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Four. In. A. Row. OKC turns it on late to cruise past Washington 110-98

by Royce Young on December 29, 2009 at 8:57 pm 85 Comments
i

Ned Dashman/NBAE via Getty Images

BOX SCORE – ADVANCED BOX SCORE

This team is starting to prove something to me. Don’t worry, we know we’re playing a little bad right now, but we got this. Going in, every game feels like a toss-up. I haven’t felt genuinely confident yet this year.

But wins like this are starting to make me come around.

At the half, Oklahoma City trailed 55-53, looked uninspired and lazy defensively. It had bad loss written all over it. But they knew they had it. I don’t want to say they were coasting and just playing for the fourth quarter, but they knew they had it. When it got to winning time, the Thunder turned it on. With six minutes left and the Thunder leading 91-90, Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook checked back in and Oklahoma City went on a 19-8  run to close the game. The closers came in and shut the door. It was a pleasure to see.

One of the major problems with this group last season was they didn’t know how to win. They didn’t know how to close. They lost some 15 or 16 games by six points or less. But they’re figuring it out. Nick Collison said they’d learn how to win, but I don’t think anyone saw this kind of maturity this soon. This was taking care of business at its finest. For three quarters these guys had me upset and ready to throw things because they were going to give a game away. But they had it all along. They were just waiting to slam the door.

You saw the whole formula for how this team is built, even on off nights. With the team struggling, Durant took over and carried his guys until they came around. KD was unreal for a second straight night – 35 points on 12-19 with 11 rebounds and four assists – but when things were bad in the second quarter, Durant ripped off nine points in three minutes before the half to keep OKC close. Then his mates woke up late. Jeff Green had a big time second half, scoring 18 for the game. Westbrook turned in another double-double with 11 points and 10 assists to just two turns. James Harden scored a few big buckets (11 points).

And Eric Maynor. What a spark off the bench to start the fourth. He kicked it off with a steal and a layup, then hit a 3 and for the quarter, scored seven points and dished out three dimes (four total). In just 12 minutes of run, he made a monster impact behind Westbrook. Not to rag, but I don’t think any of OKC’s former backup point men would have made that kind of immediate impact. Maynor was big time tonight.

Notes:

  • Serge Ibaka played seven minutes in the first half and didn’t play in the second. The only reason I can figure is because Nick Collison was big off the bench again. In 28 minutes, Collison had eight points and four rebounds, all coming in big moments.
  • You just watched Exhibit A as to why Thabo deserves Defensive Player of the Year consideration. He just makes such a huge impact defensively. He absolutely glued himself to Arenas. Gilbert only had (seven) points after halftime. It looked like Arenas might explode for 50. But Thabo put the clamps on and shut him down.
  • Seems like any time there is a point blank miss, OKC gives up the offensive rebound. Then another. Then another. Someone has got to take it personal and attack the rim instead of letting the ball come to them. Durant got aggressive on the glass in the fourth, but those type of situations are why people think OKC needs a big man. And I don’t disagree. I just think that big man might already be on the roster.
  • I get asked a lot in the Daily Dime chats who I’d compare Jeff Green to or what his ceiling is. To me, Green is a carbon copy of Antwan Jamison. A stretch four that can score inside and out, is a bit undersized but can carry a team when needed. Jamison is obviously a more gifted scorer right now, but remember, Uncle Jeff is just 23.
  • Besides Westbrook’s stellar offensive game, he played some really nice second half defense on Randy Foye. After OKC locked in on Arenas and Caron Butler, Foye appeared to be the load-bearer for Washington. But Westbrook tightened up and Foye never really saw another clean look.
  • One thing I wasn’t thrilled about though: It looked like Russ pouted a lot in the first quarter. He felt like he was hacked twice and instead of getting back, he complained about it. You don’t get a call, fine. But get back on defense. Complain after a whistle. He picked it up after the first but this is becoming a bit of a habit (granted, Russ doesn’t get a lot of calls…) and one I’m not psyched about.
  • Just like in New Jersey: 55 first half points for Washington, 43 in the second. Playing defense when it matters.
  • OKC just went completely lazy in the second quarter. The Wizards went on a 14-2 run after the Thunder took a 42-32 lead. It almost looked like the Thunder got up and thought they were going to cruise to another win. You can take your foot off the gas against the Bobcats, but you can’t do that against Washington because Gilbert Arenas, Antwan Jamison and Caron Butler can flat score. But again, closing out is what the good teams do, and Oklahoma City is a good team.
  • How about this for efficient: Durant scored 40 on 22 shots last night. And he put up 35 on 19 tonight. His PER might explode if he keeps this up.
  • Some nights, Nenad Krstic makes you want to pull out your hair. Maybe he makes himself want to pull out his own hair and that’s the reason it looks the way it does. At any rate, he struggled for a bit but got it together to hit a couple big jumpers when the Thunder needed it.
  • Something rather unimportant but something I’ve been thinking about. Why does Jeff Green do the jump at the beginning of games? He rarely wins (I wish I had a stat on it) and isn’t a great leaper. Why doesn’t Durant do it? Is it a ploy because Scott Brooks prefers to have the ball to start the second and third quarters? Could it be on purpose? Or is it just something Green really likes to do? I’m curious about this.
  • KD has scored 30-plus in five straight, which is the first time in his young career he’s done that.
  • OKC is 4-0 since Eric Maynor joined the team. M-V-P.
  • The Thunder bench was big again. It outscored the Wiz 28-8 and grabbed 14 rebounds.
  • Two key stats: Even though it seemed like they got whooped, OKC won the rebound war 44-37 and that’s with giving up 13 offensive rebounds. Washington took 13 more shots, but only hits 40 percent from the field to the Thunder’s 54 percent.

