it off. He raced down court and threw home an exclamation dunk with 1.5 seconds left.

Westbrook took offense and had some words for Bazley, who broke the unwritten rules.

A tiny skirmish started on the court and Westbrook received his second technical foul of the game, earning the ejection and hearing boos from the OKC faithful as he walked to the locker room.

It was an ugly final 30 seconds, a span in which the championship-hopeful Lakers could not manage the clock, did not use their timeouts well, and had three bad misses on potential game-tying 3-pointers. They couldn’t take advantage of the Thunder practically handing the game back to them. Daigneault, who coached an excellent game, made a near-fatal mistake of not calling a timeout when Gilgeous-Alexander was trapped.

LeBron James did not play, but that should not have been an issue for Los Angeles. Two of their stars should have been able to take down the winless Oklahoma City Thunder team.

Instead, Gilgeous-Alexander toppled the powers on the court.

After playing decent to start the game, Gilgeous-Alexander went berserk in the final three minutes of the third quarter. In that time, he scored 14 straight points for the Thunder, nine of them coming off 3-pointers. He had 17 total points in the quarter and capped it with a buzzer-beater over Westbrook.

His improved step-back has been on display this season, and it shined the brightest it has during that third quarter on Wednesday night. Gilgeous-Alexander has begun to step sideways into the shot, but this one against Westbrook was a true step-back attempt before creating space off to the side.

He finished with 27 points, nine rebounds and five assists.

Bazley had a bounceback game with 20 points, six rebounds and four steals. He struggled mightily over the first four games of the season, but in going 4-for-8 from 3, he gave himself and the team a spark, one that ended in the explosion of Westbrook walking off the court.

Isaiah Roby similarly played well after losing playing time throughout the first four games of the season, finishing with 13 points in 16 minutes of play.

Giddey had 18 points and 10 assists, his first NBA double-double and the most assists he has had at this level.

Westbrook finished with a triple-double of 20 points, 14 rebounds and 13 assists, but he had 10 turnovers — including three in a row from the 10-minute mark of the fourth quarter to the 9:16-mark — and went 2-for-8 from 3, including a pair of misses in the final four minutes of the game.

If you’re going to choose one moment, maybe it was less tangible than a made 3-pointer or a nicely drawn-up play. Maybe it was a flip in the second quarter. After being outscored 41-19 in the first quarter, the Thunder started putting shots in the hoop. They started playing defense. They looked like a team. And they slowly chipped away at the deficit, first with a 37-point second quarter and then a 41-point third.

Los Angeles, meanwhile, struck the opposite chord, scoring 31 points in the second, 23 in the third and only 20 points in the fourth quarter.

The 26-point comeback ties the Thunder franchise record, having done the same against the Houston Rockets on Feb. 9, 2019, and against the Chicago Bulls on Dec. 16, 2019.

Thunder vs. Kings: 3 takeaways, including the odd lineup & early challenge call

Kenrich Williams stepped into a lead guard role for the OKC Thunder with Theo Maledon and Ty Jerome both out with injury.

In the first half of the game against the Sacramento Kings on Tuesday, the Oklahoma City Thunder won the points battle. In the second half, they won the long game.

A 41-18 third quarter in the Kings’ favor elevated Sacramento to a 122-106 win over the Thunder, handing OKC its eighth loss in a row but allowing the team to regain sole possession of the third-best odds in the NBA draft lottery.

The Oklahoma City starting lineup of Kenrich Williams, Aleksej Pokusevski, Darius Bazley, Isaiah Roby and Moses Brown helped the Thunder score 32 points in the first quarter. OKC actually outscored the Kings overall between the first, second and fourth quarters, but that third quarter was bad enough to clinch the loss.

Here are three takeaways from the performance:

What Mark Daigneault liked, didn’t like in Thunder’s 1st game vs. Warriors

After the OKC Thunder lost to the Golden State Warriors on Thursday, Mark Daigneault talked about what he liked and what needs improvement.

