Home > Recap > OKC misses two shots to tie, drops to the Lakers 90-87

OKC misses two shots to tie, drops to the Lakers 90-87

Layne Murdoch/NBAE/Getty Images

BOX SCORE

It felt like last April all over again. The Lakers were in town, the arena was beyond loud and there was just another level of intensity on the floor. The officials swallowed their whistles for most the game, it was extremely physical and just in a general sense, it felt like a playoff game.

Even down to the halftime show, things felt the same as Peter Rabbit returned (he performed twice at halftime during the playoffs).

But just like last year, the Thunder came up juuuuuuuust a little short. Down three with 10 seconds left, Oklahoma City had two shots to tie, with both 3s — one from Kevin Durant and one from James Harden — rimming out. Hey, at least it wasn’t a Pau Gasol tip this time, right? Right?

“I got a good look. Once I let it go, I thought it was good and James felt the same way,” Durant said after the game. “It was kind of like the rest of the game, I just felt like nothing could go our way. We just have to keep pushing it along, keep fighting and staying positive.”

The Thunder battled the Lakers all afternoon, but this game really was a story of two different halves, and a bad third quarter. OKC led the Lakers 56-51 heading into the break and were playing some inspired basketball. They were struggling with Andrew Bynum inside, but Cole Aldrich came in and played 10 really nice minutes, Daequan Cook hit some 3s, Russell Westbrook had 17 and the Thunder just looked to have an edge to them.

But the second half, things changed. Mainly because Scott Brooks changed it. Interestingly, Brooks went with a small lineup almost right off the bat. Durant was at power forward, with Nick Collison and Serge Ibaka swapping turns playing the middle. Aldrich didn’t play a second in the last 24, after contributing so nicely in the first. I’m not going to sit here and call it a dumb decision or anything, just a curious one. Because regardless of what Brooks chose, the Thunder was right in the game. They played terrific second half defense allowing just 39 points and were withing two missed 3-pointers of sending this game to an extra frame. But the small lineup was kind of the story. It didn’t hurt the Thunder on the glass or defensively, because they held their own there. But Durant couldn’t really shake loose offensively, the Lakers made big adjustments to covering Westbrook (just five in the second half) and OKC had major issues scoring (31 points in the second half).

The obvious question people are asking is, would things have been different with Kendrick Perkins? The answer is, um, maybe. Perkins isn’t an offensive force by any means, but I’m sure Brooks would’ve went with a bigger lineup down the stretch if he had that option. The Collison-Ibaka tandem just doesn’t work that well inside, so OKC tries to create a mismatch and spread the floor by using Cook and James Harden at small forward. I just don’t think Brooks’ trusted the rookie Aldrich in that second half. Phil Jackson was small alongside with OKC playing Lamar Odom at power forward for most the second half so it’s not like the Thunder put themselves in some sort of huge mismatch though.

Always easy to second guess when it doesn’t completely work out though. A nice luxury I get and one Scott Brooks doesn’t.

NOTES:

