Home > Recap > Thunder keeps rolling with 109-107 win over Minnesota

Thunder keeps rolling with 109-107 win over Minnesota

(Photo by David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images)

BOX SCORE

You expected Oklahoma City to lack some energy tonight. You expected the Thunder to come out flat. But after a 13-2 start to the game, it looked like the were no heavy legs, at least on the Thunder side. But sometimes the fatigue doesn’t hit you right away. It sneaks up on you later on and when you let your guard down, the other guy strikes. And that’s what happened to the Thunder in Minnesota tonight.

OKC kept the Timberwolves at an arms length for most of the game, but a breakdown to end the third quarter allowed Minnesota to come all the way back and actually take a lead in the fourth quarter. It was clearly a fatigue issue, both mentally and physically. But like good teams have the ability to do, the Thunder clamped down and turned it on, going on a 9-0 run to seize control again. It was one of those weird games where OKC had control of the game, while losing complete control of the game. I know that doesn’t make sense, but that’s really how it was.

The one guy that clearly lost focus and energy was Kevin Durant. He got his 25 points for the 28th straight game (32 points, 8-16 shooting, six rebounds), but in the second half he had 14 on only three made baskets and didn’t hit his first bucket in the half until there was 7:20 left in the fourth. KD turned the ball over, quit moving without the ball and wasn’t getting the same lift on his jumper. But he hit the shot of the night, an and-one 3 that ended up giving him his 25th and 26th points. And KD also was big at the free throw line, hitting 14-15 at the stripe, including big ones down the stretch that iced it away. It’s not like Durant played bad by any means, it’s just that I think he obviously tired some in crunch time. But like the great ones do, he stepped up in ways he had to and made the big plays to help his team win.

Oh yeah, and Russell Westbrook. I think it’s pretty clear that Westbrook is walking his way into the elite point guard group. Yes, you read that right. FINALLY he gets his triple-double, after flirting for them for around a month now (22 points, 14 assists, 10 rebounds). In the first half, he was as good as he’s ever been. He had nine assists at the half, was dishing and creating, was hitting jumpers and was making great decisions. I thought he got a little ball-hoggy in the second half, but when you’re carrying the load offensively, I think you kind of earn that right a bit. As I’ve said about Russ lately, he’s just awesome in transition. He’s at his absolute best in the open floor. He’s decisive, he’s instinctive and he seems to always make the right play. Watching the guy now, it’s kind of funny to think back we ever actually had conversations about whether or not he was the point guard of the future.

Notes:

