Durant Returns, Mike Conley Sits, Thunder Roll at Home

OKC Thunder 112 —  Memphis Grizzlies 94

Despite being ruled out for OKC’s game against Memphis, Kevin Durant returned to the Thunder lineup against the Grizzlies. Durant struggled in the first half going 2-10, but got going in the second half to finish with a 26 point, 17 rebound night in leading the Thunder to an easy home rout of Memphis and a season series 2-1 win over the disjointed Grizzlies.

Even with Durant struggling early, it didn’t matter because Mike Conley was out with an Achilles injury and Memphis was horrible in both halves. It was an ugly, ugly game if you’re a Memphis fan. Add to the fact, Conley’s usual guard partner Courtney Lee left the game in the third period with a hip injury after going scoreless in twenty-one minutes to that point. So what we’re saying here is that a team which struggles nightly to score points got nothing from two of their better offensive players.

OKC led 56-36 and the game was essentially over at halftime even before Durant rebounded with his strong second half performance. As I wrote, Memphis was bad without Mike Conley, but even worse when you throw in Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph combined for twenty points on a combined 7-24 night from the field.

The only conceivable bright spot for Memphis was Super Thunder Slayer Mario Chalmer leading the Grizz in scoring with 23 points. Sounds like a great name for a new video game.

OKC’s bench was excellent in this game, especially Dion Waiters and Anthony Morrow. This may have been Waiters’ best game of the season as far as all around play. Billy Donovan has been pleading for this type of performance from Waiters during his recent shooting slump and tonight the coach got what he wanted from the player.

In thirty one minutes, Waiters scored 15 points on a 6-9 shooting night, and added three assists for good measure. Dion Waiters is my No. 1 Star of the Game. This is what the Thunder need from Waiters consistently. This type of contribution.

Anthony Morrow was solid and would be my No. 2 Star. In eighteen minutes of play, Morrow scored 14 points on 3-4 shooting.

Cam Payne added 8 points and 3 assists. Enes Kanter chipped in 9 points in twenty-two minutes. OKC needs more from Enes Kanter though– considering his new contract pays him roughly $213,000 per game. If you’re going to pay a guy $17.5 million, then you need to get a bang for your buck.

Overall, OKC’s bench contributed with a fifty point night. Give the bench an A- for almost excellent minus Kanter’s so-so night.

Great no look, back door pass from Steven Adams to Andre Roberson. Ironic, the Play of the Game was provided by the two most offensively challenged players on the floor from either team.

Not much else to take from this game other than Russell Westbrook looked calmer with his running mate Kevin Durant back on the floor. The whole team looked better, calmer, more poised, and in sync—but that’s the way any basketball team should look when their best player is back on the floor with them instead of sitting with a sore toe.

Memphis looks lost and better hope Mike Conley isn’t sitting out too many more games.

OKC’s Thunder improves to 25-11, but the storyline has changed a bit with the LA Clippers winning again and now on a seven game winning streak. Clippers remain only two games behind OKC in the battle for the No. 3 seed.

OKC’s needs to be winning games if they prefer playing San Antonio over Golden State in the second round. Something to look at in standings for Thunder fans because the Warriors and Spurs have separated and are in pursuit of other regular season milestones which don’t include the Thunder.

Mike Jackson

Game 36: Memphis Grizzles @ OKC Thunder Preview

Kevin Durant is out again tonight with a sprained toe. This will be Durant’s eighth game missed this season due to injury. Combining last season and this season to date–Durant has missed 62 out of a possible 117 games due to injury. Tonight will be game missed number sixty-three.

OKC better figure out in a hurry how to play a higher level of basketball without Kevin Durant in the lineup. In games this season to date without Durant the Thunder are 3-4 with the losses coming at the hands of the Celtics, Grizzlies, Knicks, and Kings.

Add to the fact the LA Clippers have now won six in a row and are suddenly only two behind OKC in the loss column for the No. 3 seed in the West. All the sudden OKC’s leisurely stroll thru January has a different feel about it if the Thunder lose tonight at home against the Grizzlies and Durant misses more than just tonight.

Memphis comes in at 19-17 and 8-11 on the road coming in tonight as a five and half point road underdog. The two teams have split so far this season with the Grizz beating the Thunder without Durant by a 122-114 count. With Durant–OKC blew out Memphis on the road in one of their more impressive performances of the season.

Memphis to date has been a disappointment to the point they’ve experimented with Zach Randolph coming off the bench while Matt Barnes is in the starting lineup. Grizzlies are 5-5 in their last ten games, yet in the now suddenly soft Western Conference—are the No. 6 seed.