The Oklahoma City Thunder had a day off between two games against the Golden State Warriors, giving them a break to reflect on the loss and watch some film before getting back into the action.

In the matchup on Thursday, Oklahoma City lost 118-97. The Thunder kept the score close for about two and a half quarters, but 17 points from Golden State guard Steph Curry in the third quarter helped the Warriors take the lead and eventually seal the game.

Guard Ty Jerome led the Thunder with 23 points while Darius Bazley scored 22.

After the game, Daigneault spoke about things he liked and an area that needs to be rectified when the teams get their rematch on Saturday.

Latest update on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s injury

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is not ready to return from injury, OKC Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said. See the full quote here:

Oklahoma City Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault provided an update on the injury to guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander on Tuesday.

Daigneault said Gilgeous-Alexander was progressing but did not provide any definitive answer about whether he would play again this season. Here is the full update from Daigneault with seven games left in the season:

“He’s progressing. He’s got a significant tear in his plantar fascia. It’s not something that you should really mess around with. If we got aggressive with him, it could compromise him long-term, which makes no sense for us, for a player that is as important to our franchise as he is.

“… He’s probably going to have the opportunity, he and Lu (Dort) to play for the (Canadian) national team, which the season bumps up against. That training camp I think starts a month from the end of the season.

“At the end of the day, we’re going to do the best that we can. Every team’s going through some version of this because of all the circumstances. This is our particular case. At the end of the day, we’re not going to sacrifice anything long-term with any of our players, but certainly with a guy like Shai, and that’s, I don’t know the details of that, our medical people handle that, but until somebody comes to me and says ‘Hey, this guy’s ready to rock and it’s not going to compromise him at all in the long-term,’ then I’m on board with doing what we’re doing with him and being really, really cautious.”

Daigneault did not say anything definitive in that, but with seven games left in the season, it would be unsurprising if the Thunder kept him out for the remainder of the year.

Gilgeous-Alexander is having a breakout campaign, averaging career-highs with 23.7 points and 5.9 assists while also shooting at career-best numbers despite the increased role. If this is indeed the end of his third season, he shot 50.8% from the field and 41.8% from 3.

Oklahoma City enters Tuesday tied with the Orlando Magic for the fourth-worst record in the NBA and just one game better than the Minnesota Timberwolves, who have the third-best odds in the draft lottery.

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

Daigneault pleased with Thunder’s performance vs. Suns: ‘I really like this team’

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s near comeback against the Phoenix Suns showed Mark Daigneault growth coming off the loss to the Indiana Pacers.

As Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker walked off the court at halftime on Sunday, he threw a towel to the ground in disgust. At the end of the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, he wasn’t feeling much better about his team’s performance.

The Thunder lost to the Suns by a score of 123-120 on Sunday, but an 18-point fourth-quarter deficit was cut to four before Phoenix managed to secure the game and hand Oklahoma City the loss.

Oklahoma City went on a 16-5 run late in the fourth quarter to claw its way back into the game. It looked like the Thunder could get even closer: Booker had been called for an offensive foul and then a technical for arguing. OKC forced Chris Paul into a turner with heavy trap defense. Lu Dort was called for a foul on a 3-point attempt.

But the Dort foul call was overturned, Booker escaped trap defense — and maybe escaped with his foot on the out-of-bounds line — and the Suns iced the game at the free throw line.

As mad as Daigneault was about the missed out-of-bounds call on Booker, he was practically giddy in the postgame press conference.

“I really like this team,” he said about his own squad with a smile and little laugh. “That was big-time.”

It started with the Thunder’s comeback effort. They trailed by 12 with two minutes to play.

“The situational awareness in those parts of the game, those situational moments of the game — when you foul, when you trap and how to play on offense, quite frankly,” Daigneault said.

“When you’re down 10, there’s a tendency sometimes for guys to just go crazy on offense because they think they have to score 10 on one possession.”

Instead of firing 3s, the Thunder got three dunks in a row, the final of which was an and-one for Isaiah Roby.