  • How big was Jeff Green tonight? When Minnesota took its first lead of the night at 88-86, Green calmly knocked down a 3 to put OKC up for good. How many times has he hit a shot similar to that this year? Oh, and he had 17 points and 14 rebounds, including 10 in the first half. My favorite play of the night was when Uncle Jeff wrestled away a rebound from Ryan Gomes late in the fourth quarter. THAT’S the kind of aggressiveness we’ve been looking for on the glass from Green. More of that and he’ll be a double-double threat every night.
  • Maybe the most underwriting storyline of the night was that Kevin Ollie came off the bench at the end of the third quarter in front of Eric Maynor. Maynor has been struggling mightily lately, playing with less confidence. I think it was a smart move by Scott Brooks to kick Maynor in the butt a little, but to also make sure OKC didn’t let this game get away. That’s the great security in having a professional like Kevin Ollie. Always ready to play at the drop of a hat.
  • How annoying was the wolf howl thing they kept playing over and over and over and over? If you said “very annoying,” you’d be right.
  • A good example of how OKC wore down: In the first half, Minnesota shot just 39 percent. In the second, Minnesota shot almost 52 percent.
  • James Harden is turning into quite the sharpshooter. He hit back-to-back 3s in an extremely cold-blooded way. He only played 21 minutes though, as Scott Brooks went with the defensive-minded Thabo to cover Corey Brewer. Brewer was one of Minny’s only chances to get back in the game, so it was a wise decision.
  • This was an extremely poorly officiated game. THREE times, Ken Mauer was influenced by the Timberwolves to overturn a call. I’ve never seen that happen that many times.
  • Nenad Krstic played a pretty decent ball game. He 10 points in 18 minutes and played some pretty good interior defense, especially in the first half.
  • It really felt like Al Jefferson was playing really well and scoring at will, but he only had 10 points and six rebounds. He’s just not the same player after the knee injury. Kevin Love on the other hand was very impressive – 19 points and 14 rebounds for Westbrook’s old teammate.
  • Is it just me or does the Thunder’s road jerseys look a shade lighter blue when in Minnesota?
  • In the above picture, it looks like Westbrook went on to cram in a monster dunk. However, he opted to try and lay it in at the last second after realizing he was going to come up short. It wasn’t very pretty.
  • I guess Oklahoma City helps players beat off the rust pretty well. Last night it was Tracy McGrady, tonight it was Darko Milicic. In 19 minutes, Darko had eight points and eight rebounds.
  • As bad as OKC was at the line last night, that’s where the Thunder won this one. OKC hit 22 of 23 with Durant missing the only one. Without that, the Thunder gives this one away.
  • Isn’t it kind of unbelievable that the Thunder is 12 games over, winners of nine straight and has a legit chance to finish in the top five of the Western Conference? Isn’t that pretty unreal? I don’t feel like we’re totally grasping this.

Just another notch on the belt for the Thunder, making this nine straight. They definitely lost some focus in this one, but I feel like it’s forgivable. Like I said, like an elite team, they stepped up and got the stops when they had to, executed when they needed points and ultimately won the second of a road back-to-back. That’s big time. Really big time.

Next up: At home Tuesday night against Phoenix.

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Good story, Royce. I like how you used the picture of Westbrook soaring in for a thunderous dunk...only to find out he had lead in his shoes and sank immediately, only to come up short of throwing it down! ;) Nonetheless, good work!

are you talking about Jermaine O'Neal?

He's past thirty and he's not a "max effort" guy - he's a randy Moss type ("I play when I want to play") . . .

pass . . .

Yeah i think the big thing if we acquire him is that we won't have to sign a huge contract with him and he won't be expensive. By the time his contract is up hopefully we will have found someone better or our bigs will developed enough to be starting.

@The DON

Done for? He's only 31, he's missed only 5 games this year. He's playing just under 30 minutes per game and would instantly become our best offensive and defensive big man. His scoring efficiency is the highest it's been in his career, he's shooting a high percentage from everywhere. He's a good defensive rebounder still, and he can even pass the ball.

Not an ideal acquisition, but I'd say he does a little bit of everything that this team needs. He'll come cheap and likely a one or two year contract given the injuries and would provide great depth up front..

O'neal is done for. He is not what we need and thankfully, not someone presti would ever target.

OMG, I just watched the game highlights on espn.com and the announcer said "kevid durant scored 32 for OKLAHOMA STATE".....pathetic

http://espn.go.com/video/clip?id=4934745&categoryid=2459789

Remember how everytime we play the Heat, one of our guys gets into it with O'Neal? Yeah...

I'd love O'Neal, specially if he costs only the MLE.

The guy can still play, what he lacks is motivation... of course, he's not the athletic freak he once was, but the Thunder is exactly the kind of team where a good veteran like him could rejuvenate.

we have plenty of athletic guys already (and Serge on the bench), so having O'Neal defending the paint and scoring eventually would be a great fit, even if he can't move like he did 4, 5 years ago.

I think O'neal will be a good addition. Theres no way in the free agent class that he will get much dough. Especially with his past injuries. If I am thinking correctly I am pretty sure these last 2 years he has been fairly healthy. With the big men we have we can make sure to watch his minutes to make sure he does not get worn down.

@Cpt. C-Note
Now, if only Amar'e could slip on one of those banana peels I've left laying all around the opposing team's locker room...

