On this day: The Seattle SuperSonics officially move to Oklahoma City

Today marks the anniversary of arguably the greatest sports day in Oklahoma history.

On this day in 2008, the Seattle SuperSonics officially announced the franchise would move to Oklahoma City and rename to the Oklahoma City Thunder.

A $75 million settlement between Clay Bennett and Seattle was agreed upon. Bennett’s investment group — the Professional Basketball Club (PBC) — agreed to pay $45 million to break Seattle’s lease with the franchise and eventually paid an additional $30 million when Seattle did not end up with a new franchise before 2013.

The lease required the SuperSonics to play in Seattle’s KeyArena until 2010 but Bennett decided to bite the bullet and terminate it early so the franchise could move to his hometown Oklahoma City quicker.

The Thunder would play their first season in 2008-09 and has been in Oklahoma City ever since.

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Old video resurfaces on Twitter of Seattle native Paolo Banchero admitting he does not like the Thunder

“I grew up with the Sonics a little bit. I was like six (years old) when they left. So I never liked the Thunder.”

In an old video that recently resurfaced on Twitter and made shockwaves through the Oklahoma City Thunder and Houston Rockets Twitterverse, Duke forward Paolo Banchero admitted his disdain for the Thunder as he grew up in Seattle, the home of the Seattle Supersonics.

“I grew up with the Sonics a little bit. I was like six (years old) when they left. So I never liked the Thunder,” said Banchero in the 10-second clip that went viral.

Now it’s not totally sure when Banchero said this, but considering it looks like it was recorded on Zoom, it’s fair to say that the latest possible time this could’ve happened was in 2020.

Considering he was viewed as a potential first overall pick and will likely go in the top three in the 2022 NBA draft, I seriously doubt Banchero would say something like this during his college season. So this marks out anything after November 2021 at the latest.

This means this video probably took place in 2020, when he was still in high school. Don’t really know how much stock you put into it — if any at all. It’s a cute little diss, but that’s all it is. The Thunder are probably not going to take Banchero anyway as it looks like their eyes are set on Chet Holmgren with the second overall pick.

Editor Note: The video is from an August 2020 interview with Zagsblog’s Jacob Polacheck, where Banchero spoke about which teams he would like to play for the most in the NBA. His answer included teams like the Miami Heat and Portland Trail Blazers.

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On this date: Michael Cooper’s block gives Lakers 3-0 lead in WCF

Michael Cooper showed how much of a defensive stopper he was in Game 3 of the 1987 WCF versus the Seattle SuperSonics.

The Showtime Lakers of the 1980s were a cohesive unit, and each member of the team knew and accepted their role.

Magic Johnson was the orchestrator and leader, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was the foundation and backbone on both ends, James Worthy was a go-to guy in the low post and in transition and Byron Scott was their designated 3-point shooter.

Michael Cooper had several different roles for L.A., and he often shifted back and forth between them depending on what the team needed, but one thing was constant: He was their defensive stopper.

He would guard a wide range of stars such as Larry Bird, Michael Jordan and Isiah Thomas and do a good job of containing them and making them work for their points.

In 1987, Cooper was recognized as the Defensive Player of the Year, and in Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals versus the Seattle SuperSonics, he showed why.

The Lakers led the series 2-0 and looked to pull away, but the Sonics stuck with them step by step.

Down by three with less than a minute left, Seattle attempted to run Dale Ellis, who was a great outside shooter, around a screen, but Cooper fought through the screen and blocked Ellis’ shot attempt, allowing L.A. to hold on for the win.

The Lakers then went on to finish off Seattle in a four-game sweep to advance to the NBA Finals, where they handled the Boston Celtics in six games for their fourth would championship of the decade.

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On this date: Lakers mount massive comeback to sweep Seattle

In Game 4 of the 1989 West semis, the Showtime Lakers came back from a huge deficit to sweep the stunned Seattle SuperSonics.

During the 1988-89 season, the Los Angeles Lakers were going for a three-peat and were hoping to send Kareem Abdul-Jabbar into retirement with yet another championship ring.

L.A. looked complacent and perhaps a bit old at times during the regular season, but when the playoffs started, it turned things up to a much higher gear.

After winning their first six playoff games, the Lakers went into Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinals against the Seattle SuperSonics looking for another sweep.

But Seattle got out to what looked to be an insurmountable lead of 43-14 early in the second quarter.

Instead of capitulating, knowing they had Game 5 in L.A. to fall back on, the Lakers fought back with a vengeance.

