While the Thunder were disappointed to drop Saturday’s game to San Antonio — Oklahoma City’s first loss in five-plus weeks — they were more focused on areas of improvement afterward rather than hanging their heads, writes Tim MacMahon of ESPN.
“Personally, I think it’s exciting,” superstar guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said. “It’s easier to learn when you don’t feel the way you want to feel. It stings a little bit more.
“We’ll also see these guys [twice in the next five] games. So, it will be a good challenge. Kind of like an automatic test, almost like in school. You fail the test, you get to retest a couple days later. That’s what it will probably feel like. Losing is where you find growth and where you really get better.”
Oklahoma City had its preferred starting lineup available on Saturday for the first time since the team won the championship in June, MacMahon notes. The Thunder were up 16 points late in the second quarter, but the Spurs rallied before halftime and wound up winning by two points.
Gilgeous-Alexander took responsibility for his part in the team’s “stagnant” offense — he finished with a game-high 29 points but also committed a season-high five turnovers.
“We can’t be spoiled,” Gilgeous-Alexander said, per MacMahon. “We can’t think we’re above anything. Us, along with every team in the league, if you show up on a night and don’t do the necessary thing to win, you probably won’t win, no matter how talented or no matter what your record looks like. That was the case for us tonight.”
Here’s more on the defending champions:
- The Thunder went 68-14 last season and won the NBA championship. However, they fell in the final of last year’s NBA Cup and were eliminated in the semifinals on Saturday. Star forward Jalen Williams, who finished with 17 points, seven rebounds, four assists and four steals but shot just 5-of-17 from the field, admitted the team was hoping to add to its trophy case, relays Joe Vardon of The Athletic. “Yeah, it’s frustrating,” said Williams. “There’s perspective on it, for sure. I think an average team would probably be like, ‘Oh, it’s the Cup, whatever, we lost one.’ What are we, 24-2? I mean, we can go home and just hang our hat on that, or we can look at it as a way to get better and understand that we played against a playoff team that beat us and gave us a two on our (loss record). So that’s how we’ll look at it from a competitive standpoint.”
- Entering Saturday’s game, the Thunder were tied with the 2015/16 Warriors for the best 25-game start in NBA history. Golden State went on to break Chicago’s regular season win mark by compiling a 73-9 record, but fell in the 2016 NBA Finals to Cleveland. As MacMahon writes for ESPN.com, Gilgeous-Alexander said on Friday that it would “absolutely” be meaningful if the Thunder were able to break the Warriors’ record, but he also cautioned that the team was more focused on repeating as champions and continuing to make day-to-day improvements.
- The reigning MVP was asked about the win record again after Saturday’s loss, according to Vardon. “Seventy-three and nine? I mean, the position we’re in right now, what are we, 24-2? My goal is to get better,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “So if we get better than what we are now, that should take care of itself. That’s kind of how I see it. Goals to me are pointless trying to reach at when they are so far away. You have to take care of everything step-by-step, and tonight we didn’t. If we stack nights like we did tonight, we won’t even come close to it.”
- Veteran guard Alex Caruso was one of the standouts for the Thunder in Saturday’s loss, observes Justin Martinez of The Oklahoman (subscription required). On a night in which the offense wasn’t firing on all cylinders, Caruso did his best to will the team to victory in crunch time, Martinez writes, recording seven points, three rebounds and two steals in eight fourth-quarter minutes. The two-time champion finished with 11 points (on 5-of-9 shooting), eight rebounds, three assists and three steals, with the Thunder outscoring the Spurs by 22 points in his 24 minutes.
- Williams was recently asked about 2024 lottery pick Nikola Topic, who is undergoing treatment for testicular cancer. The Serbian guard missed his entire rookie season with a torn ACL prior to the cancer diagnosis this fall. “He doesn’t come in like, ‘It sucks.’ He’s going in, working out and shooting and trying to get better, which is insane to me. … He’s been really strong about the situation. He doesn’t feel sorry for himself,” Williams said of Topic (Twitter link via Martinez).
Great game until the free throw thing ruined the ending. Spurs look like contenders.
I know! I hate it when these awesome games turn into non stop intentional fouls
Warriors psent too many games more worried about breaking the record than winning the championship. OKC should not worry about the record and just win.
OKC is very beatable when they don’t get spotted 10 unearned free throws.
They were 26th in ft attempts last year.
They are 17th this yea
but whatever you need to tell yourself to feel like they are beatable in a 7 game series go ahead.
Teams with Talented bigs. Give them trouble.
Spurs, Nuggets, Rockets ….
Talented bigs give every team trouble haha not really news. haha
Unless 1 of those teams drop to 4th or 5th OKC would only need to face 1. Considering how T’Wolves play in the postseason those other teams would have trouble with them.
Unless Embiid gets healthy out of nowhere they wouldn’t need to worry about the East bigs. Mobley has not gotten there offensively and they played KAT for years.
Fine with them losing when the reward is an extra game that can risk injury. No one values the cup like the actual trophy. I am sure they get some bonus when they win the real thing too.
Spurs are tough but this was not a 7 game series. They also won’t meet each other unless they can beat some form of the Rockets or Nuggets. That goes for both teams but OKC has that experience, SAS does not have a main contributor with much playoff experience. I don’t even remember Kornet playing much for Celtics. Barnes didn’t seem to play in the last game. Fox one playoff series. Unless SAS falls to 4th or 5th they won’t see OKC unless they both make WCF.
what school did shai go to? when i failed a test, there was no retake a couple days later. lol
A Canadian school.
You must not have had nice teachers. Had make ups offered in high school and college and I am only 10ish years older than SGA.
Spurs could be growing up lols. They are young and deep. Same thing we said about Thunder last year.
Imo Thunder have trouble with good teams with talented bigs. You still have to beat the champs.
Thunder gave two talented young players out. Topic a PG and Sorber a Center. Both have big futures. Amazing the Thunder are missing them. And they are still the best team. I am high on both those players.