I don't know if there's a stat or anything that tracks this, but this season we have GOT to have set some sort of an NBA record of playing against teams with one of their stars out. It seems like every other game we play our opponent has a missing star due to injury. Hey I'll take the wins don't get me wrong

great that he isn't playing for the thunder terrible for my fantasy team...

No Steve nash against OKC on Tues!!!
"The Suns are planning to hold Nash (abdomen, back) out of Tuesday's game against Oklahoma City, the Arizona Republic reports.
Spin:
Nash was incredible playing through pain on Sunday, but the Suns are going to let him rest for at least one game in an effort to prevent his ailments from getting any worse."

That's gotta help, right?

Nate :Has Traber declared Westbrook a PG yet? He’ll eventually catch on.

Yeah. He said he was wrong on the Westbrook subject about a month ago.

Kev :add: just saw where Nash is out Tuesday – Dragic is a decent shooter, but he doesn’t push the ball nearly as well as Nash – we shouldn’t have to worry about defensive transition on Tuesday . . .

Isn't Tony Parker hurt as well? I heard something about his hamstring.

add: just saw where Nash is out Tuesday - Dragic is a decent shooter, but he doesn't push the ball nearly as well as Nash - we shouldn't have to worry about defensive transition on Tuesday . . .

Defensive Breakdown

The score came up +23, which is about average. It was kind of a meh showing defensively. The Thunder did well on Al Jefferson, who had more of an impact (especially against Ibaka) the last time we faced them. The issue was in transition, where we had problems (at times) getting back. The Timberwolves run a lot more now (3rd in the NBA in pace). They had some quick baskets, and we weren’t ready for it. This allowed them to get back in a game that should have been over with in the second quarter.

The first Timberwolves basket of the game is a good illustration. Minnesota rebounds a Thunder miss. Kevin Durant (off screen) is our “goalie” (man furthest away from the action) so he should help cover up our defensive basket until any transition attempt is shut down. The starting center for the Timberwolves is Ryan Hollins. He’s really a forward – he’s skinny (for a center) but he can run the court, and he’s much quicker than Nenad Krstic. After Minnesota gets the ball, Hollins takes off. Durant does a good job of retreating, but you can read his body language – he doesn’t really want to guard Hollins, he’s conflicted – he wants to find his man (Ryan Gomes). This conflict allows Hollins to get easy inside position. Flynn bounces a pass into Hollins for an easy dunk. Minnesota’s first possession lasts all of four seconds.

Fast forward to the third. Wolves guard Ramon Sessions has the ball after an OKC miss. Durant eyes Ramon all the way down the court. Two problems: one, Sessions is not KD’s man – Thabo is guarding Ramon and is right in front of him. Two: KD’s man (Corey Brewer), his running free down the left side of the court. Hhowever, Durant is locked in on Ramon, he doesn’t even turn to see what was on the other side of the court. Sessions drags Durant in the lane and kicks to Brewer, who spots up and drains the three. Kevin tried to closeout but it was too late. This possession took five seconds.

All in all, I’m basically nitpicking. The Thunder (for the most part) does a great job in the halfcourt defensive sets. They (like most NBA teams) aren’t used to playing running teams. Yes, they have played the Warriors (who lead in pace) twice recently, but the Warriors aren’t really that fast – they just take a lot of quick (and dumb) shots in the halfcourt. The Thunder need to shore up their transition defense since Phoenix is coming to town. OKC was victorious at Phoenix last time out, but that was a high scoring game, and our defense was lacking in that game as well.

