Report: Thunder won’t issue qualifying offer to Tony Bradley

The Thunder will reportedly not issue a qualifying off to center Tony Jones.

The Oklahoma City Thunder appear to be moving on from Tony Bradley, a young center acquired at the trade deadline.

The Thunder are not expected to issue Bradley a qualifying offer as he hits free agency, according to The Athletic’s Tony Jones. Bradley was acquired from the Philadelphia 76ers as part of the George Hill trade last season.

In 22 games with the Thunder, Bradley was a reliable big man, averaging 8.7 points and 6.1 rebounds in 18 minutes per game while shooting 65.6% on 5.5 shots per contest.

The Thunder’s roster is already filling up, though, and they enter Monday night with six selections in the 2021 draft. The assumption is that they’ll trade some or pick a draft-and-stash player — or both — but there’s limited room to work with.

Bradley started seeing playing time in his third year in the league. In that 2019-20 season, on the Utah Jazz, he averaged 4.9 points and 4.6 rebounds in 11.4 minutes per game.

He was traded to the Sixers during the 2020 offseason. A third- to fourth-string center for much of his tenure in Philly, Bradley only appeared in 20 games, but he played well overall during his stint as a starter in place of the injured Joel Embiid.

Bradley was traded to the Thunder, where he played solid but remained stuck in a busy rotation, one in which Oklahoma City wanted to explore a more positionless style with players like Darius Bazley and Isaiah Roby at center, along with true big Moses Brown, who has been traded to the Boston Celtics.

Assuming Bradley is gone, the Thunder will have no true centers on the team.

The draft will begin at 7 p.m. Central Time on Thursday.

Tony Bradley talks about what he learned from Joel Embiid, Dwight Howard

Before being traded to the OKC Thunder, Tony Bradley was a teammate of Philadelphia 76ers centers Joel Embiid and Dwight Howard.

There aren’t many players in the NBA who are better for a young center to play behind than Joel Embiid and Dwight Howard.

Embiid, an MVP candidate this season, has been one of the best players on both ends of the ball for the last four years. Howard is among the best centers in NBA history, a future Hall of Famer who led the Orlando Magic to a Finals appearance in 2009.

Oklahoma City Thunder center Tony Bradley spent time behind both this season when he was on the Philadelphia 76ers. He said there were two key things he took away from them.

“Mainly from watching them the time I was there in Philly, the physicality they bring defensively and their awareness off the ball,” Bradley said. “Those two are the first things that I see, especially physicality.”

They have made their careers off their physicality, particularly on the defensive end. Howard won Defensive Player of the Year three years in a row from 2008-11, and Embiid has been on two All-Defensive teams in the last three years.

Those areas Bradley grew from watching them can help him as he works to secure his next contract.

The 23-year-old is set to be a restricted free agent, so his remaining games are essentially tryouts for the Thunder and other teams around the league.

After emerging as a viable NBA player with the Utah Jazz last season, his third in the league, Bradley saw limited time on the court in the Sixers’ loaded center rotation this year. He was traded to the Thunder at the deadline as part of the deal for guard George Hill.

Bradley has seen a bit more time with the Thunder, and his stats have increased accordingly. He is averaging 8.9 points and 6.3 rebounds in 18.2 minutes per game, each of which is better than his numbers over his 20 appearances with the Sixers.

Over the last two seasons, he has shot 66.5% from the field. Bradley is looking to prove his reliability on both ends of the court as the Thunder — and perhaps other teams — evaluate if he is worth a spot on a roster.

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Turnovers plague Thunder in loss to Sixers, Joel Embiid

The OKC Thunder lost to the Philadelphia 76ers in the return of Darius Bazley and Lu Dort.

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Ty Jerome pulled up for a jumper, hit it, and got fouled. He sank the free throw.

There was 1:16 remaining in the third quarter against the Philadelphia 76ers, and the Thunder had trimmed a 20-point lead down to 12. They were starting to pick up a little momentum. After wing Furkan Korkmaz missed a free throw on the next Sixers possession, OKC had a chance to grab the board and cut the deficit down even further.