OKC was brutal against the Kings on Sunday evening in absorbing a 116-104 home loss. The Thunder allowed a 68 point first half  and the defense was an issue throughout the game.

Russell Westbrook struggled with a very tough shooting night and tried to force too much without Durant on the court with him. Dion Waiters and Enes Kanter were basically no shows going a combined 2-12 from the field. Without Durant, OKC has a very slim margin to win with that lack of  production from what should be OKC’s two biggest bench scorers.

Bright spots in the loss were Anthony Morrow, Serge Ibaka, Steven Adams, Cameron Payne, and Kyle Singler. Same will be needed tonight from these guys, but with Kanter and Waiters making positive contributions.

 

 

Kings Topple Durantless Thunder

Sacramento Kings 116 — OKC Thunder 104

With Kevin Durant’s big right toe healthy you’d have thought this would be another Thunder win over the usually self-destructive Sacramento Kings. But instead, with Durant and his big right toe sidelined on this Big Monday Night, it became a night of basketball history of sorts when the Kings beat the Thunder 116-104 inside Chesapeake Energy Arena.

Before tonight, the Sacramento Kings were 0-14 in games played in Oklahoma City. Make that 1-14 now as these Kings won their first ever against this franchise since the move from Seattle.

Speaking of Seattle, former Sonics coach George Karl notched the 1,156th win in his NBA coaching career which now places him in sole possession of fifth place on the all-time list. Good for him.

The third piece of history occurred in Lawrence, Kansas where Kansas and OU played a No. 1 versus No. 2 epic triple overtime game which in all candor put the Thunder game on the back shelf as far as basketball passion and drama.

Let’s be clear, without Kevin Durant—the OKC Thunder are not a top twelve team in the NBA and are perhaps at best a periphery playoff team which would be similar to Utah only with Russell Westbrook. Without Durant this team doesn’t know what to do–and that includes Russell Westbrook at times as well.

They look around. They don’t play defense. They hesitate taking open shots. But most of  all —they just look lost.

OKC started out fine in this game with Anthony Morrow subbing for Durant. In fact–OKC led 31-14 at one point before the bench unit came onto the floor. So much for the feel good glow about OKC’s bench play of late. OKC’s bench was in a word horrific on this night being outscored 51-25 in the game.

In thirty-five minutes of combined play — this OKC bench duo went 2-12 from the field and scored eight points total. If this were Jeopardy on television—the correct question would be …Who are Dion Waiters and Enes Kanter?

There’s no way you can sugarcoat it–both Kanter and Waiters were wretched topped with a touch of abysmal which is exactly what OKC couldn’t live with on a night without Kevin Durant and all ten of his toes.

Sadly—both Serge Ibaka and Anthony Morrow had season high scoring nights with 25 and 20 respectively….which in essence went wasted.

Steven Adams was pretty good scoring 15 points and grabbing 10 rebounds. I liked the way Adams played actually and don’t have anything snarky to say about his hair.

Cam Payne went scoreless the first half, but came back in the fourth period to score all 11 points of his points as Donovan tried a lineup using both Westbrook and Payne, but to no avail as Russell Westbrook kept shooting when he shouldn’t have on a 6-23 shooting night. It was one of those nights where you just wished Westbrook would stop shooting threes altogether as he went 2-9 from beyond the arc.

Five different Kings scored in double figures…. Demarcus Cousins, Rajon Rondo, Rudy Gay, Marco Bellinelli, and Darren Collison.

DeMarcus Cousins is my No. 1 Star with 33 points and 19 rebounds.

With the win–the Kings improve to 14-20, and notch their fifth win of the season against a Western Conference team.

OKC’s win streak ends at four and the Thunder drop to 24-11. Good thing for OKC The UnderGround Power Poll came out yesterday.

In closing, on a night when it appeared OKC would coast and continue heading in the right direction under Billy Donovan–this Thunder team collectively took two steps backward and saw what they are without Kevin Durant.

Memphis Grizzlies in Oklahoma City on Wednesday. Vegas spread on hold pending a health update on a big right toe.

Mike Jackson

Game 35: Sacramento Kings @ OKC Thunder

Sacramento Kings in town tonight to play OKC at Chesapeake Energy Arena. Kings come in as the current No. 10 seed in the West—which means nothing right now other than they’re one of a generic group of sub .500 teams in the West that aren’t very good.