  • There’s just no denying that Ron Artest defends KD so incredibly well. It’s not a coincidence that Durant can never seem to break lose for 30 against the Lakers. Artest just cuts off KD’s path wherever he’s going. It’s like Artest somehow holds Durant with his body. It’s just terrific work. KD finished with 21 on 8-20 shooting, but missed a couple decent looks inside the lane at the rim. But Artest is just a bulldog. He tied up Durant on the first possession of the game and really bullied him for the entire game.
  • You’ve got to admit, that was a decent look at a 3 by Durant to tie. Not a bad last second play there Scotty boy.
  • I couldn’t have been more impressed by James Harden’s defense on Kobe Bryant (8-22 for just 17 points). It was almost to an inspiring level. He didn’t bite on pumps, didn’t let Kobe bully him in the post and you could tell Harden was under his skin. As another writer tweeted me, you wouldn’t ever see Steph Curry do that. Just sayin’.
  • Harden had a nice game on the other end too with 14 points on 6-11 shooting. He made one terrific move on Kobe, crossing him big time but Harden just left a layup short. It would’ve been a huge play, but like the Thunder, was short.
  • More defense talk: Thabo Sefolosha looked like his old self and then some. He had most the duty on Kobe and did an outstanding job. It was the defense we all fell in love with last year. Plus, Thabo dropped eight of the Thunder’s first 15 points including back-to-back 3s. For a second, I didn’t know where I was at.
  • Phil Jackson before the game on Perkins’ playoff experience: “Kendrick’s a pretty young guy. I don’t know how much experience he has if Garnett’s not talking in his ear and sending him where to go. I think he’s got the notion but whether he can be a leader and lead that deal, that’s another story.”
  • No Nazr Mohammed, even with Brooks saying he’d play. Instead, Aldrich got the call. And the rookie made a huge impact. He used his length really well defensively challenging shots and while his stat line won’t impress you, he set great screens and just made the Thunder bigger. It was kind of a preview of how OKC will be with Perkins. But it’ll be better and for longer stretches.
  • A lot of people were griping to me via Twitter about not playing Mohammed and Nate Robinson. You all understand that they aren’t the things that OKC gave up Green for right? You realize this thing is about Perkins? Quit freaking people. Sheesh.
  • When Daequan Cook shoots like that, he may just be my favorite human being ever. He’s giving the Thunder two or three 3s a night, which is kind of what we’ve dreamed of. And he hit one of those nice momentum 3s in the first half where the crowd is buzzing as he lines up for the shot. Seems like the Thunder never hits those.
  • I’ve got to say this: Rumble seriously cracks me up.
  • Serge Ibaka played his butt off in this one despite being put in a tough position. He grabbed 13 rebounds and had two blocks, but just six points. At center against the Lakers, he just didn’t have the chance to be an offensive weapon. That’s why him playing alongside Perkins will be great. Ibaka will have the chance to crash the glass more, pick-and-pop with Westbrook and play a little more open.
  • You know, with this trade, OKC kind of got two new starters if you think about it. One of the biggest bonuses to it is that Serge Ibaka is now the Thunder’s starting power forward. I don’t think that was ever going to happen without Green being traded (or not re-signed). He got 37 minutes in this game which would have never happened. That’s such an underrated aspect.
  • You can tell Scott Brooks is going to try and experiment with that second rotation now that Green is gone. Against Orlando, he went with Thabo at small forward. This one, he went with Cook. And that second unit just isn’t as good now. They helped pump up to a 14-point first half lead, but they don’t have the talent and diversity to keep it up for long stretches.
  • That was Westbrook’s first lefty dunk that I can think of. An homage to Jeff Green, one of the league’s best off-hand dunkers, perhaps?
  • As good a defender as Ibaka is, he gives away his low block position too easily. Example: right at the end of the first half. Gasol post Ibaka right in the middle of the lane and the Lakers threw a long pass that Gasol sealed Ibaka off for and then finished at the buzzer. Ibaka doesn’t look all that comfortable with fronting, so in turn, he tends to give up pretty nice post position. Then again, he was taking on Bynum and Gasol, which is not an easy order.
  • OKC had 19 turnovers. Four of them charges.
  • Also, the Thunder just couldn’t get to the line. This game was pretty physical with both teams combining to shoot just 34 free throws. OKC does that by itself most night. But when the Thunder only gets 16 free throw attempts, they become a very average offensive team.

This is the Thunder first three-game losing streak of the season, but it’s also the team’s toughest stretch. Two road games against the Spurs and Magic with the Lakers at home is about as difficult a run as you can get. And other than the Magic game, OKC had a shot against both the Lakers and Spurs. Literally. Both games OKC missed a game-tying 3-point attempt.

Losing games like this isn’t that tough to stomach because you know how good L.A. is and you know that the Thunder still has room to improve. We’re all looking forward to how the team performs with the new pieces in place, but the team made the statement today that they’re going to be fine without Jeff Green and Nenad Krstic. I think some had their doubts after the Orlando game. But this group is still good regardless. So don’t start worrying about a late season collapse or anything. Get off this part of the schedule and back against less stellar teams and the Thunder will look a lot better.

Next up: Home against Indiana Wednesday.

Share:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • del.icio.us
  • Fark
  • StumbleUpon

Recap

Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest

It was a horrid 3 game stretch. Came at a bad time in our season. Once we get to play teams we know we can beat we will get our confidence back, and Mohammed and Perkins will help us be able to beat up on teams. We have never had big physical guys. This will help every single one of our guys on Defense. Dwight makes Orlando a good defensive team. We have better defenders than the magic, but have never had an anchor in the lane. Give the trades a couple of weeks. Once we start winning, which we will, then we will forget about the days of green and kristic.
http://h2hhombre.wordpress.com/

This quote by KD concerns me..."It was kind of like the rest of the game, I just felt like nothing could go our way." What? WHAT? From where I sat, it looked like everything was going the Thunder's way up until the last few minutes. I worry that KD and Russ will be in a bit of a funk over Green being traded. Should the Thunder's new theme song be "The Thrill Is Gone"?

