Mike Muscala, Steven Adams have been playing online chess during road trip

Oklahoma City Thunder big Mike Muscala has been playing New Orleans center Steven Adams in online chess during the OKC road trip.

Queen’s Gambit fever has hit the Oklahoma City Thunder locker room.

In the middle of OKC’s road trip, big Mike Muscala told media during a Zoom press conference that he joined Chess.com and is starting to play with former Thunder center Steven Adams.

“I created a Chess.com account and just added Steven Adams as a friend,” Muscala said. “He has like twice the rating that I do, so he’s definitely gonna be teaching me some lessons on there.”

Muscala said he remembered Adams talking about chess while in the NBA bubble.

“I hadn’t created an account yet, so I was just playing on the board, but then I remembered him talking so I just texted him,” he said. “So we just started.”

It’s certainly hard to forget about Adams playing chess in the bubble. He excitedly tweeted a screenshot of him winning a game in July.

And then he started to tweet that same screenshot under random NBA tweets.

So, good luck to Muscala.

We can’t wait to see what he tweets after beating you.

The Thunder are 1-3 on the road trip entering their final game of the set, a matchup with the Phoenix Suns. Tipoff is scheduled for 8 p.m.

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

Thunder win Lu Dort challenge, win game, end losing streak vs. Blazers

Lu Dort’s defense of Damian Lillard and the challenge from Mark Daigneault after helped clinch the OKC Thunder win over the Trail Blazers.

Good defense is often relative. Allowing 26 points to an opposing player is often not ideal.

But when that player is Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard, and when Lillard had scored at least 35 points in three games in a row entering the night, and when he was held to 8-for-23 shooting from the field, then yes, relatively, it was a very good defensive performance.

One defensive play at the end of the game turned out to be subjective: Did Lu Dort foul Lillard on a 3-pointer while the Thunder led by six with 20 seconds to play? The referees said yes. Dort emphatically said no. Head coach Mark Daigneault called upon the challenge he had kept pocketed earlier in the game.

Subjectivity went out the window as the referees grouped at the monitor and saw that, indeed, Dort’s defense was objectively excellent. He got a hand on the ball, not Lillard, and forced the miss.

That successful challenge ended up being huge in the Thunder’s 125-122 victory.

After Dort got the block and won the challenge, the Thunder led 123-117 and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was intentionally fouled. He missed both free throws and Lillard made a step-back 3 on the next possession — this shot would have tied the game had Lillard gone to the line and sank all three free throws 15 seconds earlier.

Instead, Oklahoma City stayed up by three points and Gilgeous-Alexander made one of the two free throws the next time at the line. It wasn’t quite over, though.

Lillard made another tough shot, but his foot was on the line, so the Thunder lead was 124-122. Gilgeous-Alexander returned to the line with 0.9 seconds to play.

He hit the first but missed the second. Lillard got the defensive rebound, but he couldn’t get the shot off in time, and even if he had, it was well short.

The Thunder officially got the win at the buzzer. It was a good game for them, and one they should have put away earlier.

Oklahoma City scored 69 points in the first half, a season-high for the team, and led by as many as 17 points. Backup big Mike Muscala hit a career-high six 3-pointers and posted 23 points in just 21 minutes of play.

“It was fun to play tonight,” Muscala said. “Moving the ball around, finding open shooters, it’s really fun to play like that.”

He and the bench were huge on Monday. Hamidou Diallo scored 11 on 5-for-8 shooting, and Kenrich Williams got closing minutes with guard George Hill out due to a thumb sprain.

Rookie Theo Maledon started in place of Hill. He had six points, four rebounds and four assists in 22 minutes.

Gilgeous-Alexander led the Thunder with 24 points while Darius Bazley had the best game he has played over the past couple weeks, scoring 19 points, grabbing seven rebounds and making three 3s.

Four Blazers recorded more than 20 points. Lillard and Anfernee Simons had 26 apiece while Carmelo Anthony and Gary Trent Jr. both scored 22.

The difference came in shooting percentage: Portland took 15 more shots that OKC in part because Enes Kanter had 22 rebounds (seven offensive), but they hit 46.5% of their 99 attempts (yes, 99!) from the field and 33% of their 42 shots from deep. The Thunder made 51.2% of their looks from the field and shot 18-for-40 from behind the (45%).