But Korkmaz got his own offensive rebound off the missed free throw and big Mike Scott hit a 3 for the unconventional four-point possession. The Sixers extended their lead back up to 16, and the Thunder comeback attempt was over.

Oklahoma City lost its sixth game in a row. The team fell 117-93 to the Sixers, who are now tied with the Brooklyn Nets for the best record in the Eastern Conference.

The Thunder suffered another turnover-filled game, giving up the ball 23 times and allowing 32 total points off turnovers. In the third quarter, Oklahoma City committed seven — so even though Philadelphia only scored 24 points that frame, the Thunder posted just 23 because they couldn’t keep hold of the rock.

“I thought it was a good game for us just to go against a team with that kind of length and discipline,” said Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault.

“We were just a little sloppy with the ball and had too many turnovers, but I thought the movement and the screening and cutting, which they force you to do to generate advantages, was pretty good. … I thought the pace of offense and the way we were trying to play was well-intentioned.”

Those turnovers contributed to the Thunder scoring only 93 points despite having a very efficient night. The team shot exactly 50% from the field and 40% from 3, but only attempted 76 field goals. The Sixers, by comparison, put up 94 shots.

Over the 10 prior games entering the night, the Thunder allowed 24.4 points off turnovers, 4.1 worse than the next-worst team. That margin is worse than the difference between the No. 29 team and the No. 19 team.

In that time span, the Thunder averaged 17.9 turnovers per game, 29th in the league to the Los Angeles Lakers. The difference between the Thunder and the No. 28 team was wider than the difference between No. 28 and No. 20.

Jerome was asked specifically about the turnovers of the Saturday night game, to which he responded that the young team is still learning to play at a fast tempo.

“We’re going to have those stretches. We’re young, we’ve got some inexperience,” Jerome said. “We want to play fast. We’re going to make some mistakes. Just try to minimize the bad ones. But it’s going to happen, we’ve just got to work on it.”

Power forward Darius Bazley had nine turnovers himself in his first game since March 4.

Beyond those turnovers, Bazley’s return to the court was largely positive. He scored a team-high 17 points to go with nine boards and five assists, and Daigneault acknowledged that he was impressed the forward reached 36 minutes after not playing for more than a five weeks.

“I thought he was in really good shape tonight. I kind of let him run there at the end because he obviously was a little out of rhythm,” Daigneault said. “I give him a lot of credit for his return to play, that’s easier said than done.”

Wing Lu Dort also returned to action for the first time in two weeks. He scored 15 points on 6-for-12 shooting and had five rebounds.

“Similar (to Bazley), didn’t take a dip conditioning wise,” Daigneault said. “He was a bull downhill tonight. He was really, really fast downhill.”

Center Tony Bradley, facing off against his former team, had the best night of any Thunder player. He posted a double-double with 16 points and 14 rebounds to go with three blocks in 25 minutes of action.

“It was a good opportunity to first off see them again and secondly get a chance to play against them,” he said. “They’re a really good team. … When I was with them, observing and watching them, when I was sitting on the bench, it was something special to watch.”

The center he used to play behind, Joel Embiid, led the way for the Sixers. He scored 27 points in 27 minutes and recorded four blocks on the night.

Off the Sixers bench, backup power forward Mike Scott had 13 points while backup center Dwight Howard had 13 rebounds and two blocks.

Philadelphia was far too much for Oklahoma City to handle, and the Thunder have now lost nine of their 10 games. But they got two core pieces back into the lineup and, for those watching the reverse standings, are now in the seventh-best position for lottery odds.

This post originally appeared on OKCThunderWire. Follow us on Facebook, and keep up with 76ers news at Sixers Wire!

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Thunder vs. Sixers halftime: Darius Bazley leads OKC scorers in return to court

Darius Bazley returned from injury and had 10 points in the first quarter, but Joel Embiid has 21 at halftime for the Philadelphia 76ers.