A 22-6 run in the second quarter, which included 16 unanswered points, got their deficit down to 11 at halftime. The Sonics’ supreme confidence had been blunted, and when the Purple and Gold took the lead for the first time midway through the fourth quarter, the ending was all too easy to predict.

The Lakers won 97-95 and advanced to the Western Conference Finals while showing the grit and resolve that had won them five world championships in the decade.

James Worthy led the way with 33 points on an unbelievable 15-of-19 shooting from the field.

It’s annoying when a team such as those Lakers appears to be complacent in games such as this one, but what they did on that date is proof that a team or individual can bounce back from adversity and still accomplish a huge goal.

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On this date: Shaquille O’Neal leads Lakers to upset over Seattle

In the 1998 Western Conference semis, Shaquille O’Neal feasted on the Seattle SuperSonics and led the Lakers to a surprising series win.

When the young and talented 1997-98 Los Angeles Lakers finished the regular season with a 61-21 record, they looked to have a real chance at reaching the NBA Finals.

But many doubted they had the maturity or mental toughness to get there or even make noise in the playoffs.

When L.A. faced the Seattle SuperSonics in the second round, it looked like it was headed for another humbling postseason elimination, especially after they handed it a 106-92 loss in Game 1.

But then the tables turned, and it shocked even some Lakers fans.

Shaquille O’Neal played perhaps his best ball since joining the team two summers prior, and the Purple and Gold won each of the next four games by double-digits, sending the Sonics home for the summer with a gentleman’s sweep.

The big fella scored 30, 39 and 31 points in the final three games of the series, as he made Vin Baker and the rest of Seattle’s frontline look like schoolchildren.

In the Game 5 clincher, O’Neal also added an incredible eight blocked shots as L.A. slammed the door on Seattle, 110-95.

Shooting guard Eddie Jones, a fan favorite, also played big in this series, scoring 29 points in Game 3 and 32 in Game 4.

The Lakers seemed to be coming of age before everyone’s eyes, but the Utah Jazz would remind them they still weren’t ready to win yet by sweeping them in the Western Conference Finals.

Still, the league was put on notice, and it would be just two years before O’Neal and Kobe Bryant would start collecting championship rings.

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Remembering Kobe: The legend’s top scoring games against Thunder/Sonics

Kobe Bryant dominated the Oklahoma City Thunder and Seattle SuperSonics like he did so many other teams. See his top scoring games vs. the organization.

Like every other team in the NBA, the Oklahoma City Thunder and Seattle SuperSonics saw domination from the late, great Kobe Bryant during the legend’s NBA career.

Bryant scored at least 30 points 28 times against the Sonics/Thunder, broke 40 points more than half a dozen times and even reached the 50-point plateau.

In 65 regular-season games against the franchise, Bryant averaged 24.2 points, 4.6 rebounds and 4.5 assists.

He played 14 playoff games against the franchise. In 1998, as a second-year pro, his Los Angeles Lakers beat the Sonics in five games. Bryant appeared in three of the games.

That was his only playoff series against Seattle. In 2010, the Lakers beat the Thunder en route to a championship, and in 2012, Oklahoma City overcame Bryant’s 31.2 points per game to get the series win in five games.

On the anniversary of Bryant’s death, we’re taking a look back at some of his best performances against the Thunder franchise going back to their Sonics days.

Stats are courtesy of Statmuse.com.

See NBA 2K21 ratings for Thunder, all-time Thunder/Sonics rosters

With the release of NBA 2K21, see the ratings of Oklahoma City Thunder players in the present and the all-time Thunder/Sonics teams.

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NBA 2K21 was released worldwide on Friday, marking the latest edition of the game that has dominated the basketball video game market.

For those who have not yet gotten it, take a look at the Oklahoma City Thunder roster and player ratings, both for the current team and the all-time rosters that are included.

Point guard Chris Paul tops the 2021 team with a rating of 88, the 20th-best in the league.

On the all-time roster, Kevin Durant leads the Thunder/Sonics with a 97 rating and Gary Payton is close behind at 95.

2K21 Thunder roster

  • Point guard Chris Paul: 88
  • Guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander: 84
  • Forward Danilo Gallinari: 83
  • Center Steven Adams: 82
  • Guard Dennis Schroder: 80
  • Center Nerlens Noel 76
  • Guard/forward Luguentz Dort 74
  • Center/Power forward Mike Muscala 73
  • Power forward Darius Bazley 73
  • Guard/forward Andre Roberson 72
  • Forward/Guard Terrance Ferguson 71
  • Forward Abdel Nader 71
  • Guard/forward Hamidou Diallo 70
  • Forward/guard Deonte Burton 70
  • Forward Isaiah Roby 70
  • Power forward Hervey 69
  • Guard/forward Devon Hall 67

Some notable figures, beyond Paul’s 88:

Dort has a B+ for perimeter defense; Diallo, despite getting quite a bit of rotation time, and Ferguson, who started part of the year, are ranked quite low compared to players like Burton, Roby and Hervey, who got minimal time. 2K21 has very few of today’s players ranked below 70.

