2024 Olympics provide first chance to see Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Josh Giddey square off

2024 Olympics provide first chance to see Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Josh Giddey square off.

The 2024 Olympics has kicked off, which means group play for the Men’s Basketball tournament will soon begin.

Most Oklahoma City Thunder fans will root for a second squad beyond the hometown Team USA. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Lu Dort hope to carry Canada’s momentum from its bronze medal finish last year at the 2023 FIBA World Cup.

Gilgeous-Alexander is the face of the program. The 26-year-old is one of the best players in the league and is fresh off a runner-up finish in MVP last season. Canada will go as far as he takes it.

Canada must survive group play first though — which is no easy task. It is placed in the toughest group with Australia, Spain and Greece. Gilgeous-Alexander will face off against the three other squads in the coming days.

The headliner of the group phase for Thunder fans will be when Canada and Australia face off on Tuesday, July 30.

The international contest provides the first chance for Gilgeous-Alexander and former teammate Josh Giddey to square off as opponents. The latter was shipped to the Chicago Bulls earlier this offseason after three seasons in OKC.

The 21-year-old struggled to adjust to an off-ball role last season. He was eventually benched in the NBA playoffs. In Chicago, he returns to a primary ball-handler role that best suits his strengths.

After sharing a backcourt for three years, both players enter the 2024 Olympics as the face of their respective programs. They will likely match up for most of the contest together.

It’ll be fun for Thunder fans to see Gilgeous-Alexander and Giddey duke it out in this high-stakes setting. The former’s ascension played a factor in the latter’s eventual departure.

Both players have come a long way from Gilgeous-Alexander’s infamous “Plan A/B” comments a few seasons ago.

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2024 OKC Thunder fan survey officially open

2024 OKC Thunder fan survey officially open.

The dust has settled for the NBA offseason. As the calendar nears August, most rosters are set. The Oklahoma City Thunder enters the 2024-25 season as a title favorite.

The Thunder had a productive offseason. They shored up their weaknesses with the additions of Isaiah Hartenstein and Alex Caruso. Both are seamless fits for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams.

The Thunder also added a trio of rookies to their roster headlined by Nikola Topic, who will sit out next season recovering from a torn ACL.

As the NBA calendar enters its slowest part of the year, Thunder Wire offers fans a chance to reflect on OKC’s moves and upcoming campaign with a fan survey.

The 2024 Thunder fan survey will be open until Monday, July 29 at 12 p.m. CT. It’s 16 quick questions. Please consider filling it out and sharing it with others:


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OKC Thunder announces 2024-25 preseason schedule

OKC Thunder announces 2024-25 preseason schedule.

The Oklahoma City Thunder announced their 2024-25 preseason schedule. They will play in five contests in 10 days from Oct. 7 to Oct. 17.

After a first-seed finish last season, the Thunder enter next year with high expectations. They are viewed as a championship favorite after the additions of Alex Caruso and Isaiah Hartenstein.

This will also be the second season together for OKC’s trio of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams. Expect those three to continue to develop.

Below is the Thunder’s 2024 preseason schedule:

  • Thunder at Spurs on Monday, Oct. 7 with a 7 p.m. CT tip
  • Rockets vs. Thunder on Wednesday, Oct. 9 with a 7 p.m. CT tip
  • NBL’s New Zealand Breakers vs. Thunder on Thursday, Oct. 10 with a 7 p.m. CT tip in Tulsa, Okla.
  • Thunder at Nuggets on Tuesday, Oct. 15 with an 8 p.m. CT tip
  • Hawks vs. Thunder on Thursday, Oct. 17 with a 7 p.m. CT tip

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Dillon Brooks says Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is one of the toughest covers in NBA

Dillon Brooks says Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is one of the toughest covers in NBA.

Matching up against the opposition’s best scorers, Dillon Brooks has had his fair share of experiences to judge who some of the best players in the league are.

As Canada prepares for group play in the 2024 Olympics, Brooks broke down the three toughest opponents to defend. The 28-year-old listed Shai Gilgeous-Alexander as one of his answers.

The other two players were Luka Doncic and Andrew Nembhard.

This shouldn’t be a shocker. Gilgeous-Alexander has ascended into one of the best players in the league over the last two seasons. He finished runner-up in MVP last season.

As an efficient 30-plus point scorer, Gilgeous-Alexander drives to the basket often with little resistance. This has made the 26-year-old a tough cover on any night.

This is solid praise to hear from Gilgeous-Alexander Canadian teammate. Despite his villain gimmick and offensive tunnel vision, Brooks is one of the best perimeter defenders in the league.

Expect both players to duke it out next season as the Oklahoma City Thunder and Houston Rockets square off for playoff seeding. The former is seen as a title contender while the latter can make the playoff jump next year.

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Shai Gilgeous-Alexander crafts perfect NBA player with these 5 names

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander crafts perfect NBA player with these 5 names.