After this came the offensive foul on Booker and technical foul. Then, after Roby missed a 3, Paul grabbed the rebound and started to take the ball upcourt.

Oklahoma City knows firsthand how sure-handed Paul is with the basketball and how dominant he is in clutch moments.

But they trapped well and forced a turnover. It was a situation the Thunder had reviewed the day before, guard Kenrich Williams said.

“Yesterday we watched a lot of game situations from throughout the year and from our team and from different teams around the league, and that’s one of the things we went over the day before,” Williams said.

“It’s good to see stuff like that translate. It shows we’re locked in with the game plan.”

Daigneault talked about that play as well. In general, the fact that the team showed lessons learned from reviewing areas on both sides of the ball was a major positive for the coach.

“For them to carry it over in a pressure situation like that when the stakes are high … for them to do that with the level of awareness that they did was high, high level,” he said. “That was what was most impressive, more the mental than the physical.”

Then there was the fact that the Thunder did this less than 24 hours after losing a game by 57 points.

“These guys were awesome tonight on a number of levels,” Daigneault said. “Tonight was a test of our 0-0 mindset with how we played last night, and it thought everybody came ready to play. Learned the lesson, but then moved on and got ourselves into the competition.”

In the end, this is probably an ideal finish for both teams.

The Suns have regained first place in the Western Conference, but they also had a good reminder of what happens when they don’t take teams seriously.

Incredibly enough, the Suns are better against teams with a .500 record or better (25-8) than they are against teams below (21-10).

They needed this reminder. They got it. But they still got the win, their first in Oklahoma City since 2010.

The Thunder, meanwhile, turned the page on perhaps the worst loss in franchise history with a performance that earned rave reviews from Daigneault, yet they didn’t harm their lottery odds. Oklahoma City moves back into sole possession of the fifth-worst record in the league, half a game worse than the Cleveland Cavaliers and half a game better than the Orlando Magic.

It’s a game the Thunder can take pride in, even though they suffered another loss.

“There was a lot of growth and progress tonight, we should be really, really happy,” Daigneault said.

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

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Daigneault: Devin Booker ‘definitely’ stepped out of bounds on crucial play

Mark Daigneault said Devin Booker stepped out of bounds on a crucial play in the Thunder and Suns game, but the refs were out of position following the jump ball.

The Oklahoma City Thunder, with an intense demeanor, impressive defense and smart trapping, had clawed their way back into the game against the Phoenix Suns. With 12.6 seconds left and a deficit that had shrunk to four points, big Isaiah Roby and center Deandre Ayton stepped to center court for a jump ball.

Ayton tapped it to Booker and the Thunder defenders pounced. The Suns guard took it to the right side of the court as he tried to escape, but he slipped. He somehow kept his dribble but couldn’t regain his footing.

Booker managed to roll the ball between defenders and to Mikal Bridges, who got foul and iced the game at the free throw line.

Over on the Thunder sideline, head coach Mark Daigneault was irate. From his vantage point, Booker’s foot had gone out of bounds as he slipped and flicked the ball to Bridges.

“He definitely stepped out,” Daigneault said. “I mean, I blitzed (the refs), I wouldn’t have done that if he didn’t step out.”

With that said, Daigneault expressed understanding for why the referees missed the call.

“It was a tough play for them, I think, for the refs, because they were coming out of a jump ball. So they weren’t in their normal positions,” he said.

“And then we were trapping and there was kind of a scramble situation, and I don’t think anybody had eyes on it, obviously. But that was a tough one. And I was pissed, but it was just for our players. We laid it on the line tonight against one of the best teams in the league after a really, really tough night last night, so I wanted that one for them, because they deserved it. …

“But that was a tough one. But I think it was a byproduct of (the refs’) positioning coming out of the jump ball, otherwise I think they would have had that.

Because of the non-call, Bridges made a pair of free throws with six seconds left to put the game out of reach. Oklahoma City guard Theo Maledon made a 3-pointer right before the buzzer, and the Thunder lost 123-120.