Thunder/Sonics all-time roster

  • Forward Kevin Durant 97
  • Guard Gary Payton 95
  • Point guard Russell Westbrook 95
  • Guard/forward Ray Allen 95
  • Small forward Paul George 92
  • Guard Dennis Johnson 91
  • Power forward/center Shawn Kemp 90
  • Power forward Spencer Haywood 89
  • Center Jack Sikma 89
  • Point guard Gus Williams 89
  • Forward Rashard Lewis 89
  • Guard Fred Brown 88
  • Shooting guard Dale Ellis 88
  • Forward Xavier McDaniel 87
  • Forward Detlef Schrempf 87

The game also has the 1995-96 Sonics team that won 64 games and got to the NBA Finals behind Payton and Kemp.

In addition, it has the 2011-12 Thunder roster that made the Finals with Durant, Westbrook, James Harden and Serge Ibaka.

A look back on Antawn Jamison, a steady and consistent scorer

Antawn Jamison was a steady and consistent scorer throughout 16 seasons.

During the heyday of his career, Antawn Jamison was one of the NBA’s most steady and consistent scorers.

Standing at 6-foot-8, Jamison played both forward positions, and though he wasn’t always his team’s first option, he got buckets throughout his career. He’s one of 46 players in league history who’s part of the 20,000 career points club, with 20,042 total.

Through 16 seasons, Jamison only failed to average double figures in scoring three times — his rookie year and final two seasons in the league.

Jamison was drafted fourth overall by the Toronto Raptors in the 1998 NBA draft, and he and former UNC teammate Vince Carter were swapped on draft night.

Carter went to Toronto and became the Raptors’ first star, and Jamison went to the Bay Area. He played his first five seasons with Golden State, and quickly established his reputation as a skilled scorer.

The lockout shortened 1998-99 season was Jamison’s rookie year. The league played 50 games, but Jamison still got to showcase his skills for the basketball world. He scored 9.6 points per game on 45.2% shooting, and according to NBA.com stats, he was fourth among rookies in rebounds per game (6.4).

Jamison’s production skyrocketed during his sophomore season. He scored 19.6 points per game on 47.1% shooting, ranking second in scoring among second-year players. Jamison also led sophomores in rebounds per game (8.3).

Once his third season came around, Jamison reached a statistical peak. During the 2000-01 season, he scored a career-high 24.9 points per game and led Golden State in scoring.

The season included two of Jamison’s best games ever, as the former Tar Heel went to another level in December 2000.

The Warriors were playing the Seattle SuperSonics on Dec. 3, and they had come into the game with a record of 5-12. The Sonics weren’t much better at 8-10.

Jamison scored a career-high 51 points and grabbed 14 rebounds as the Warriors lost 118-102. Jamison also shot a career-high 36 field goal attempts.

Not too long after that game, though, Jamison matched his own greatness.

Following the loss to Seattle, the Warriors had the reigning champion Los Angeles Lakers on Dec. 6. The Lakers were 14-5 and were just coming off a win against the Philadelphia 76ers.

Jamison and the late Kobe Bryant had a scoring battle, and both put up 51 points. The Warriors defeated the Lakers 125-122 in overtime. Jamison’s back-to-back 50-point games were the hallmark of his career season in which he ranked ninth in the league in scoring.

As Jamison progressed through his career, he started picking up individual accolades. He was traded to the Dallas Mavericks in August 2003, and he won the 2004 Sixth Man of the Year award during his lone season there.

After his brief stint in Dallas, Jamison was traded to the Washington Wizards in June 2004. Jamison spent his prime in Washington, and he earned both of his two All-Star appearances with the franchise.

Despite not having much playoff success — he only went past the first round twice — Jamison played his best postseason basketball during a 2007 first-round series.

The Wizards were playing the Cleveland Cavaliers, and LeBron James had the Cavs playing their best basketball since the late 1980s and early 1990s. Washington was swept in the first round, but Jamison had a great showing. He led the Wizards in scoring with 32.0 points per game, and he shot 47.6% from the field. He also led the team in rebounds per game (9.8).