Building the perfect NBA player has been a fun activity to kill time. It’s traditionally used to create discourse and highlight the best players at each basketball skill.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander recently participated in a fun exercise as he prepares for the 2024 Olympics. The 26-year-old headlines Canada’s best roster in program history.

Gilgeous-Alexander had to pick the best player for five important basketball attributes. He went with Kobe Bryant’s scoring, Andrew Nembhard’s passing, Lu Dort’s defense, Chris Paul’s IQ and LeBron James’ athleticism.

While surprising to most, Oklahoma City Thunder fans shouldn’t be surprised by Gilgeous-Alexander’s selections. He’s known to select his teammates in these types of hypothetical questions as a sign of support.

Dort is his teammate on the Thunder and Nembhard is a fellow Canadian. Paul was Gilgeous-Alexander’s teammate for a sole season upon his arrival to OKC.

Gilgeous-Alexander is also a massive Kobe stan, so his selection for point production isn’t surprising.

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Thunder’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Chet Holmgren, Jalen Williams ranked 4th-best trio

Thunder’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Chet Holmgren, Jalen Williams ranked 4th-best trio.

The Oklahoma City Thunder graduated to being a title contender this past season. They became the youngest first seed in league history and lost an intense second-round series to the Dallas Mavericks.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander headlines OKC’s roster but Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams help round out one of the best trios in the league. Expect all three to be on the Thunder for the foreseeable future.

As teams prepare for the 2024-25 season, Bleacher Report’s Dan Favale ranked the 10 best trios in the league. The Thunder were ranked at the No. 4 spot.

“Inserting the Oklahoma City Thunder’s trio into this exercise is not a rush to coronate. SGA just finished second on the MVP ballot and secured back-to-back All-NBA First Team selections. He is him, and he is here.

Holmgren and Williams are lightyears from finished products. That complicates this process. It’s also part of the point. If you came away from Chet’s rookie romp and J-Dub’s sophomore soiree thinking these dudes aren’t both on an All-Star track, I’m not really sure what to say.”

The Thunder had a successful offseason as they shored up weaknesses with the addition of Alex Caruso and Isaiah Hartenstein. But OKC’s status as a contender is off the work of Gilgeous-Alexander, Holmgren and Williams.

The three squads ranked ahead of them were the Milwaukee Bucks, Philadelphia 76ers and Boston Celtics.

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Paul George picks Shai Gilgeous-Alexander as MVP favorite for 2024-25 season

Paul George picks Shai Gilgeous-Alexander as MVP favorite for 2024-25 season.

The Oklahoma City Thunder are fresh off their most successful season since Kevin Durant departed. They became the youngest first seed in league history and fought out a grueling Round 2 series against the Dallas Mavericks.

This past season marked the beginning of another championship window for the Thunder. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s ascension into one of the league’s best players headlines their group.

The 25-year-old had his best season yet and finished runner-up for MVP behind Nikola Jokic. It was a tight race that came down to the wire.

According to Paul George, he felt like Gilgeous-Alexander should’ve won MVP last season and bets he’ll be the favorite heading into the 2024-24 campaign.

George — who recently joined the Philadelphia 76ers — talked about the MVP discourse and how the narratives around it change season-by-season. He vouched for Gilgeous-Alexander on a recent episode of his “Podcast P” show.

“I thought he was the best example of what the MVP should be,” George said. “What he did to a team that no one had expectations — especially playing in the West, how hard that is to be No. 1. And average 30-plus… To take that team where he took them, I thought it was a no-brainer.”

George later clarified that even though Gilgeous-Alexader was the undisputed best player in OKC, that doesn’t mean he didn’t have a rich squad. Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams help round out one of the best trios.

“Not to say the Thunder didn’t give Shai help. But this was a team no one had any expectations of,” George said. “For me, I just think what you actually bring to the table and how you affect your team’s success should be valued the most.”

The 34-year-old then went to a classic fallacy of saying the Thunder wouldn’t have sniffed the first seed without Gilgeous-Alexander. He said the experienced vet helped lead OKC.

“If you take Shai off that group, OKC is probably in the lottery. Let’s just be real,” George said. “As much talent as they have, I just thought they were young and they lacked the experience that Shai brought and gave the confidence to a lot of players.”

George then made his early prediction for next season. He thinks Gilgeous-Alexander will enter the year as the favorite to win the prestigious award. It’s definitely within the realm of possibility as he’s in his prime.

“If we’re looking at the front-runner MVP for next season, Shai’s got my pick,” George said.

As most know, George and Gilgeous-Alexander will forever be linked together for the rest of their careers. They were the main pieces involved in the blockbuster deal between the Thunder and LA Clippers in 2019.