Thabo Sefolosha (+7)

Jeff Green (+6)

Russell Westbrook (+4)

Kevin Durant (+3)

Serge Ibaka (+3)

James Harden (+2)

Nenad Krstic (+1)

Kevin Ollie (zero)

Nick Collison (-1)

Eric Maynor (-2)

Westbrook is avg 47% fg, 9 As, only 2.3 TO, 7,4 Reb, 19.1 ppg. Does anyone still wish we had drafted Rubio? Small sample size against uptempo poor defensive teams, but still, he is really improving, next year I think he could easily avg 10 As, 2.8-3.0 TO, 7 Reb, 20 ppg. He is scoring more than Nash, Deron, and Rondo, getting more rebounds, and has a similar A/TO, how could anyone not be ecstatic with that. And he is still young, if he shoots over 45% for the year, continues to cut down on his bad shots, then he will be in the upper tier of point guards for sure. I like the idea of adding O'Neal, as long as he accepts less than 30 minutes a night.

How many games do you think this team would have won if they didn't have Westbrook? 25? Less? I can't imagine how much the team would suffer if Maynor/Ollie was their PG rotation.

Quote from Darko after the game.

''I was trying to focus on breathing,'' Milicic said. ''I was just focusing on breathing so I didn't die.''

I can't believe Utah just won this game. Unbelievable. They were down 64-39 a ways into the 3rd quarter.

i caught the Minny radio feed on XM on my way home...some thoughts:

1. Minnesota has a really good announcer. He was talking eFG% and everything.
2. They're trying really hard to talk themselves into the Darko era. I feel for them. He looked good tonight, but they ran an clip from an interview where he noted that he was surprised by the trade and unsure what to do, since he was planning on heading back to Serbia. So much for self-confidence.
3. They were promoting a variety of ticket packages for the Wolves, most of which involved lower level seats for $20-$40. My favorite was the "Chalk Talk" package, which included a lower deck seat and a pre-game talk...from Wolves GM David Kahn! Yeah, the guy who drafted three point guards in one draft can teach you about the NBA! Insert your own punchline here. But when you hear about NBA teams losing $400 million, I'd bet the T-Wolves are contributing more than their fair share.
4. Westbrook has put up a 31-10-9 and a 22-14-10 the last two nights. I can't really comment on that without breaking Royce's rules about decorum on the site. My word.

If you replaced Krstic with O'neal on this team you get a few more wins probably. He's better defensively and offensively and is fine with less than 30 minutes a game.

Yeah, O'Neal has missed a lot of games since '04... He'd be a great addition to the current frontcourt rotation, but one signing like this would be a faux-step toward the final product. I hope Presti either orchestrates one great deal or several JO-sized acquisitions this summer. Krstic, Collison, O'Neal, Ibaka--that's a pretty diverse rotation down low. But I don't see it beating the Lakers anytime soon.

our big 3 were all incredible tonight..

KD making 32 look so ho-hum and ordinary..
Russ finally getting the triple-double! woohoo! he's been so close all season!
Green with the double-double and some more clutch play..

i.love.this.team.

@Keith
Yeah, but wouldn't third seed be neat? :)

O'neal won't get more than the MLE.. less than $7 million a season, and definitley won't get a long term contract due to his injury history. I don't think he's someone we should definitely look at because of the attitude but he does have playoff experience and has been productive..

Holy crap Carlos Boozer just made a crazy put back to send it to OT. I dunno if Utah is incredible or Portland sucks, that was an unbelievable comeback.

@justin
Yeah, but how cheap? That's the question. I don't follow the market enough to know. O'Neal has been in the league, what, around fifteen years? Surely he wouldn't be worth the $23m Miami is paying for his services this year, but how much do you think we could sign him for, assuming he wanted to come?

Can't believe this Utah-Portland game. Utah was losing by 24 points and now can send it to OT or win it..

@Royce Young
Thabeet's PER for the season isn't that bad, though, currently 14.27. Not bad for a rookie.

@Deat
Nvm, found this:
http://www.rotowire.com/Steve-Nash-googid125016-spnba.htm

This was semi interesting:
http://seatgeek.com/ticketpulse

He's been durable this year, his rebounding is fairly good. He can't play 30+ minutes a game but I suspect he'll come cheap.