In a long 82-game season and on the second night of a back-to-back, you pace yourself I guess. And if pacing yourself is winning by 12 and outscoring your opponent 34-22 on their floor, then I’ll take it. I’ll admit, I was ready to set the world on fire. I thought this might be a trap game for OKC, but I didn’t want them to lose because a lack of effort. And halfway through the third, I thought that’s what would happen. But these guys are good. They really are. They sense the moment, they understand how to win when they should and they know how to take care of business. I’m coming around on the fearing every game as a loss. Last season is becoming a distant memory. These guys are new, improved and maturing rapidly. Of course they’re going to lose a few they shouldn’t along the way, that’s life, but I think it’s time I stop worrying so much about it.

NBA

Next up: The Thunder returns home for a New Year’s Eve game against the Jazz Thursday night.

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Todd
Todd 5pts

Nice write-up. (Seems to be a common refrain, but with good reason.)

This isn't really the place for it, but a quick comment about the New Jersey game before getting back to the Wizards game. This may have been brought up already, but it occurred to me during the Nets game that I was watching this year's version of last year's Thunder. I kept asking myself, how can these guys only be 2-28? They're not world-beaters, but they darn sure aren't a 2-28 team. Which is how I felt about the Thunder this time last year. I knew they weren't great, but I never bought that they were as bad as their record said they were. New Jersey strikes me that same way.

On the Wizards game, this quote reminded me of something...

"You just watched Exhibit A as to why Thabo deserves Defensive Player of the Year consideration. He just makes such a huge impact defensively. He absolutely glued himself to Arenas. Gilbert only had (seven) points after halftime. It looked like Arenas might explode for 50. But Thabo put the clamps on and shut him down."

During the 4th quarter I think it was, Brian Davis said, "Arenas must feel like he's wearing Thabo." He sure must have. Thabo was on him like the two were tied together.

I think Scott Brooks made the point that anyone who just looks at game stats for OKC doesn't understand how this team plays. That's a darn good point, and Thabo might be the best example of why. His stats don't blow you away, or even muss your hair, but on defense, he's the glue that holds things together. If this team hangs it hat on defense, Thabo is the one who shows them where the hat stand is.

Nick Collison is similar, in an all-around sort of way. He had a couple of off nights against the Lakers and Phoenix, but most of the time it seems like he has a positive impact of some sort within one minute of stepping on the court, and keeps it up the whole time he's in there. His stats won't ever grab you, but he's a big part of this team's success. Look up "how to cause an offensive charge," you might just see Collison's picture as the given example. And when you watch him and James Harden play, you have a better understanding of what is meant by having a feel for the game. I couldn't describe what that means to save my life. I'd just tell folks, watch those two guys play.

I also heard an interview with Eric Maynor before last night's game, where he was asked what sort of point guard he was - a pure point guard, a score-first point guard, or maybe some sort of combo-guard. He said he was a pure point guard. Then he said something that stuck with me. He talked about all the scorers on this team, and how all he had to do was get them the ball. Because, as he put it, "when they score, we score."

How can you not like that? And after seeing him play, how can you not be glad he's on the team? I was surprised and darn sorry to see Sean Livingston waived, and I sure hope he gets a chance on another team. But I have to admit, Maynor is an upgrade as a back-up point guard.