After George’s departure, it’s easy to say the Clippers lost that league-altering trade by a wide margin. He left LA with no championship in five years and a single Western Conference Finals appearance at its peak.

As George leaves for Philly, the Clippers are stuck with an old, expensive roster led by Kawhi Leonard and James Harden. Leonard’s unreliable durability is well documented and a large reason LA failed to win a title.

Meanwhile, the Clippers laid the foundation of OKC’s current title window. The trade also included a plethora of draft picks through the 2020s. Williams was selected with LA’s lottery pick in 2022. There is still fruit to enjoy from the deal for the Thunder through the next couple of draft cycles.

Even though the deal turned lopsided in OKC’s favor, George’s admiration for Gilgeous-Alexander is cool to see. It’s obvious the latter is well-respected among the league’s upper echelon.

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On this day: Thunder ship Paul George to Clippers for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, draft picks

On this day: Thunder ship Paul George to Clippers for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, draft picks.

On this day in 2019, the Oklahoma City Thunder shocked the sports world when they shipped Paul George to the LA Clippers for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Danilo Gallinari and a rich supply of draft capital.

The deal was one of the largest volumes of draft picks in league history. Five years later, it’s proven to be the launching point of the Thunder’s quick ascension into a title window.

This Clippers threw the Thunder a life vest. They stared down the barrel of being cornered with a roster that had three straight first-round exits in the playoffs. They turned that around for a lucrative amount of draft picks in the 2020s.

The original package of draft picks included the Clippers’ first-round pick in 2022, 2024, 2026 and swap rights in 2023 and 2025. OKC also acquired the Heat’s first-round pick in 2021 and 2023 with protections.

Meanwhile, the Clippers landed George and Kawhi Leonard within minutes of each other. This provided them with one of the best duos in the league with championship aspirations from the get-go.

A couple of draft cycles remain, but the results have been fantastic for the Thunder. They added Jalen Williams with LA’s 2022 first-round pick. While Tre Mann didn’t work out with the Thunder, his traded salary helped them land Isaiah Hartenstein.

For the Clippers, this past week officially saw them wave the white flag of the massive gamble. George departed LA and signed with the Philadelphia 76ers.

In five seasons with the Clippers, his tenure peaked in 2021 when they reached the Western Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history.

But in total, it was an epic failure. LA only won three playoff series in five years. It hasn’t won a playoff series since 2021. Both George and Leonard have dealt with injuries to varying degrees.

It was a massive swing and miss by the Clippers to mortgage their future. The Thunder have reaped the benefits as two of their three best players were directly acquired from LA’s work.

The Clippers are now on the downturn and stuck with an old, expensive roster that has no honest shot of a deep playoff run. Meanwhile, the Thunder are in the infancy stages of a title window.

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The Clippers lost Paul George for nothing after trading so much (Shai Gilgeous-Alexander!) to originally acquire him

How bleak is it for the Clippers considering what they gave up to get Paul George?

Paul George will reportedly sign with the Philadelphia 76ers, officially marking the end of his tenure with the L.A. Clippers.

The Clippers ultimately paid a premium price to acquire George from the Thunder in 2019. While it was perhaps a necessary gamble because it helped the team also acquire Kawhi Leonard, it is wild to consider just how many assets the front office surrendered in this deal five years ago.

Even the organization released a statement acknowledging as much:

“We traded a lot to pair Paul and Kawhi, and in exchange, we had five seasons of contention. Even though we fell short of our ultimate objective, we appreciate the chances we had with Paul.”

Looking back, Danilo Gallinari was the main piece that made the deal work financially. But he was hardly the most important part of this move.

Some fans may forget that Shai Gilgeous-Alexander began his career with the Clippers. He was drafted at No. 11 overall and played his rookie season in Los Angeles before he was named All-Rookie Second Team.

While he wasn’t yet who he is today, he was the centerpiece of the deal for the Thunder. Knowing what we know now, Gilgeous-Alexander already has more trade value than George. But that wasn’t all that the Clippers gave up to make this happen.

RELATED: The Clippers fumbling Paul George in free agency has to be the most Clippers thing ever

Also included in the deal was a loaded collection of first-round picks, some of which have been more favorable than others. It seems the most valuable was the No. 12 overall pick in the 2022 NBA Draft, which was used to pick Jalen Williams.

After earning NBA All-Rookie First-Team during his debut campaign with the Thunder in 2023, he had a breakout season with the Thunder last year and has proven himself as one of the most impressive young players in the NBA.

Oklahoma City also received the No. 18 pick in the 2021 NBA Draft, which was used on Tre Mann, who was later rerouted to the Hornets as part of the trade for Gordon Hayward.

Other assets from L.A. in the deal included the No. 26 pick in the 2024 NBA Draft (which was recently used to select Dillon Jones from Weber State).

