The Thunder were able to win Game 3 handily against the Suns, despite missing Jalen Williams, thanks to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his superpower: inevitable consistency, Joe Mussatto writes for The Oklahoman.

Gilgeous-Alexander finished the game with 42 points, a playoff career-high, along with eight assists, and did it the same way he always does: hitting step-back threes, getting to the foul line, and operating in the mid-range. It was a masterful performance — only Russell Westbrook has scored more in a Thunder playoff game — but it was also entirely ordinary for the MVP.

He’s got great poise and composure,” head coach Mark Daigneault said of his star after the Game 3 victory. “I think his confidence has something to do with that, he feels agency over his performance so he’s never gonna let anything else or anybody else get in the way of him or his best performance.

Gilgeous-Alexander has averaged 34.7 points and 8.0 rebounds per game in the series heading into Monday’s Game 4.

We have more Thunder notes:

  • With Williams sidelined due to a hamstring injury, Ajay Mitchell was given the starting nod in Game 3, and while he didn’t have the most efficient night, making just 5-of-20 field goal tries, he showed fearlessness during his minutes, Rylan Stiles writes for Sports Illustrated. “He’s obviously not shy, so that’s a start. Winners fail and losers hide. He wasn’t hiding,” Daigneault said of Mitchell’s performance. “That’s one of the things I love about this team. We’ve got a bunch of guys who lean into the competition.”
  • Alex Caruso was greeted with boos by the Phoenix home crowd after Suns’ star Devin Booker claimed he only received a technical foul in the previous game after the Thunder guard had lobbied for it. Caruso was undeterred and showed why he’s such a driver of winning, writes Justin Martinez of The Oklahoman. He did the little things, disrupting passing lanes and finding the Suns’ weak points on defense. “I love being able to find and pick apart little advantages that we can gain through the game,” Caruso said. “My mind, especially during the postseason, is always running and tinkering and looking for different ways to take advantage of the game.”
  • While he only scored seven points on eight shots in the win, Jared McCain‘s impact off the bench in the second quarter was huge and earned him an A-minus grade in Stiles’ post-game recap. McCain’s 12 minutes of action helped the Thunder tread water in the minutes without Gilgeous-Alexander, which Stiles says will be the key to the Thunder’s postseason success, especially with Williams out.
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