Going with KD on Lamar was a good idea. Collison couldn't stay with him in the first half. Actually Collison got abused the whole game because he's too small to stay with Gasol or Bynum and he's not quick enough to stay with Odom. I don't blame Brooks for that move at all. The thing that killed was the 2nd half was the turnovers. They sold out to stop Westbrook and he played right into their hands. You can't go one on four.

KD also needs to man up. He's got to play stronger down the stretch. He has done it before and he did it in the first half. He needs to dictate. You know they're going to play physical so fight through it. That's frustrating. That's the only thing IMO stopping him from being elite. You can shut him down at times with physical play. It's all mental though. He's got to fight through it.

Perkins mentioned on Saturday that he hoped to teach the young Thunder players some of the tricks that some of the Celtic vets have taught him over the years. I hope one of those tricks his him teaching Ibaka how to play position defense. If Ibaka can figure that out we're going to have the toughest low post D in the league. Ibaka is really bad at that and it should not be that hard.

I'm still really excited despite the 3 losses in a row. You don't want to be playing your best basketball 3 months before the playoffs. We've got a couple months to figure things out offensively. By we I mean KD and Russ. They are our offense. They've got to share the ball, make better decisions and value every posession. They can't take everything away. Westbrook needs to take what they're giving him. If they have 4 in the lane when you drive someone is open. Make smart PG decisions. KD has to man up. We're alright though. I'm excited to see where we go.

This may mean something or absolutely nothing, but we are now 2-8 when we play on Sunday. Yeesh.

@dragonbug82
If it were just a matter of players running a wrong play every now and then, that would be one thing. However, most things of which we speak have been going on for the entire season or longer. I'm no more comforted by thinking players are consistently ignoring a coach's play calls than I am thinking the coach doesn't know the play to call.

I will agree that a lot of the Thunder's second half woes are due to bad decisions by the players. But how Brooks deals with it says a lot. As Mark! pointed out, Russ' assist per 48 min ratio takes a nosedive as the game goes on. A good coach tries to coach bad habits out of his or her ballplayers.

We've noted that throughout the season, Harden's been on a short leash. Make a mistake and it's quickly back to the bench. I don't really have an issue with that, providing that it's consistent. I think it was after the Spurs game that Darnell Mayberry pointed out Brooks getting all over Maynor for a bad play, but sitting silently when Russ kept shooting bad midrange jumpers.

"moral victories are for minor league coaches" jay z (so appalled kanye west)...

I usually follow this mantra .. & I have my share of gripes about okc ...

But when you're in a 1 possession game in the final minute vs the 2-time defending champs, & your lineup consists of (2) 22 yr olds, (2) 21 yr olds & nick collison, the future is SO bright!

Even when I'm mad about the game or the outcome, I really can not have any complaints!

Okc has renewed my love of the game!

@DavyTheWise
well said man. People seem to forget were a young team. were not 12 year nba veterans. And the people who rag on brooks have to cause they just dont want to admit we messed up. we didnt do the play right. ect. Sometimes you just lose. We did fantastic today i thought. A few more things that could of happen and we would of won, missed lay ups, ect.

I mean even the spurs the best team right now has lost 10 times :P .
would of been nice today if we would of got more calls though, i saw artest freaking holding durant a lot, collison was getting banged up under the rim.

Daniel Hawaii :@SpearsNBAYahooPotential suitors for @RasualButler45 once he clears waivers includes BOS, ATL, NJ, NY and OKC, source tells Y! Sports.
Rasual Butler is another small forward I’d love to get.

Oops, never mind. Looks like Butler is going to sign with the Bulls, which is a nice get for them.

I would still love to get Jason Kapono or Jared Jeffries once they are bought out. I think we need a real backup SF, not a SG sliding over to play SF.

Although I do think we could live with Cook playing backup 3 which is what he's doing right now.

People are funny freakingout about this three game loosing streak. its one of the the hardest three game stretches of the season, andwe traded two starters right in the middle of it. the Spurs are just awesome. Howard gets 40pts, what are you gonna do? We all knew he would go off against collison, ibaka, and cole... its a no brainer. The laker game was tough because it was so close, but we saw some positive things come out of this. cole had some solid mins, cook continues to cook, thabo looked like last year again, we were still short handed in the paint and had a chance to tie the game (and got a decent look on a final play, which has been a huge gripe on DT particularly allseason).

I will offer that i was really surprised that robinson and nazr didn't get any pt today. but at the same time, we were competing without taking the chance on blowing it with new players. Its understandable. This game is about the whole season, and beyond. Lets all keep this in perspective. These guys are humans, and as such, have ups and downs, russ and kd just lost their best friend onand off the court, who had been for thier whole careers in the NBA. Give them some time, and they will recover.