‘It’s embarrassing’: Thunder lose by 57 points to Pacers

The Oklahoma City Thunder have reached the point of a true tanking team: embarrassing losses. The Indiana Pacers beat them by 57 points.

“It’s embarrassing.”

There comes a point for every rebuilding team when there’s a moment that that’s all an organization can say. For the tanking Philadelphia 76ers, it may have been the 119-68 loss in December 2015, their 21st loss in 22 games to open the season following a year in which they had won just 18 games.

For the tanking Phoenix Suns, if it wasn’t the 48-point defeat in the 2017 season opener, it was less than a week later, when they lost by 42 to the Los Angeles Clippers and then Eric Bledsoe tweeted that he didn’t want to be there.

For the Oklahoma City Thunder, the first true moment came in the 152-95 loss to the Indiana Pacers on Saturday.

“It’s embarrassing,” said head coach Mark Daigneault. “I’m not going to try to spin that. It’s tough. It’s demoralizing.”

“It was a pretty ugly storm,” he added.

That’s the type of outcome to expect when the starting lineup is made of one rookie and four second-year players, three of whom spent some or most of their rookie season in the G League.

That’s the type of outcome when of the six bench players, two more are rookies and one is another second-year player who spent most of his rookie season in the G League.

The Thunder got obliterated by the Pacers on Saturday. Domantas Sabonis had a triple-double by halftime and finished with 26 points, 19 rebounds and 14 assists. Doug McDermott scored 31 points and Caris LeVert had 25.

Indiana scored at least 40 points in each of the first three quarters.

With 4:12 remaining, the Pacers led by 67, just one shy of tying the largest margin of victory in NBA history. The Thunder went on a 10-0 run to cut the deficit down into non-historic levels.

Charlie Brown Jr., on a 10-day contract with the Thunder, started the first game of his career. He recorded eight points, five rebounds and two assists in 27 minutes.

Gabriel Deck played his second NBA game and recorded eight points and 10 rebounds in 24 minutes.

Isaiah Roby had just two points and Theo Maledon scored eight. Moses Brown had 16 points and seven rebounds.

It was the worst game of the season for the Thunder, and likely the worst game in franchise history. It won’t get any easier on Sunday when they face the NBA-leading Suns.

The good news is, Oklahoma City is different than those tanking Sixers and Suns teams.

Those two teams were directionless, will all hopes lying in the draft lottery. While that is clearly important to the Thunder, they have players they believe in such as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort and Darius Bazley. They have assets from teams including the Houston Rockets and Clippers, so they themselves don’t need to lose for years and years on end. They have a trade piece in Al Horford.

This game was embarrassing. They’ve won just two of their last 20 games. But unlike the Sixers and Suns, they built enough goodwill during the beginning of the season that fans can get through these final eight games for what they are. They can look to the future without thinking the team is two years away from being two years away from sniffing a playoff spot.

Oklahoma City lost by 57 points. They’re lucky it wasn’t worse. If there’s any positive to take away, it’s that they’ve hit their low at a good time: With eight games left, fans and the front office are already looking toward the draft.

Daigneault: Losses of 2008 built foundation. He hopes 2021 can do the same.

The dominant OKC Thunder teams of the mid-2000s used the awful 2008 season to help lay a foundation and build character, Daigneault said.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s 31-point defeat at the hands of the Philadelphia 76ers gave them their 14th loss in a row, tying the franchise’s record set in the first season in OKC.

In 2008, the Thunder started 1-12, fired head coach P.J. Carlesimo, hired Scott Brooks, and then lost four more games before finally picking up victory No. 2.

The coaches and players who remained a half-decade later remembered this time, during which the Thunder won just three of their first 32 games and finished 23-59.

Current Oklahoma City Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said after the loss to the Sixers on Monday that when he arrived in Oklahoma City, players continued to recall this poor stretch and use its lessons.

“I came here … seven years ago and the team was rockin’. It was one of the best teams in the league. Perennially,” Daigneault said. “What was fascinating to me was how much the internal dialogue was referring to the 3-29 start (in 2008). …

“It was an ugly start, but you can tell that a lot of character was built during that time, and a lot of the foundation was laid with how they went about their business in the most extreme of adversity.”

