OKC Thunder 124 – Phoenix Suns 103

Behind a Kevin Durant 32 point, 11 rebound night, the OKC Thunder eventually overwhelmed the Phoenix Suns by a 124-103 count to end their three game losing streak. OKC improves to 4-3 while Phoenix drops to 3-4.

OKC jumped out quickly to an early double digit lead, but OKC’s bench promptly allowed Phoenix back into the game. OKC’s starters got part of the lead back and led 60-54 at halftime.

The second half was pretty much OKC expanding the lead and taking care of business in a matter of fact win against a Phoenix team which isn’t nearly as fun to watch this season without  Dragic, Gerald Green and the departed Morris twin.  Eric Bledsoe was the lone bright spot for Phoenix with a line of 28 points and 11 assists.

But a win is a step forward, you take it and hope some things were learned by OKC tonight as far as self team discovery.

Westbrook was solid with 21 points, 6 rebounds and 11 assists. Both Enes Kanter and Dion Waiters had solid nights for the otherwise struggling OKC bench unit. Kanter was 9-10 from the field going for 21 points. Waiters scored 19 points on a six of nine night from the field. Interesting note–this marks the first time in the history of the Thunder two bench players have scored at least 19 points on the same night. The rest of the OKC bench was in a word…lacking.

Mitch McGary did play regular rotational minutes tonight coming off the bench, but looked rusty, awkward and a step out of sync. He struggled. Kyle Singler kept his minutes and like McGary…struggled. DJ Augustin was better than Singler and McGary, but I’m not sure what that says at this point. Nick Collison was a DNP, as was Anthony Morrow.

Expected this on the Collison front tonight, didn’t expect it on the Anthony Morrow front. Early in this season it appears Billy Donovan has relegated Morrow to basically a three point specialist role who might play on some nights, but on other nights won’t play because of his defensive issues. But still—Singler hasn’t shown much and I loved watching him play at Duke so it’s not like I’m a Kyle Singler hater or something of the like. We’ll see if he can get going and make some shots to make it appear the Reggie Jackson trade to Detroit isn’t a bust.

The North Edmond Little League soccer mothers on the Cox telecast awarded Dion Waiters as their player of the game. Not horrible, and in fact I thought of going with Dion and Enes Kanter as my co-players of the game. But in the end couldn’t do it because the Big Dog exerted his will in this game . Kevin Durant is my OKCThunderGround No. 1 Star of the Game with 32 points on a 12-19 shooting night. Throw in the 11 rebounds, 4 assists and three steals and unless you’re into participation ribbons how could it be anyone else tonight but Kevin Durant.

A win in the West is a win. You don’t piss on it, but in reality we didn’t learn much tonight except this Phoenix team is pretty boring to watch without Dragic getting under Westbrook’s skin, the Morris Twins playing happily together in their fantasy basketball play crib and Gerald Green jacking shots.

OKC on the road against the Wizards on Tuesday night.

Mike Jackson

 

Maurice Cheeks Career Highlight Video

Before OKC ever got an NBA team via Hurricane Katrina, the Philadelphia 76’ers were my favorite team. As a kid growing up, I pretended to be Billy Cunningham in my driveway even though right-handed. Loved Billy C and Bobby Jones. Marveled at Dr. J. But most of all, respected the way Mo Cheeks played the point guard position. Know what I mean?

 

Game 7: Phoenix Suns @ OKC Thunder Preview

On Monday evening, the 3-0 OKC Thunder played the 0-3 Houston Rockets inside the Toyota Center. On Saturday night, we went to bed with the 4-3 Rockets ahead of the 3-3 Thunder in the Western Conference standings. Such will be life in the Western Conference this season for fans unless your team has three guys on it named Steph, Klay and Dramond. But for the other fourteen teams it’s going to be an up and down meat grinder of a season.

Phoenix Suns in OKC this Sunday evening to play the OKC Thunder. Both teams generically 3-3 entering tonight. Both teams rested. Phoenix features a nice guard tandem of Eric Bledsoe and Brandon Knight. Both Kentucky guards in previous basketball lives.

Hint…this might be a game to integrate Anthony Morrow and Mitch McGary into some sort of minutes within the flow.

But beyond this maybe happening, OKC  needs to start working at getting better every game. Treating each game as an incremental opportunity to learn and get better as a team. Move the ball. Finish good looks. Play defense–as in all five guys.