Kings last game was a win over Phoenix which gave Coach George Karl his 1,155th win and tied him with Phil Jackson at the No. 5 spot on the all-time winningest NBA coaching list. Since Jackson hasn’t coached since 2010-11, Karl’s next win puts him above Jackson on the list. Karl’s other NBA head coaching stops include Cleveland, Golden State, Seattle, and Denver. Karl has never won an NBA championship, but his ’96 Seattle Sonic team made it to the NBA Finals before losing to the Chicago Bulls in six games.

So far in the Karl era in Sacramento—the Kings look pretty much the same as a sub .500 team with some nice athletes led by Demarcus Cousins, Rudy Gay, and Rajon Rondo, but still a team who can’t really pull it together. Kings are 4-11 on the road and 4-14 against Western Conference teams. In the only meeting so far this season between the teams, OKC played awful yet stole a game at the end with Kevin Durant making a couple of clutch plays in what was probably Durant’s worse game of the season.

OKC’s Thunder comes in on a roll with a four game winning streak and an overall record of 24-10. Thunder are 16-4 at home and have lost only twice this season to Western Conference teams with the losses being on the road to Houston and Memphis, and both by single digits. OKC is a Vegas 11 point home favorite tonight.

The January schedule for Oklahoma City is very favorable for a monster month of wins. Tonight isn’t any exception. Since the insertion of Cam Payne as the backup point guard–OKC’s bench has come back alive and been a plus instead of a negative. Payne has brought much better ball movement to the unit of which Anthony Morrow and Enes Kanter have benefitted from the most. Plus, with Payne in the game–there’s no need for the ball to stick in Dion Waiter’s hands. There’s no question as to who should be unit leader. Even Kyle Singler has suddenly found some life of late—to date it’s been good with  Cameron Payne on the floor.

This should be a stretch of the season where OKC wins most of their games and becomes even more comfortable with Billy Donovan and vice versa.

OKCThunderGround Power Poll

Too many college bowl games yesterday to release the Power Poll–and the TCU game put me over the edge. A day late, but here’s this week’s OKCThunderGround Power Poll. Eat your heart out, Marc Stein. This is the blog where the TSN metric model (Toughness, Snarl, Nasty) was invented. You don’t stand a chance, buddy.

1   Golden State Warriors

2    San Antonio Spurs

3    Cleveland Cavaliers

4    Oklahoma City Thunder

5     Chicago Bulls

6     Miami Heat

7     LA Clippers

8     Toronto Raptors

9      Indiana Pacers

10    Boston Celtics

11     Memphis Grizzlies

12     Houston Rockets

 

Thunder Trend in Charlotte — Handle Hornets

OKC Thunder 109 — Charlotte Hornets 90

There are no excuses in the NBA. You play the schedule and suit up whoever’s healthy or available. Charlotte was minus Al Jefferson and Nicolas Batum on the second night of a back to back but nobody cares in the heartless grind of an 82 game marathon regular season.

Never give a sucker an even break and kick him when he’s down…which is exactly what OKC’s trending Thunder did Saturday night in Charlotte while posting an easy 109-90 road win.

OKC took care of business coming out of the gate with an opening 13-2 flurry, led 66-54 at the half, then answered a couple of obligatory second half NBA runs by the Hornets until Cam Payne and OKC’s second unit ultimately shut the door in the opening six minutes of the fourth period by expanding OKC’s lead to fifteen points.

Six Thunder players scored in double figures being led by Kevin Durant’s 29 points and Russell Westbrook’s relatively quiet 16 points. Fellow starter Serge Ibaka chipped in a 10-10 free throw night and four of OKC’s fifteen blocked shots.

Durant could be  my No. 1 Star of the Game, but part of me wants to give it to rookie Cameron Payne and the OKC bench which scored 44 points on the night and looked in sync from the moment Payne set foot on the floor. So–I’m going to give my No. 1 Star to OKC’s bench.

Payne played 20 minutes garnering 7 points and 3 assists. But it’s his smooth, poised ball distribution and shot making which has turned this unit back around of late. Payne was excellent.

Anthony Morrow continued his hot play of late scoring 12 points and stretching the floor with his three point shooting.

Enes Kanter was good scoring in double figures as was Dion Waiters who scored 10 points and had a season high 5 assists. It was a good night for the Thunder bench in general.

OKC held Charlotte to 34.5% shooting from the field. Only three Hornets scored in double figures with Kemba Walker leading the way with 32 points. Jeremy Lamb played 25 minutes going 3-12 in the game and was not a factor.

The Thunder improve to 24-10 on the season and appear to be melding the starters and bench just a little better each game as Billy Donovan learns more about his team.

Sacramento Kings in Oklahoma City on Monday night.

Mike Jackson