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The 2020-21 Oklahoma City team didn’t start as poorly. The Thunder were a respectable 20-27 before embarking on this 14-game losing streak on the heels of losing Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to injury.

Daigneault thinks that players who will be around for the next winning Thunder team can use these losses to help when adversity strikes again down the road.

“Right now, that’s what we’re focusing on. How can we leverage the position — as uncomfortable as it might be — into building a foundation for this particular cycle for the team,” Daigneault said.

“We’re remaining optimistic. We’re obviously losing the games, but there’s a lot of wins going on behind the scenes. There’s a lot of developmental wins.

Oklahoma City has 11 games left on the schedule. On-court wins as the Thunder attempt to avoid setting a franchise-record losing streak will be tough to come by, especially with the Boston Celtics lined up to face off Tuesday. Tipoff is scheduled for 6 p.m. Central Time.

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On anniversary of OKC bombing, Thunder feel ‘unique relationship’ with city

On the Oklahoma City bombing anniversary, Sam Presti told the Thunder about the “unique relationship between an organization and a community.”

On the 26th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, the most deadly domestic attack in U.S. history, Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault recalled a moment during his interview for the Oklahoma City Blue in 2014.

“On my job interview for the Blue head coaching job, the first time I stepped foot in the state of Oklahoma, on I think the first day or the second day, I was at the memorial. Which I think speaks volumes to the priority that the organization places on that event and that memorial,” he said during a Zoom press conference.

On the morning of April 19, 1995, 168 people were killed and 680 others injured when a pair of domestic terrorists detonated a truck bomb outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. More than 300 buildings in the area were damaged or destroyed.

General manager Sam Presti spoke with players Monday morning to discuss the attack and make sure the players were aware it was the anniversary.

Daigneault said that Presti had two key messages from the discussion.

“Number one, not taking the day for granted and remaining extremely grateful, because obviously a lot of lives were lost and it impacted generations.

“He also talked about the connection that this particular organization and team has to the community, and the connection that the community has to the team. We have a lot of new players, we have a lot of young players, and usually the expression of that is when fans are in the seats, and we haven’t had the ability to do that this year.

“That was something that he really verbalized to the guys today, is that this is a unique relationship between an organization and a community, and we should just embrace that. It’s an extremely unique relationship of professional sports and the NBA, and we really feel closely tied to it.”

Injury update: Pokusevski had arm soreness before game, tried to play through

OKC Thunder rookie Aleksej Pokusevski had right arm soreness before the game against the Philadelphia 76ers and tried to play through it.

Oklahoma City Thunder forward Aleksej Pokusevski departed the game on Saturday against the Philadelphia 76ers about 8 1/2 minutes into the first quarter due to right arm soreness he was feeling before the game.

After the 117-93 loss, head coach Mark Daigneault said Pokusevski tried to play through the injury.

“He had a little bit of discomfort before game. Tried to give it a go, wasn’t a night for it. We’ll evaluate him in morning like we always do,” Daigneault said.

It was a relatively similar situation to two games prior, when Pokusevski injured his hip when he took a fall in the first quarter of the matchup against the Charlotte Hornets. He played through it for most the game before being pulled in the fourth quarter.

The rookie did not miss the game the following night against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

“We weren’t quite sure how he was going to respond to that physically, and he got himself to the court on the second night of a back-to-back, which was a positive thing for a 19-year-old that’s playing a lot of minutes and carrying a pretty heavy load right now,” Daigneault said.

Similarly, Pokusevski tried to play through the arm pain on Saturday. He missed both shots he attempted, ending the game scoreless in under nine minutes of play.

The severity of the injury was unclear Saturday night, but he will have some time to rest the arm before the next Thunder game, which is Tuesday against the Utah Jazz.

“We’ve got two days before our next game, so hopefully he’s in a better place,” Daigneault said.

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