Which brings me to Kendrick Perkins of all things on this beautiful Sunday morning in Deer Creek, Oklahoma. If Perk provided nothing else, he at least provided a consistent voice on the team that defense matters. Teams do not win championships in this league by being soft defensively. OKC is currently soft on the defensive end, but they don’t have to be. They have enough pieces to be better than this, but it’s kind of like all five guys on the floor need to be on board. Need to be trying.

Scott Brooks knew this, but wore his coaching voice out pleading for his team to play harder on the defensive end. Billy Donovan six games in probably has some empathy for Brooks after watching the film of the Orlando, Houston, Toronto and Chicago games. I would guess he looked at Monty Williams, Mo Cheeks and asked aloud, ” Can you believe this shit?”

Jordan and Pippen were tenacious defenders in their prime. Usually two of the best in the league on the defensive end of the floor. Same with Kobe Bryant when he was in his prime. Same with D Wade before his knees betrayed him. LeBron James plays defense, and maybe that’s one of the reasons he’s been in six straight NBA Finals. Golden State changed their team culture by bringing in Steve Kerr and Ron Adams to instill defense and were rewarded with 67 regular season wins and sixteen more post season wins, plus rings for those three guys named Steph, Klay and Dramond.

Until Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook embrace this and lead their team with a defense first team mantra—OKC’s Thunder is basically going nowhere.

Great players play both ends. End of lecture on an obscure, underground blog.

Suns at Thunder tonight.

Six Games In

Six games into the Billy Donovan Era in Oklahoma City with two off days before a Sunday evening home game against the Phoenix Suns…maybe a time for some thoughts.

Coming into this NBA basketball season most serious observers had four to six teams in the league as favorites to win the title. LeBron’s Cavs, the Spurs with the additions of LaMarcus Aldridge and David West, the defending champion Golden State Warriors, OKC’s Thunder, the LA Clippers and perhaps the Houston Rockets as an outside possibility.

Golden State, Cleveland and the LA Clippers appear to be what we thought,–the Spurs, Thunder and Rockets still groping with various issues though. San Antonio with the integrations of LaMarcus Aldridge and David West, plus the reality of Tony Parker’s wear and tear at the point guard position. Houston with some early season injuries. Oklahoma City with the coaching change from Scott Brooks to Billy Donovan, plus the eight month injury layoff of Kevin Durant.

To me at least, OKC is the most puzzling of the group, but it shouldn’t be shocking considering Durant’s layoff and Billy Donovan’s introduction to the NBA way of doing things. The four games in five nights didn’t help. You look at the Oklahoma City schedule and it may have been the Thunder’s toughest stretch of the entire 82 game marathon slate.

But several things from a team standpoint glare about Oklahoma City early on which can’t continue if OKC wants to remain on this list of serious contenders. Namely team defense, turnovers and establishing  coherent bench rotations, plus maybe a relook at what to do with starting Andre Roberson at the shooting guard position.

The team defense part is simple. As in it might help if Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant start leading at this end of the floor instead of taking possessions off here and there. I’ve never believed leadership is about rah-rah speeches, but rather your best players leading by example in their play. If Durant and Westbrook want to win a championship it will be because they lead defensively instead of just padding their offensive stats night to night.

Turnovers. OKC has always been near the top during the Durant-Westbrook Era. You can get away with this in the regular season against the bottom twenty-four teams just because of Durant and Westbrook’s talent, not so much when you’re playing against other elite talent. OKC has to clean this up, especially during the final six minutes of games where every possession means something.

Bench rotations. Why is one of the most effective three point shooters in the league from last season not getting minutes? Anthony Morrow–start playing him and get him sixteen minutes a game. Nick Collison-Mitch McGary–this is what I’d do… play Collison against the tougher teams. Play McGary against the bottom level fifteen teams in the league, but don’t just waste his obvious ability to energize offensively from the bench. Nurture Mitch McGary.

Andre Roberson and Kyle Singler. Both are alleged to be seriously good wing defenders. I haven’t seen it. Decent, but not special. You never discount perimeter defense with the mathematical importance of the three point shot. Never.  But even Shawn Marion got to where he could make some shots. Maybe try something different at the starting shooting guard position and if it doesn’t work, try something else. Maybe try Anthony Morrow for those sixteen minutes and use Roberson and Singler as situational players. If Westbrook would start trying defensively–this might actually work.’

I would think and hope Billy Donovan, Monty Williams and Mo Cheeks at least discussed some of this today. Be interesting to see if some tweaks are made on Sunday night against the Phoenix Suns.

 

MJ

 

Chicago Bulls 104 – OKC Thunder 98

The Chicago Bulls rode the shoulders of Derrick Rose down the stretch as he seemingly didn’t miss in the game’s final five minutes or so as the Bulls beat the OKC Thunder 104-98 on Thursday night to improve to 4-2 while OKC lost their third straight to drop to 3-3.