@justin
I was just looking at O'Neal this afternoon. His low-post scoring and shot-blocking would be valuable. But can he rebound enough, and does he have the attitude and durability to be a piece here? I guess probably not.

So Nash is out Tuesday, not even traveling to OKC... The basketball gods are kind.

@M.J.
You are right on with that. Which is why being 3rd or 5th doesn't matter much as long as we are better than Dallas. I'd love to see us go all the way to the conference finals, but I don't like us against Denver or LA in round two, and we can't avoid both.

@jdstorm
Considering Evans was supposed to be a PG, they STILL should have drafted him this year. They needed a PG far more than they needed a center. If they didn't pick Evans this time, they weren't going to pick him just because they had Love. Also, the centerpiece of the #5 trade from Washington was Randy Foye, who was not part of the Love-Mayo trade, so you can't assume they would have gotten that pick.

If they were smart enough to draft Evans (which they obviously aren't), not trading would definitely have been smarter. But come one, are you really even bothering pointing out the mistakes of Memphis' front office? You can just say the name Chris Wallace and NBA fans start laughing.

@Paul

I dissagree about the Love Mayo trade. that one looks worse and worse every day.
if memphis had kept Love, They would be set at PF, and would not have Traded for Randolph. Without OJ Mayo they would also Be in need of a SG. If they had needed a SG in the last draft they would have Taken Memphis' own Tyreeke Evans. They also would have had the key components to the deal that sent the No 5 pick to the T wolves. So if Memphis Doesn't Trade KLove Here's what their current team Looks like.

Starters. PG No 5 pick in 2009 Draft SG Tyreeke Evans SF Rudy Gay PF Kevin Love C Marc Gasol
With around 8 million in cap space, and more in expiring contracts to make a deadline deal.

@Keith
Yeah, that's right, and now that I think about it, that's probably what j-mo meant. Sorry...didn't mean to imply otherwise. I just wanted to be clear on the whole seeding thing -- like there's no way that any division could get three of the top four seeds under the current rules.

@Royce Young
Per40 stats of 40 turnovers and 80 personal fouls. But he's 7'3", so he'll at least get one more contract after his rookie years run out.

@Vega
I think it's the facial hair. If you look at it hard, it looks like it's been pasted on. I think he just got a little out of hand with the paste and so nothing can move anymore.

Keith :
Funny stat line: Hasheem Thabeet
1 minute played
0 shots
0 rebounds
0 assists
0 steals
0 blocks
1 turnover
2 personal fouls
Really getting things done in the time provided.

He's an anti-PER All-Star. That's got to be like a -30.00.

Funny stat line: Hasheem Thabeet

1 minute played
0 shots
0 rebounds
0 assists
0 steals
0 blocks
1 turnover
2 personal fouls

Really getting things done in the time provided.

@Keith
I don't think Mullens is capable of any expression other than the neutral stare he's always wearing on the bench. Seriously. I don't think the guy's face can move.

Watching the replay right now, WOW enough with the howling!

@M.J.
True, but if they had a better record than Dallas, the series would still start in OKC and the Thunder would get the 4 home games should the series go 7.

@justin
He signed for less, but Utah matched. We would have had to up the ante to pry him away. The fact that we didn't is a good thing knowing that now.

@Vega
I know, which only infuriates me more. He always has that Kobe "I'm better than that call" scowl on his face, and it is magnified greatly by how bad he has been thus far in his career. It would be like Mullens being called for a foul and then mouthing off to the ref for five minutes.

@j-mo
Actually, the way the seeding process works in the NBA, the top four seeds in each conference go to the three division champions and the best team that did not win a division...and those four teams are then seeded by record. Right now, the Thunder are fifth, behind the Lakers, Denver, Utah, and Dallas. However, if they finished with a better record than division champion Dallas but were still third in the Northwest behind Denver and Utah, they would STILL be the fifth seed, and would be matched against the fourth-seeded Mavericks in the first round.

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