Oklahoma City Thunder forward Darius Bazley posted 10 points in the first quarter in his return to the court and finished the first half against the Philadelphia 76ers on Saturday with a team-high 12 points in 15 minutes.

He had been out the entire second half of the season due to a shoulder contusion on his shooting arm. In his first game action since March 4, Bazley went 5-for-7 from the field, made both 3-pointers he attempted, and had three rebounds and assists apiece by halftime.

Despite this, the Thunder went into the break trailing the Sixers 66-53.

Bazley may have scored 10 for the Thunder in the first quarter, but three different 76ers reached the double-digit mark as well over the first 12 minutes. Ben Simmons, Joel Embiid and Furkan Korkmaz all had 10 points, and the team shot 55% from the field in the opening frame. They were nearly unstoppable inside the arc, going 13-for-16 from 2-point range in the first quarter.

Embiid continued to dominate in the second quarter. He finished the half with 21 points, seven rebounds and three assists, and attempted nine free throws.

Thunder center Tony Bradley, facing off against his old team, had eight points in 10 minutes of play.

Overall, the Thunder shot well from the field, posting a field goal mark of 52.4% and making four of their nine 3-pointers, but the 76ers shot a nearly identical 52.1%

A 13-1 run for the Sixers in the second quarter allowed them to extend their lead as high as 20 before OKC could trim it back down to 13 to end the half on a Theo Maledon buzzer-beater from the corner.

Tune into the rest of the game at Bally Sports Oklahoma.

Doc Rivers praises former Sixers big man Tony Bradley, loved coaching him

Philadelphia 76ers coach Doc Rivers praised former big man Tony Bradley for his work with the team.

The Philadelphia 76ers had some great center depth earlier in the season. While they still have future Hall of Famer Dwight Howard backing up Joel Embiid, they did have a young center who was making a name for himself before he was shipped to the Oklahoma City Thunder in the George Hill trade.

That young center was Tony Bradley who took over the starting center spot when Embiid was out with an injury and he played very well. He averaged 9.3 points and 6.8 rebounds in eight games with the Sixers, seven starts, after the All-Star break before the trade.

He was making steady improvements all throughout the season and coach Doc Rivers was fond of him.

“He’s just a pro man,” said Rivers. “First of all, he’s a terrific kid. He’s the type of kid that you want on your franchise, you want to keep on your franchise as much as you can. He worked his butt off.”

Bradley entered Philadelphia needing work. He needed to polish a lot of different parts of his game and he needed to lose weight. Rivers and the coaching staff drew up a game plan for him and he followed it to a T which is what the team wanted from him.

“A lot of guys who are like that, won’t do the work,” Rivers explained. “You’ll tell them they need to do the work, you’ll give them a game plan that you believe leads as a coach and a coaching staff that can make the kid individually better, and you’ll be surprised how many guys, they won’t hear it, they won’t listen, they’ll do their own thing. Tony wasn’t one of those.”

Being only 23-years old, he still has a long NBA future ahead of him. He is still such a young guy and he fits right in with the Thunder timeline. They are a rebuilding team that needs a lot of younger talent and Bradley will be able to make an impact in Oklahoma City.

“Just a fantastic kid and he’s young,” the veteran coach finished. “I think a lot of people forget that how young he is. I think he has a bright future in the league. He’s one of those guys, you would love to coach again for sure.”

The Sixers and the Thunder will battle at 9 p.m. EDT from the Chesapeake Energy Arena.

This post originally appeared on Sixers Wire! Follow us on Facebook!

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Thunder vs. Pistons halftime: Mykhailiuk has 11 points vs. former team

Svi Mykhailiuk led the OKC Thunder with 11 points in the first half in his first game vs. the Pistons since Detroit traded him.

The Oklahoma City Thunder only scored 19 points in the first quarter against the Detroit Pistons and trailed by as many as 23 in the second, but a run by the OKC bench unit helped the team get back in the game. At halftime, the Thunder trailed 58-47.