“It’s how we gotta play if we want to win,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “Play fast, get stops, rebound and run. We find that we’re at our best when we hang our hats on those things offensively.”

The Thunder could’ve put the game away earlier, but there’s no lamenting the fact that they didn’t.

Holding on for the victory is just as sweet, and Gilgeous-Alexander mentioned that there’s things to be learned from Lillard and the Blazers making the late push.

“It’s always good to get a win in those situations,” he said. “I think, myself personally, there’s lessons to be learned in every game, especially the close ones. The best basketball is played in close games.”

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Mike Muscala’s five 3s helps Thunder score season-high 69 in first half

OKC Thunder big Mike Muscala made five 3-pointers and had 16 points to put Oklahoma City over the Portland Trail Blazers going into halftime.

Whatever Oklahoma City Thunder big Mike Muscala did over the last 24 hours after making only one of nine 3-pointers on Sunday night worked.

Muscala made five 3-pointers in the first half alone to help the Thunder take a 69-60 lead over the Blazers going into the third quarter.

That ties his full-game season high for 3-pointers. The 69 points that Oklahoma City scored is by far the most they’ve scored in a first half so far this season — the previous was 57.

Muscala had 16 points off the bench, a game-high. Overall, he went 5-for-7 from the field, all of which came from behind the arc, in his 11 minutes of play. He also made a free throw.

His first 3 of the game was the 300th of his career.

He spread his makes across the court, making two from the corner, one from straight on and two slightly angled.

Here’s his shot chart via ESPN:

With Muscala’s help, the Thunder took a nine-point lead into the half.

Oklahoma City is looking to break a three-game losing streak.

Guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, forward Darius Bazley and center Isaiah Roby all had 10 points for the Thunder.

Forward Carmelo Anthony led the Blazers with 13 points, while guard Damian Lillard had 12 and wing Gary Trent Jr. had 10.

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Thunder’s Mike Muscala, Nets’ Kevin Durant active; Kyrie Irving out

Brooklyn Nets forward Kevin Durant and OKC Thunder big Mike Muscala will be active while Kyrie Irving has been ruled out.

The Oklahoma City Thunder will have backup big Mike Muscala back against the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday evening, head coach Mark Daigneault said in a pregame press conference.

Muscala left the game against the New York Knicks in the fourth quarter due to a rib contusion. He got hit in the same spot he had suffered a bruise a few weeks earlier, forcing him out.

He did not return to the game, which turned into a blowout lead for the Thunder. Muscala is on track to not miss a full game due to the injury.

Meanwhile, the Nets will be getting back one of their stars. Forward Kevin Durant, who missed the last three games due to coronavirus protocol, is active, according to ESPN’s Tim Bontemps.

Point guard Kyrie Irving, however, remains out for personal reasons, Bontemps tweeted. This will be Irving’s third game out in a row.

Durant has averaged 28.2 points this season while shooting at ridiculous clips of 51.4% from the field and 45.5% from 3. He is also posting 7.0 rebounds and 4.8 assist per game.

Irving has played seven games this season, during which he has averaged 27.1 points, 5.3 rebounds and 6.1 assists while shooting 50.4% from the field and 42.6% from 3.

Muscala is having the best season of his career, averaging 10.3 points while shooting 42.9% from 3 on 5.3 attempts per game.

The Thunder (4-4) will tip off against the Nets (5-5) at 5 p.m.

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Thunder’s Mike Muscala suffers rib contusion during win over Knicks

OKC Thunder big Mike Muscala suffered a rib contusion during the win over the New York Knicks.

Oklahoma City Thunder big Mike Muscala suffered a rib contusion during the game against the New York Knicks on Friday, the team announced during the game.

After the 101-89 victory, head coach Mark Daigneault said the injury was intensified because he got hit in the same spot he had suffered a bruise just a few weeks prior.

“He had a rib thing that happened I think a couple weeks ago, I don’t know what the timing was, but he literally got hit in the exact same spot,” Daigneualt said.

“If you have a bruise and then all of a sudden you take kind of a blunt hit to that bruise before it’s completely healed, that’s what he experienced on his ribs.

Muscala suffered the injury at the beginning of the fourth quarter and was ruled out of the game shortly after. He finished with five points and four rebounds in 15 minutes of play.

The seriousness of the injury was unclear immediately following the game Friday, but Daigneault said Muscala was in pain as he left the court.