The biggest concern i have with the team looking ahead will definitely be the management of the lineups by brooks. He gets bashed here a lot about his in game personnel management, and i am on that boat. it seems to me that the biggest problem is that he doesn't seem to have the ability to recognize who's hot. Phil Jackson, in my opinion, is the master of manipulating lineups and taking advantage of the other teams weaknesses, and that seems to be our main issue against the lakers.

Regardless, i'm excited about the future and look forward to seeing how this all pans out!

@SpearsNBAYahoo@RasualButler45
once he clears waivers includes BOS, ATL, NJ, NY and OKC, source tells Y! Sports.

Rasual Butler is another small forward I'd love to get.

@TheFix
Idiots, that is insulting to KD

Guys on RealGM are bashing Durant, saying he's a 3 inches taller version of Kevin Martin.

@Crow
I don't disagree. Russ needs to use Ibaka much like he used Green/Krstic - in the pick and pop and on entry passes when he gets good position. Ibaka can fill the gap Green left, and probably fill it better than Green did. But like you say, he has to go out and grab it. Green wasn't good, but at least teams expected him to shoot and thus had to defend. Ibaka needs to make that same presence.

The starting lineup and minute allocation in general has needed changing for a long time. Ideally, Russ would check out a little early, then KD wouldn't check out until Russ came back in. Harden would play more overall, and especially with Ibaka-Perkins. At the same time, we wouldn't have so many non-shooters taking shots or on the court together at least. But, like I said before, I don't yet have faith that the coaching staff is able to make the proper adjustments at the proper time.

@Keith

Ibaka has more responsbility now to get to good spots, get the ball, get the shot up and put it in.

If they play the starting lineup we are both anticipating they need good screens, both Westbrook and Durant on at the same time and they probably need to bounce to a different lineup soon if things are not working well.

*3 games up in the NW, my bad

The Blazers & Hornets both lost tonight... Thunder lose a game to the Lakers in the standings, but still 2.5 up on the 4 seed & 3.5 in the NW

@Keith
right, I was mainly referring to the coaching staff. I hope we are wrong though.

I don't know if some good screens by Perkins (or good ones from others) on Artest would be a gamechanger but it would give him something to think about and it might help get a few more shots for Durant and more buckets from him.

@okc baby
The team is a collection of talents - talents that need direction and leadership. I don't thing the team is at all unready for the personnel changes that occur. The coaching is a different story. The current coaching couldn't properly use the personnel they had with more than a year's practice. I don't have great faith in their ability to properly implement brand new and unfamiliar talent.

I'm interested to see what Russ does with the new lineup. Problematically, we may not start Harden, and it will only reinforce Westbrook not to pass to anyone not named Kevin. I saw too many instances today (and all season) where other players are wide open, but Russ is just waiting for KD to get in position to receive a pass. As a PG, that can't happen. I know KD is great, I understand it, but the PG has bigger duties than just "pass when we tell you to, score otherwise." I worry about Westbrook's vision, or specifically lack there of.

Perkins-Ibaka-Thabo seems like a very poor combination regardless of the personnel in between. Perkins-Ibaka-Thabo-Westbrook seems like a great way not to score points. Crow pointed out how important three point shooting is outside a strong interior player. Now, we can't extrapolate right away that shooters make the big man or the other way around. But I can guarantee you, just from watching how poorly we've been able to execute offense in the past, that having 4 non-shooters on the floor at once is a bad idea. If we start Perkins-Ibaka, but not Harden, we are going to be painfully easy to defend. Imagine the Boston Celtics if Pierce or Allen couldn't shoot and nobody moved on offense. Not a pretty offense to imagine.

Brooks and Cheeks have experience playing with inside players. They will get the chance to show how well they can teach and manage that.

Is this team really ready for the changes that have to be made to be successful. I sure hope so

If Russ mainly plays with Ibaka-Perkins and Harden comes off the bench then Russ may need to focus more on using good Perkins screens himself, for Durant or anybody else. He should still look for Durant from 3 more but it may not amount to a high team level of those shots.

If Harden started then you'd want him to get him the 3 pt shoot a lot and a high team level is more realistic.

Maybe it is Maynor with Harden and Cook (and all on the court together a lot) who will have to up the team 3 pt game.

Division of labor, suited to their skills and temperament.