The Thunder bench scored 12 straight points in the second quarter, all from players new to the team. Six were from Justin Robinson and two were from Jaylen Hoard, and the other four came via Tony Bradley.

Those three players each had six points in the first half.

Svi Mykhailiuk helped the Thunder cut the deficit to single digits before the Pistons found their footing. Mykhailiuk, who was traded from Detroit to Thunder last month, led OKC with 11 points.

Hamidou Diallo, who the Pistons got in return, posted four points in the half.

Ty Jerome had some very nice passes to help the Thunder cut back into the deficit, and Darius Miller had three steals.

To get back into the game, the Thunder will have to improve their shooting — the team is shooting 37.5% from the field and 26.7% from deep — and get more transition chances on offense. The team only had six fast break points.

Tune in to Bally Sports Oklahoma to see the remainder of the game.

Tony Bradley reacts to retirement of UNC coach Roy Williams

OKC Thunder center Tony Bradley, who won a championship under Roy Williams, reacted to the coaching legend’s retirement.

New Oklahoma City Thunder center and former North Carolina Tar Heel reacted to the retirement of UNC head coach Roy Williams’ the same way so many of us did at home:

“I thought it was an April Fool’s joke,” he said.

It was not a joke. April 2 rolled around and the legend remained retired. Williams finished his coaching career with a 903-264 record over 33 seasons between Kansas and North Carolina and three National Championships with the Tar Heels.

“I was actually shocked to see him retire. I was thinking maybe he had another two or three years,” Bradley said.

Bradley won an NCAA Championship under Williams at North Carolina in 2016-17. In that season, Bradley’s only year at UNC, the big averaged 7.1 points and 5.1 rebounds in 14.6 minutes per game off the bench.

He had five points and seven boards in the championship game against Gonzaga. Justin Jackson, who is once again Bradley’s teammate in Oklahoma City, scored 16 points for North Carolina in the title performance.

“Coach Williams was one of the main reasons why I went to UNC,” Bradley said. “Watching him and his teams play and compete at a young age, as a kid, I always wanted to go there.”

Bradley said he will never forget being recruited by the legend.

“The process of the recruiting and everything, him coming to see me in high school … memories we made and some things I just won’t ever forget,” he said.

The evaluation of Bradley, Hall, Mykhailiuk was important part of OKC-Mavs game

As important as the score of the OKC Thunder and Dallas Mavericks game were the performances of Tony Bradley, Josh Hall and Svi Mykhailiuk.

Thunder lose to Mavericks, Luka Doncic

It’s worth wondering if Oklahoma City Thunder fans are going to start seeing more of this.

The Thunder have remained competitive even with lack of on-paper talent and injuries to starters for a few reasons. They hustle more and play harder than you. Every rotation player has at least one NBA-level skill, which is different than many rebuilding rosters. They are versatile enough that even without their main players, they typically can find enough creation on offense and smart rotation on defense.

But finally, in the 127-106 loss to the Dallas Mavericks on Monday, it looked different. The lineups didn’t have the same complexity and skill sets. The roster as a whole doesn’t have much acquaintance with the NBA, but even so, this group was less experienced.

“We’re learning those things, and we have really, really good moments where it’s really, really tight and then we have moments where we slip, and that’s where we’re most vulnerable,” head coach Mark Daigneault said.

“We’re not vulnerable with energy, we’re not vulnerable with competitiveness, we’re not vulnerable with team-orientation. All those things are tight with this group, that’s why it’s so enjoyable to coach this team. But where we are vulnerable is just in those details, and it shows up on both ends of the floor.

The Mavericks went on a run to pull ahead midway through the second quarter when the Thunder had Theo Maledon, Ty Jerome, Josh Hall, Kenrich Williams and Moses Brown on the court. It’s not hard to see why this group would struggle together, especially against an offense like Dallas’.

Jerome is a point guard, but he’s had more success this year than as a rookie because he hasn’t had to play much of a creator role. Hall entered the night with a grand total of 72 NBA minutes played. He and Brown have still not had time to learn NBA defense and rotations, meaning Williams was the only markedly good defender on the court.  They were picked apart by the Mavericks and, during this stretch in particular, Tim Hardaway Jr.