OKC did clean up their turnover issues on the night with 21 assists to nine turnovers. Turnovers didn’t get them beat in this one though. Not being able to stop Derrick Rose when every possession counted was more of the primary cause for losing this game. Much as it was last night with DeRosan and as it was on Monday night with James Harden. All three losses in a sense were strongly linked by not being able to get stops on the other team’s go to guard in the last minutes of the game.

Jimmy Butler was stellar as well for the Bulls with 26 points, 4 rebounds, two assists, a steal and two blocks for good measure. But in a close vote, namely me, I’m going with Derrick Rose as the OKCThunderGround No. 1 Star of the Game because unlike the homers on the Fox telecasts I actually pick the rightful No. 1 star of the game.

Tough week for OKC and Billy Donovan. Billy Donovan meet Scott Brooks’ previous life. Not as easy as you thought, eh?

So after six games we really know pretty much nothing except Durant and Westbrook are exceptionally talented players and Serge Ibaka is a nice third piece. Other than that what do we really know?

We know in this loss the Big Three scored 70 points while the rest of the team combined for 28 points. There won’t be any parade this summer in Bricktown with this dynamic in place. Still waiting for Morrow and McGary to be impact guys off the OKC bench. I was kind of shocked by how little both were used this week.

Kanter and Waiters are about what I thought they’d be. Augustin was good in the first three games, but not so good these last three. I love Nick Collison, but I never envisioned him as a regular rotational guy this season. Same with Kyle Singler. I’d like to see McGary get minutes against the Suns, same for Anthony Morrow.

Four games in five nights and the Thunder go 1-3. Think about this though–if Westbrook doesn’t hit the prayer against Orlando–the Thunder would be 2-4 with the Sports Animal and Daily Thunder imploding simultaneously with smoke billowing from the windows atop the Devon Tower.

Billy Donovan honeymoon period is over. No more gushing. The expectations for this club were clear.  Should be two busy off game days for Billy Donovan and his staff.

Phoenix Suns on Sunday at the Chesapeake Energy Arena.

Mike Jackson

 

 

 

Game 6: OKC Thunder @ Chicago Bulls Preview

In the near past a Billy Donovan-Fred Hoiberg matchup would have been an intriguing Sweet 16 or Elite 8 matchup between the Florida Gators and Iowa State Cyclones. Tonight in Chicago its the OKC Thunder versus the Chicago Bulls pitting two teams in search of their identities in Week 2 of an NBA regular season TNT broadcast.

Both teams coming off losses. Both teams at 3-2 midway in Week 2. Both teams with college head coaches making the transition to the NBA game, and both teams needing a win to stabilize a bit and get back on track.

Chicago comes off an embarrassing 130-105 loss to the Charlotte Bobcats which left little doubt the Tom Thibadeau era ended last season in Chicago. The Bulls have a nice array of players led by Jimmy Butler, Pau Gasol, Joakim Noah, Derrick Rose, Nikola Mirotic, Taj Gibson, Tony Snell, Aaron Brooks, E’tan Moore,  and Doug McDermott. The experiment with Noah coming off the bench is a work in progress.

Chicago was idle last night while OKC was playing its third game in four nights…an eventual 103-98 home loss at the hands of the Toronto Raptors.

Like the Bulls, OKC is still in the process of finding its new identity in the Billy Donovan era while Kevin Durant works his way back after an eight month layoff from injury. Fourth game in five nights for OKC can’t be dismissed. Both teams and both coaches need a win and some momentum heading forward.

Interesting matchup pitting two good teams in an early season game as they both transition to new head coaches and new systems.

 

 

 

 

Toronto Raptors 103 – OKC Thunder 98

DeMar DeRozan scored ten of his game high twenty-eight points in the fourth period to lead the Toronto Raptors to a 103-98 win over the OKC Thunder.But it wasn’t just DeRozan making clutch plays. It was a team effort of different players making just the right plays when it mattered most. Toronto improves to an Eastern Conference best 5-0 with the road win.

Kyle Lowery had 17 points. Jonas Valanciunas  a 17-12 double double and two clutch free throws down the stretch. Demare Carroll had 13 points and made two clutch free throws at the 16.8 second mark to give the Raptors a four point lead. Cory Joseph, Bismarck Biyombo and Patrick Patterson each made significant contributions. Especially Joseph—who melded beautifully in Dwane Casey’s small ball sets which gave the Thunder fits.