The Clippers also owned what became the No. 18 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft (used to seelct Jaime Jaquez Jr.), though Oklahoma City turned that into a protected 2025 first-round pick or an unprotected first-round pick in 2026 from the Heat.

That means Oklahoma City is still owed a first-round pick from Miami, the rights to swap picks with the Clippers in 2025, and a first-round pick from the Clippers in 2026.

Meanwhile, the Clippers are left with nothing back in return for George.

They still have Leonard and James Harden on the roster, but the odds of them contending next season do not look strong.

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It’s official — the OKC Thunder have won the Paul George trade

It’s official — the OKC Thunder have won the Paul George trade.

What’s been known for years became official on Sunday. The Oklahoma City Thunder have won the Paul George trade over the LA Clippers.

Like a quarterback kneeling out the last couple of plays, George’s departure officially sealed the book of this multi-year saga.

According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, both sides have moved on from each other. The Philadelphia 76ers are seen as the favorites to win the PG sweepstakes.

The Thunder shocked the sports world when they shipped George — fresh off a third-place MVP finish — to the Clippers for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Danilo Gallinari and a treasure trove of draft picks.

Five years later, the trade laid the foundations of OKC’s current title window, which is in its infancy after last season. The Thunder became the youngest first seed in league history and were a foul away from forcing a Game 7 to determine a Western Conference Finals trip.

Gilgeous-Alexander headlines the Thunder’s second iteration of a championship squad. The 25-year-old has blossomed into one of the best players in the league. He finished runner-up for MVP last season and has had back-to-back years of All-NBA First Team honors.

Under contract for at least three more seasons, the Clippers supplied the Thunder with an MVP-caliber player amid his prime. Most NBA franchises spend years in the wilderness seeking that type of player. LA gift-wrapped OKC one.

If it were a basic George for Gilgeous-Alexander swap, it’d be viewed as a lopsided deal by itself. But what makes it historic is the draft capital attached that initially grabbed headlines when it happened.

The Thunder received four unprotected first-round picks, a lottery-protected first-round picks and two first-round pick swaps spanning from 2022-26. This means, yes — as hard as it is to believe, there are still fruits to enjoy from that five-year-old deal.

A few drafts in and the Thunder have turned one of those draft picks into Jalen Williams — OKC’s second-best scorer and part of its impressive trio.

The Thunder were gifted the lottery pick from the Clippers in 2022 because of the play-in tournament as — in a sick twist of fate — George missed their season-ending loss to the New Orleans Pelicans due to COVID-19 protocols.

To lay it on thick, this means Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams — arguably the two biggest reasons why the Thunder have such a bright future — landed in OKC solely off of LA’s work.

The Clippers have turned into the farm system for the Thunder. The same way the Minnesota Vikings nurtured the Dallas Cowboys’ 1990s dynasty in exchange for Herschel Walker.

There’s no way around it — that must sting. To add salt to the wound, OKC still owns its future draft picks for the next two draft cycles. The full effects of the massive deal have not materialized yet.

This likely explains the sunk-cost fallacy LA has fallen into over the years. It’s double-downed on its star duo. But the sad reality is its best shot to win a title with George and Kawhi Leonard was within its first two seasons.

After they missed their shots, it’s been about keeping a sliver of space opened for its window. The only problem is the two stars they’ve built around can’t stay healthy when it matters the most.

Leonard failed to play 60 games in his first four years with the Clippers — including being out the entire 2021-22 season. Even when he did enjoy his most healthy campaign this past year, he only played in two postseason contests — where he looked like a shell of his former self.

At 33 years old, Leonard’s career is on borrowed time. He simply can’t stay healthy for a full season. The days of him carrying a contender are long over.

George has been the healthier of the two but he’s also failed to play 60-plus games in his first four seasons. He missed LA’s entire 2023 playoff run.

Mortgaging their future meant the Clippers had a title-or-bust mentality. Despite making their first Western Conference Finals appearance in 2021, this trade has been a catastrophic disaster that has defined LA’s franchise.

Maybe in hindsight, it was an aimless ambition to build around Leonard and George. Their bodies have fallen apart over the years. But even then, it was fairly easy to predict this outcome. Both players have had major question marks about their durability for most of their careers.

This might’ve been a 10th-percentile outcome, but it was a real possibility the Clippers would’ve flamed out like this. Now — even with George’s departure — they can’t reverse course.

Lofty extensions to Leonard and presumably James Harden mean they must retool with one of the oldest and most expensive rosters — even if they know it’s an unjustified cause. A lack of future draft picks forces LA’s hand to dig deeper into its grave. There’s no turning back.

While they’re 10 feet below, shoveling dirt, they’ll likely hear faint celebrations from the Thunder above ground. LA’s front office deserves as much credit as OKC’s for what it’s built in recent years.

George’s decision to leave made a formality official. The Thunder are on the right side of history in one of the most one-sided blockbuster trades of the 21st century.

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