We’ll see more of these types of rotations as the Thunder explore the roster.

Oklahoma City doesn’t need to evaluate Brown anymore the way it does players like Hall, Svi Mykhailiuk and Tony Bradley. They’ve seen enough, and signed the center to a contract for up to four years. But they’ll still get him as much court time as possible to improve, particularly on the defensive end, where his ability to read and react to the opposing big is still developing.

Brown, Hall and Aleksej Pokusevski, all of whom were on the OKC Blue G League roster a month ago, will likely see time on the Thunder court together. That is not a design that should win often. That’s written with hesitation, because the Thunder have proved that mindset wrong time and time again this season — what should be competitive vs. what is competitive — but with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort, Darius Bazley and Al Horford all out for the foreseeable future, the circumstances have changed.

After trailing by nine points at the end of the first quarter, the Thunder cut the deficit to a 47-46 Dallas lead with 5:51 to play in the half. Over the next 18 minutes, the Mavericks outscored Oklahoma City 53-37 to take a lead that stood.

To be frank, at this point in the season, more important than the score will be how the individual players performed. In this game, the focus was on Hall, Mykhailiuk and Bradley.

Bradley appeared in a Thunder jersey for the first time since the George Hill trade with the Philadelphia 76ers and New York Knicks. His first basket was early in the second quarter, and then he scored four more points before anyone else on the floor could get a bucket as he launched a solo 6-0 run with one of the baskets coming off an offense rebound.

Beyond that stretch he struggled to score, though, finishing with eight points and five rebounds in 14 minutes.

The newest Thunder member finished the game with eight points and five rebounds in 14 minutes.

After the game, Daigneault mentioned that Bradley hasn’t yet had time to learn the playbook or team terminology.

“Everything he does well, he deserves credit for. And everything he’s done poorly is a position we’ve put him in,” Daigneault said. “This is his starting point, he’ll just continue to learn … He’s a good player and will hit his stride.”

From Bradley: “Different things I’m still trying to learn and pick up, kind of on the fly. As I continue to play more, it’ll get more comfortable.”

Hall returned from a left knee injury on Saturday and scored four points over 20 minutes in his first game in almost two months. On Monday, he reached double-digits for the first time in his career, finishing with 10 on 3-for-6 shooting in 22 minutes.

He wasn’t great, but it was a step forward for the 20-year-old undrafted rookie who didn’t get a traditional NBA summer with Summer League or fall build-up with the Thunder.

“With the lack of those touchpoints, you have to understand how early this is in his trajectory,” Daigneault said. “This is like square zero for him, and he’ll gain the experiences. We’ll keep working with him. We have a lot of confidence in him as a person and in his game, but it’s gonna take time.”

Mykhailiuk started in place of Dort, his first start as a member of the Thunder.

It came on a night in which he would be the primary defender of one of the best offensive threats in the league, Luka Doncic.

The third-year Mavericks star finished with 25 points on 9-for-17 shooting in 28 minutes. When Mykhailiuk was asked about his defensive performance, he sounded very unsatisfied, pausing for several seconds before answering.

“For us, I feel like it was not to let him get comfortable on the court and just trying to get the ball out of his hands,” Mykhailiuk said. “He’s a great players, so it’s tough to do, especially in this situation. It is what it is.

Even while defending Doncic, Mykhailiuk was one of the better Thunder players on Monday. He shot 7-for-10 from the field, a line that included a couple nice step-back looks, and he impressed Daigneault beyond his shooting ability.

“With a guy that shoots it as well as he does, the tendency is to sometimes slip into a belief that you have a shooter on your hands, but when you unpack his game, he’s a way more complete player than that,” Daigneault said.

His 16 points were second on the Thunder to only Pokusevski, who finished with 21.