“He’s a tough guy, he takes a lot of hits, so for him to walk off the way he did, I think he was feeling it,” Daigneault said.

Through eight games this season, Muscala is averaging a career-high 10.3 points and his making 42.9% of his 3-point attempts.

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Thunder pull out close win over Pelicans in game of runs

The second-half runs by Darius Bazley and Mike Muscala led the Oklahoma City Thunder to a win over the New Orleans Pelicans.

Nobody could corral the loose ball. The buzzer sounded. Center Al Horford and guard George Hill gave elated fist pumps as Oklahoma City Thunder secured the 111-110 win over the New Orleans Pelicans.

The two veterans deserved that excitement. Despite struggles earlier, they were keys in closing out the game and eking the win over the Pelicans.

With 2:41 to play and trailing the Pelicans 101-100, Horford missed a 3-pointer with Steven Adams’ hand in his face. It was his fifth missed shot from deep in the game. He didn’t hesitate on the next possession, though, drilling the shot from beyond the arc.

“Al obviously didn’t shoot it well early in the game, but there’s not a person in our group that didn’t want him to continue to let it go,” head coach Mark Daigneault said. “He made a big one there.”

With 17 seconds left, the Thunder’s deficit was again down to one point. Guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander took a shot from the baseline and missed. It bounced long and Horford managed to keep it alive. The ball eventually ended up with Hill, who drove and got fouled on a layup.

He hit both free throws to take the lead.

Nickeil Alexander-Walker missed a 3 on the next possession and Horford tussled with Steven Adams for the loose ball. By the time anyone came up with it, the game was over.

After a 33-point loss to the Pelicans on New Year’s Eve, a nine-point win over the Orlando Magic on Saturday and a 28-point loss to the Miami Heat on Monday, the Thunder got back into the win column and picked up their third victory of the year.

Horford and Hill combined for just 21 points on 7-for-20 shooting, but their years of playoff experience were on show as they helped close it out.

The other factor in the late offensive output was Gilgeous-Alexander.

The third-year guard hit an and-one with 1:22 to play and then drew a foul on Lonzo Ball while shooting a 3-pointer on the next possession to get six quick points.

His 21 points was a team-high. He also contributed nine assists and five steals.

Those three closed it out, but there were other parties that allowed Oklahoma City to even have a chance.

Thunder starters began the game slowly. The team trailed by eight at the end of the first quarter. It took less than five minutes in the second quarter for the bench unit to take the lead, led by five points apiece from Hamidou Diallo and Isaiah Roby during that stretch.

The bench built the lead as high as six before the starters starting trickling back into the lineup. The Thunder went into the half down five.

In the second half, it was the other way around. The starters jumped ahead.

“It was kind of a tale of two halves related to our units. In the first half, the edge of that game elevated when [the bench unit] went out there and they really set a tone for the rest of the game,” Daigneault said. “The starters did a great job coming out at halftime.”

Specifically, Darius Bazley did a great job coming out at halftime.

The second-year forward went off in the third quarter, scoring the first 11 points overall and 15 of the Thunder’s first 17.

“Baze, bringing the competitive spirit, getting steals, getting out in transition, making these 3s, gave us a little boost,” Gilgeous-Alexander said.

Third quarters have been the death sentence for Oklahoma City early in the season, but on Wednesday, the team outscored the Pelicans 34-19 in that frame.

But New Orleans quickly caught up, opening the fourth quarter with a 9-0 run.

Thunder center Mike Muscala answered with three 3-pointers in the next three possessions, extending Oklahoma City’s lead back to double-digits.

“A game of runs and we had to weather the storm tonight,” Diagneault said. “We showed great resilience through the course of 48 [minutes].”

Muscala finished with 18 points, third on the team to Gilgeous-Alexander’s 21 and Bazley’s 20.

The deciding factor in those runs may have been the 3-pointer differential overall.

Oklahoma City went 19-for-46 from deep, a clip of 41.3%. The Pelicans went 4-for-22, a paltry 18.2%.

In a game of runs, Muscala’s three 3s in three possessions nearly matched New Orleans’ over their entire game.

It ended up being vital in the one-point victory.

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By the numbers: How the Thunder fell apart against the Heat

The OKC Thunder lost to the Miami Heat by almost 30 points after falling behind in the third quarter.