@okc baby
Not to mention he is double teamed

Didnt expect for Portland to lose this bad

Ray Allen is NEVER clutch on isos. They always drive and kick to him or get him open shots off of screens for his clutch 3's

KD can be MJ and Jordan clutch. He up for the challenge and has ice in his veins. But Isos do not cut it. His skill set is different

@okc baby

Yes Ray Allen is very clutch right now after being just alright earlier in the season.

James and Durant are alright now but that's it.

@Crow
Your right, with the addition of Perk and Nazr. Forces that issue? You would think, huh

KD needs better drawn up plays in his defense

@okc baby

Brooks could go to Westbrook and say I need you to get this team higher on 3 pt attempts and 3 pt FG% and I mainly need to do it by looking harder for our best 3 pt shooters. It is only part of the ideal game but if we're slipping too far on that part of the game you may be coming out more often.

Brian :WHY?! Did Coach Brooks not research what Nazr Mohammad did against the Lakers on Mon 2/14 when he scored 16points and greatly helped the Bobcats beat LA 109 to 89?
This is sooo frustrating because we lost by only 3 points and had we just had Nazr fight down low against the Lakers score if he could or kick it out to Durant, Westbrook or Harden down the stretch. Or even have Him set a screen to spring Durant!
This was soooo winnable, ARGGH!

Exactly. If anyone should know how to beat the Lakers, it's Nazr Mohammed. The Bobcats own L.A. Why Nazr didn't even get 1 second of playing time is beyond me.

And when we were struggling for an offensive spark in the 2nd half, did it not occur to Brooks that maybe Nate Robinson could've provided that? Sigh.

@RWisMyFavThunder
"Clutch" is so overrated.

Also, people keep on saying Durant is not clutch. How many game winning threes has LBJ choked on in the last week?

Is tomorrow the last day to buy people out?

But as someone said yesterday if you play a traditional big or even 2 and want to drive, set good screens n go.

Thabo cant even get the ball to pass. And Harden is ignored at times and doesnt get the amount of touches he should get. How are we going to produce confident perimeter shooters?

You can mitigate the need for a lot of 3 point shooters somewhat if the right 3 point shooters shooting a lot of them but they have to get the ball first and they have to make 3 point shooting a priority.

If you only have 3-4 qualified 3 pt shooters at all it is tougher to have 3 out there on the court. The Spurs have 5 well qualified and a few marginal guys.

By the very loose definition the Thunder had 6 guys in the 3 pt shooter conversation. By this standard it is down to 3 (with Cook) and you'd have to bend the rules a bit to have 4 (with Maynor).

@f5alcon

I was being loose with the definition of a 3 point shooter. But it probably ought be something like over 33% and at least 2 attempts per game or something tougher.

blazers getting crushed by the hawks. Down 20 late in the 3rd.

With Green-Krstic the Thunder could somewhat afford Westbrook being weak on the 3 pt game easier than without Green. If Westbrook gets better, if Harden plays more, if Thabo get better at the 3 it helps maintain a higher rate of 3 pt ability on the court with its direct and indirect benefits but this is not a team strength right now. I've felt for some time it should have gotten more attention but the driving game seemed to offset the weakness.

Whenever San Antonio plays 2 traditional bigs these days it appears they put 3 3 point shooters out there with them and when they play Bonner or Jefferson at PF they have 4.

Lanes are not going to open up with the new guys we are adding. Russ better learn how to pass the ball:)

@Crow
what is the critera for a 3 points shooter? durant shoots a lot of them and misses, ibaka has the range but never uses it, westbrook and thabo occasionally knocks them down. maynor shoots a high percentage but low volume.

im curious to see who gets bought out tomorrow and if we pick any up, murphy and Azubuike would be my top targets, and just make sure cook, harden, Azubuike or nate rob is on the floor at all times

@gr8ball83

Yeah you can use the numbers or conventional basketball wisdom or both. In this case they come to the same basic answer.

Right now for 3 pt shooters they have

Good- Harden, Maynor, Cook
Ok- Durant
Marginal- Westbrook and Thabo

They can have 3 on the court virtually all the time but if quality matters and it does there are perimeters you would favor and those where you are going to be deficient from 3 point land. If deficient from 3 point land you by design or default would have to rely on inside action (post or driving) and need to put the right big man combo in there for one or both of those possibilities.

Trackbacks

  1. [...] Some great insight from Royce Young over at Daily Thunder: “There’s just no denying that Ron Artest defends KD so incredibly well. It’s not a [...]

  2. [...] Royce Young of Daily Thunder wonders why Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks chose to go small, with Kevin Durant at power forward, for most [...]