Jamison would finish his career playing for the Cavaliers, Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers. He had career averages of 18.5 points per game and 7.5 rebounds, along with shooting 45.1% from the field.

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‘We ride for Seattle’: Game of Zones puts basketball city back in spotlight

Game of Zones, the Bleacher Report video series combining the NBA and Game of Thrones, entered Seattle prior to a game with the Dream Team.

In a fictional world combining the NBA and Game of Thrones, Seattle basketball has made its return.

On episode three of Game of Zones, NBA stars entered the former home of the SuperSonics to take on the ultimate foe.

For those who have not yet watched the series: In the new season of Game of Zones, the Dream Team returned in their prime form to take on the stars of today in a battle to decide which generation is truly the best.

Though there are jokes and themes from the HBO hit Game of Thrones, even those who didn’t watch that show can appreciate the basketball-related humor and plot lines in Game of Zones.

In episode two, Adam Silver announced that the media has voted on a “super-super house” of the best players in the league and that the game would take place in Seattle.

On the episode released Thursday, the team entered Seattle, where they established battle plans, LeBron James got a visit from Kobe Bryant and stars snubbed from their team launched an attack against the media.

Below is the third episode of the season. The first two can be found on the Bleacher Report YouTube page as well.

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Matt Bullard: 1990s Rockets were close to their own three-peat

How close were the Houston Rockets to winning a third championship in the early 1990s? Closer than you might think. Here’s why.

For many NBA fans, the most popular hypothetical from the 1990s era involves Michael Jordan‘s temporary mid-career retirement in October 1993. With the Chicago Bulls coming off three straight titles, many wonder if they’d have kept winning, had Jordan continued to play.

The Houston Rockets, of course, won the next two NBA championships in 1994 and 1995 following Jordan’s decision to walk away.

From Houston’s perspective, there’s a different hypothetical. What if one of two relatively open shots had gone down at the end of Game 7 of their second-round series at Seattle in the 1993 playoffs? Matt Bullard, who played nine seasons with the Rockets between 1990 and 2001 and now works as a broadcaster for the team, thinks he knows the answer.

“Had Seattle not beaten us in the playoffs in 1993, we probably would have three-peated in 1993, 1994, and 1995,” Bullard said Tuesday in an appearance on flagship radio station SportsTalk 790 in Houston. “We would’ve beaten the Bulls in 1993.”

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Looking back, there are legitimate reasons for that confidence. By Win Shares, the 1992-93 season was the best of Hall of Fame center Hakeem Olajuwon‘s entire career. “The Dream” played all 82 games and averaged 26.1 points (52.9% FG), 13.0 rebounds, and a league-high 4.2 blocks per game, which led to him finishing second in MVP voting.

The Rockets went 55-27 that season, which was tied for the second-best record in the Western Conference. They also got much better as the year moved along, with two winning streaks of 15 games and 11 games in the regular season’s final two months. After starting the year 14-16, they finished 41-11 (.788) — good for a 65-win pace over a full season.

Though the Shawn Kemp and Gary Payton-led SuperSonics were a juggernaut in their own right, Houston had two golden opportunities late in Game 7 of a tight second-round series. With the game tied in the closing seconds of regulation, sharpshooting guard Kenny Smith missed a clean look from the corner that would’ve won the game at the buzzer.

Then, trailing by only one point in the closing seconds of overtime, Vernon Maxwell missed a go-ahead shot on the left baseline from about 18 feet away. Seattle then made two free throws in the final second to escape with the 103-100 victory (box score).

There were also a series of questionable officiating calls late in Game 7, each working to the benefit of the home team.

It was only a second-round series, of course. Even had Houston won, they would’ve had to then defeat both of that year’s NBA Finals participants (Phoenix and Chicago) in back-to-back rounds, in order to win the title.

But there’s certainly reason to wonder. The Rockets beat Charles Barkley’s Suns in a playoff series in each of the next two years, and they also won their final two regular-season games versus Phoenix in 1992-93.

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While Houston never faced the Bulls in the playoffs, they did go 5-1 versus Chicago in the regular season from 1990-91 through 1992-93 — including 2-0 in that final season, with both wins by double digits. Olajuwon was a tough matchup for the Bulls and the likes of Bill Cartwright, while Maxwell embraced the challenge of covering Jordan.

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As it was, the Suns defeated Seattle in a seven-game Western Conference Finals before losing to Chicago in the NBA Finals in six games. But just as the Bulls wonder what might have been had Jordan not stepped away later that year, the Rockets have a fascinating 1993 hypothetical of their own about what might have happened with just one more shot.

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