The Oklahoma City Thunder got throttled in the Monday night game against the Miami Heat, falling 118-90 during a game in which they were beaten up down low and from beyond the arc.

Guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led the Thunder with 18 points on 7-for-15 shooting while forward Darius Bazley had 16 points on 5-for-10 shooting to go with eight rebounds. Center Al Horford and guard George Hill combined for just five points on 1-for-11 shooting in 21 minutes apiece.

Heat big Kelly Olynyk got hot from 3 in the third quarter, contributing to a 20-0 run that put Miami well out of reach. He finished the game with 19 points, behind only center Bam Adebayo’s 20 points for team lead. Wing Jimmy Butler had 18. Guard Tyler Herro approached triple-double territory with seven points, eight assists and nine rebounds, while guard Goran Dragic had seven assists off the bench.

Here are the numbers that define Oklahoma City’s loss.

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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Thunder vs. Hornets halftime stats: 3 OKC players score double-digits

The Oklahoma City Thunder starters helped pull OKC back to a one-possession halftime deficit against the Charlotte Hornets in the opener.

After trailing the Charlotte Hornets by as many as 11 points, a 10-0 Oklahoma City run in the second quarter helped OKC go into the half in a one-possession game.

The Thunder trailed the Hornets 59-57 at halftime in Oklahoma City’s opening game of the season.

Guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led the team with 12 points and center Mike Muscala had nine off the bench. Lu Dort turned away from the 3-point line, instead choosing to drive into the lane frequently with the ball. It paid off, as he had 10 points on 3-for-6 shooting with four free throws.

LaMelo Ball led the Hornets with 13 points. He made five shots in nine minutes of play.

2020-21 Oklahoma City Thunder preseason stats

See the Oklahoma City Thunder preseason stats prior to the 2020-21 season. How did newcomers like Al Horford and Aleksej Pokusevski perform?

While the preseason isn’t always a good barometer for regular season play, it can allow teams to discover who has a good feel for the system and who can play a role moving forward.

The Oklahoma City Thunder got at least two games out of 16 players. Six members of the team — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Aleksej Pokusevski, Isaiah Roby, Frank Jackson, Hamidou Diallo and Kenrich Williams — played all three games.

Ty Jerome, Josh Hall, Darius Miller and Trevor Ariza did not play.

Take a look at how the players performed. While the Thunder’s talent level is still unclear, there were some strong performances from young players who could take on roles early in the season.

Here are their stats:

Player Minutes Points Rebounds Assists FGM/FGA 3PTM/A BLK+ST
Al Horford 17.8 16.0 7.5 0.5 6.0/9.5 3.0/4.5 0.5
Mike Muscala 17.5 15.5 3.0 0.5 5.0/7.5 3.5/5.0 2.0
Theo Maledon 29.7 15.5 4.5 2.0 5.0/11.5 2.0/4.5 3.0
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander 21.2 12.7 2.3 4.0 4.7/10.0 0.7/3.3 1.7
Frank Jackson 20.2 12.3 2.0 1.0 4.7/9.3 2.0/4.0 1.3
Aleksej Pokusevski 23.6 11.0 9.3 1.7 3.7/11.0 2.3/6.7 1.7
George Hill 19.3 9.5 3.0 2.0 4.0/5.5 0.5/1.0 0.0
Hamidou Diallo 20.7 9.0 5.7 1.7 3.7/9.7 0.0/1.0 0.0
Darius Bazley 20.9 8.5 6.5 2.5 3.5/8.5 1.5/3.0 2.0
Isaiah Roby 19.4 8.5 6.0 2.0 2.0/5.0 1.3/1.7 2.0
Moses Brown 6.4 6.0 1.5 0.0 2.5/3.5 0.0/0.0 1.0
Justin Jackson 20.9 5.0 2.0 1.5 2.0/8.5 0.5/2.5 0.0
T.J. Leaf 11.7 4.0 3.5 0 1.0/3.0 0.5/1.0 0.5
Kenrich Williams 16.7 2.7 3.0 2.7 0.7/3.7 0.3/1.3 1.0
Lu Dort 20.6 2.5 2.5 2.5 0.5/5.5 0.5/3.5 1.0
Admiral Schofield 12.7 0.0 1.0 1.0 0.0/1.5 0.0/1.0 0.0

Stats from Basketball RealGM.

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