The rookie had a good night offensively, scoring from a variety of spots around the court. He made five of his seven attempts from inside the arc, though only three of his 10 from 3.

He is now averaging 11.3 points, 6.8 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game since coming back from the G League.

“With his size and his abilities, with his skills, it’s going to be tough to not play him and he’ll be tough to guard,” Mykhailiuk said.

Without Gilgeous-Alexander or Dort on the floor, OKC will be starved for playmaking. Expect Pokusevski’s role to continue to increase.

The Thunder will get a day off before their next game. Daigneault emphasized that losses like 21-point defeat to the Mavericks cannot affect the team’s mindset.

“We can’t allow this outcome to impact our process tomorrow, because otherwise you stagnate, and that’s the last thing we want to do,” he said.

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Tony Bradley arrives in OKC; Austin Rivers still away from Thunder

The Thunder’s return from the George Hill trade are at different stages. Tony Bradley has arrived in Oklahoma City but Austin Rivers has not.

One of the two players who the Oklahoma City Thunder received on Thursday at the trade deadline has reported to the team, head coach Mark Daigneault said on Saturday prior to the game against the Boston Celtics.

Center Tony Bradley, 23, is joining the Thunder. He is in Oklahoma City going through COVID-19 protocol. He will not play on Saturday, but Daigneault said he will begin participating with the team once he has finished those steps.

Rivers has not joined the team.

General manager Sam Presti is “still working through that and figuring out next steps with his representation,” Daigneault said.

The coach said on Friday that Oklahoma City was working on the next steps with both players, neither of which had joined the team at that point.

Bradley, who will be a restricted free agent this offseason, has a chance to play for a role on the Thunder now that Al Horford has been shut down. He had good energy in Philadelphia, filled in well over the last couple weeks when Joel Embiid was injured, and seems generally loved by his former teammates.

He joins a large group of young bigs vying for time including Isaiah Roby, Moses Brown and Aleksej Pokusevski.

Rivers, who has two non-guaranteed years on his contract after this season, is 28. He does not fit with the Thunder’s timeline, and his joining the team would take time away from guards including Theo Maledon and Ty Jerome. It would be reasonable to expect that he doesn’t join the Thunder, similar to Trevor Ariza, though that has not been confirmed by the team. Either way, he has not joined Oklahoma City as of Saturday.

The Thunder received these players, along with two second-round picks, in a trade that sent George Hill to the Philadelphia 76ers at the trade deadline.

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Tony Bradley, Austin Rivers ‘working through next steps’ with agents, Thunder

The Thunder received Tony Bradley and Austin Rivers in the George Hill trade, but the front office is still “working through next steps” with their agents.

There was a little bit of uncertainty from Oklahoma City Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault regarding the return for George Hill in the trade with the Philadelphia 76ers and New York Knicks.

The Thunder received center Tony Bradley from the Sixers and Austin Rivers from the Knicks, along with two second-round draft picks. Daigneault was asked on Friday what the plan is for incorporating those two players.

“I know a little bit about them and have respect for them as players, but the trade just happened and (general manager) Sam (Presti) and their representation are working through next steps, so there’s not a lot of clarity yet on what that’s going to look like,” Daigneault said.

“To be honest with you, outside of knowing that we acquired them, I’m not really privy to those conversations yet. Sam will be updating me on that later today or tomorrow, so we’ll just kind of leave it at that for now with those two guys.”

As of Friday afternoon, they had not yet joined the Thunder in Oklahoma City.

At the risk of speculating, it would make more sense for Rivers to not play a minute for the Thunder than it would for him to suit up and take time from young prospects. Bradley is only 23 years old, but he’s on the final year of his contract before hitting restricted free agency. If the Thunder can find minutes for him around the rest of the young bigs, it would make sense to test him out. They have done well at getting the most out of energy guys this year, and Bradley can bring that. His fellow Sixers bigs sure like him.

Take Daigneault’s comments how you will. Updates can be expected after he and Presti have discussed the matter and after the front office has finished working through whatever steps they need to go through with the players’ agents.

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

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