Thunder Notes: Bounce Back, Holmgren, Smith, System, Hartenstein

Following three losses in four games — including a pair to their new rival, the Spurs — the Thunder responded with a 129-104 thumping of the Sixers on Sunday. Oklahoma City reestablished itself on the defensive side, holding Philadelphia to 42 percent shooting and forcing 23 turnovers, which it converted into 31 points.

“We really cranked up the pressure and the help and did so with discipline,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault told Justin Martinez of The Oklahoman. “It wasn’t reckless. I thought we really tuned up there and did a really good job of making everything hard on them.”

We have more on the Thunder:

  • Chet Holmgren, who scored a total of 31 points in the Thunder’s three previous games, erupted for 29 points, nine rebounds and four blocks on Sunday. “At the core, the guy is just a winning, tough player,” Daigneault said, per Martinez. “And it’s exhibited with the way he can hold his own at (center) when we shift him there. … He was a dominant defensive player tonight, first and foremost. He was great at the rim. Great in the help. Great in the coverages. He really played at a high level on that end of the floor. It just changes our team when he’s in that mode.”
  • The Oklahoma City Blue, the Thunder’s NBA G League affiliate, has acquired wing Zhaire Smith from the Texas Legends in exchange for a 2026 first-round pick and a 2027 second-round pick, beat writer Rylan Stiles tweets. Smith was on the Mavericks’ training camp roster but was waived in mid-October. Smith, a 2018 NBA first-rounder, racked up 24 points, six rebounds and five assists against the South Bay Lakers on Saturday. Smith’s career got derailed early on due to a broken foot, followed by a life-threatening allergic reaction to sesame that left him forced to use a feeding tube.
  • Buying into the system is a requirement for the Thunder players and they recognize the benefits, Martinez writes. “On the player’s side, it’s always a sacrifice, but it’s for the better,” Luguentz Dort said. “For a player, you become more efficient. And then you connect more with the team. You’re more into what the team wants to do, and that recipe has been working. Whenever it’s been like that, it’s always important to listen to what they want you to do. Then you just adapt and get better at that, and you’ll be in a good position.”
  • Isaiah Hartenstein will miss tonight’s game against Atlanta, Tim MacMahon of ESPN tweets. His injury is listed as a left soleus strain. It’s the second time he’s strained that calf this season. He missed six games after originally injuring it on Nov. 26, MacMahon notes.
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