As was the case in Houston on Monday night, OKC fizzled and went away quietly into the night in the game’s final four minutes. OKC shot 5-20 in the fourth period and scored but 17 points in the fourth period. But even more alarming, OKC scored only seven points in the game’s final six minutes. Most notable… Durant missing a nice mid range baseline jumper. Westbrook missing a layup. Durant missing a big free throw. Serge Ibaka losing a critical offensive zone jump ball. And Billy Donovan finding himself with nary a twenty second timeout when his team could have used one in the last twenty seconds. It was contagious- a team epidemic of no one making clutch plays.

Long story short, at the midway point of the fourth period–OKC led 91-83, only to lose the last six minutes 20-7.

OKC’s bench was hideous save the 15 points from Enes Kanter. Kyle Singler, Anthony Morrow and DJ Augustin combined to score zero points on the night. On a positive vein–I thought Steven Adams did some nice things early in the game.

OKC drops to 3-2 with its second consecutive loss in which Durant and Westbrook struggled completing plays coming down the stretch in a close game against a playoff caliber team.

DeMar DeRozan wins the OKCThunderGround No. 1 Star of the Night. OKC had no answer for him. Period.

You can analyze this till the proverbial cow jumps over the moon, but when your two stars don’t make plays in the last four minutes it’s tough to win against good teams, and Toronto is a good team which understands its skill sets and roles to a man. OKC presently does not.

Tomorrow night second night of a back to back against the Bulls in Chicago.

MJ

 

 

 

 

Game 5: Toronto Raptors @ OKC Thunder Preview

Highly compelling matchup tonight at the Chesapeake Energy Arena as the 4-0 Toronto Raptors visit the 3-1 OKC Thunder. Toronto comes off a win in Dallas last night on the second night of a back to back. OKC comes back home to lick their wounds from not only a disappointing loss, but one in which they scored only forty points in the second half and brought back to light the warts which have kept this team from realizing its championship potential… namely turnovers and a lack of a commitment on the defensive end.

Toronto has its own demons though in being a first round exit two years running in the Eastern Conference Playoffs. Through four games Toronto’s team differential is +11.8 and there is optimism Demare Carroll might be the missing piece as far as adding defensive toughness and a more blue collar look to the team as a whole. Kyle Lowery leads the team from the point guard position and is undeniably the glue of this basketball team. Starting five will be Lowery, Carroll, DeMar Rozan, Jonas Valanciunas and Luis Scola. Potentially-Toronto should be one of the clubs challenging for a top three seed in the Eastern Conference.

For OKC, it’s the first night of a back to back which concludes tomorrow night in Chicago. OKC comes off its worst half of basketball this season, one in which they lost the second half by 19 points in route to a 110-105 loss to the struggling Rockets It wasn’t pretty. Twenty-five turnovers, a lack of the ability to stay on their man, and in the end,  not finishing and answering James Harden.

For OKC to have any illusions of hanging near Golden State in the regular season and beyond, these two team focal points must be cleaned up by first year coach Billy Donovan. Basketball is not as highly complex as some would suggest it is. If you defend, take care of the ball, and have a finisher you win a lot of games.

Bigger game for OKC than Toronto. For OKC to stake the claim they could be a legitimate contender to Golden State–the subtraction of bad turnovers and soft defense have to be instilled in the team as a whole from top to bottom. There–I’ve said my piece…somewhat.

 

 

 

Random Thoughts

Tough game to lose, especially considering the current condition of the Houston Rockets with the instability of their roster due to injuries and the integration of Ty Lawson, but in the end James Harden did what we feared. He carried his team to a big early season win considering the Rockets’ 0-3 start.

From the point of Westbrook sitting with his fourth foul the game changed course in a dramatic fashion. The twenty-five turnovers didn’t help and the twenty-five turnovers only give credence to the fact OKC is still a work in progress as far as ball movement and distribution when they’re playing top half level competition.

As far as Donovan sitting Westbrook the remainder of the third period—I don’t have a problem with it. It was the percentage play. Durant, Augustin and Waiters should have picked up the slack, they didn’t.

The twelve turnovers by Durant and Westbrook combined is something we’ve seen before and is something we’ll see again would be my guess. It’s a delicate balance for Billy Donovan to get them to play more controlled, yet not dim their creative brilliance. The hope would be they just learn to calibrate when the time is right to attempt a high risk play and when it’s not.

Not much time to dwell on a loss in the NBA. Tomorrow night Toronto Raptors in town, then a back to back in Chicago on Thursday evening. Two of the better teams in the Eastern Conference.

MJ