Kev
Kev 5pts

Crow :Thanks for the compliment happy247.There are a lot of people here who provide good insight.
Despite all that has gone well, one stat that should concern some- Thunder have the 4th worst conference record in the west at 7-11. 34 of the next 51 games are conference. Got to pick it up against them.

excellent stat - didn't know that . . .

the east is WEAK - the only twom teams with NO SHOT to make the playoffs in the west are GS and Minnesots, and GS is even playing well at home lately (recent wins oveer the Celtics and Suns) . . .

Crow
Crow 5pts

Houston is 15-9 against the west. If that last they are more likely to make the playoffs. Utah is only 7-8. Probably the team to beat.

Memphis 8-12, Sacamento 8-12, New Orleans 10-8.

So OKC is fairly normal for its peers.

Houston is different.
Only got 8 games against the east so far. 4-4. I'd think they'd pick it up but maybe they are easier for east coast style teams to play / beat?

Crow
Crow 5pts

If the east / west win% stay the same (and that is a simplistic assumption) they would end up with 43 wins.

Crow
Crow 5pts

10-3 against the east, second best record against them. Only the Lakers have done that better.

Crow
Crow 5pts

Thanks for the compliment happy247.
There are a lot of people here who provide good insight.

Despite all that has gone well, one stat that should concern some- Thunder have the 4th worst conference record in the west at 7-11. 34 of the next 51 games are conference. Got to pick it up against them.

Kev
Kev 5pts

DizzyDai :@The DON
Good points Don. I also agree with the poster that mentioned we are running out of room on the roster. Perhaps Presti could use the two first round picks and trade up?

at this point, they are not looking like much at all - like 15 and 23 for example . . . hard to move up with that . . .

DizzyDai
DizzyDai 5pts

justin :@The DON
Cole Aldrich would be a great alternative, but I don’t see how we get him unless we get extremely lucky with the ping pong balls.

There won't be any ping pong balls if we keep playing like this.

DizzyDai
DizzyDai 5pts

@The DON

Good points Don. I also agree with the poster that mentioned we are running out of room on the roster. Perhaps Presti could use the two first round picks and trade up?

The DON
The DON 5pts

@justin

I was at the game last night, and watched Haywood up close. He is an above average C in this league, but I am not sure he is what we need. Would we be better with him than Kristic? Immensely better. But He's what, 31? I think with the money we would have to fork up for him, we would be better served to spend it elsewhere. But then again, where I don't know. I'm not sure who else is really out there so just based on the reality that there aren't really any other viable alternatives, we might have to get Haywood. I kind of wanted Pryzbilla but he just had a season ending injury and I'll now have to pass on him.

You know who I really like? Joakim Noah. He has been terrific this season for the Bulls, but since they are really struggling as a team they might be more willing to shake things up and I think Presti should at least make an attempt on Noah.

Gortat is another option. He has voiced his unhappiness with the situation he finds himself in down in Orlando and maybe he would be a good option. He keeps saying that the most important thing to him is playing time. We would have plenty of it for him.

These are all the relatively realistic scenarios I can think of right now in trying to fill our C position.

justin
justin 5pts

@The DON

Unless he gets injured, based on what I've been hearing from people I'm guessing Sam Presti will sign Brendan Haywood unless he gets seriously over paid by someone else.

Cole Aldrich would be a great alternative, but I don't see how we get him unless we get extremely lucky with the ping pong balls.

The DON
The DON 5pts

@Lefty

I agree. My bet is on Presti fetching us a free agent to fill our holes (the only glaring one being our need for a defensive center). But we do have a TON of picks on our hands, so he has to do something with them. My guess is he keeps like one of our 1st rounders and packages the rest in some of his trademark out of the blue transactions no one sees coming.

But then again Presti is someone that loves bargains, and what better bargain than having a solid contributor locked in for 4 years on a rookie contract.

We'll see. But just the fact that we have seemingly endless opportunities to still wheel and deal adds even more excitement on top of what we're witnessing on the court right now.

Lefty
Lefty 5pts

@The DON
I agree with everything you've said here, but I stil kind of expect a free agent or trade rather than draft help. We'll see. Exciting anyway.

Lefty
Lefty 5pts

Just the fact that we're winning games, have three fantastic rookies, and still are finding things we can be doing better is awesome, isn't it? :)

The DON
The DON 5pts

To the guy that mentioned the one bad thing about winning is that we can't get high draft picks anymore, there is actually a positive to be had from our situation. It looks like we are most likely going to be positioned in either late lottery/mid-teens range of the draft, which means that we will be picking more proven commodities. Guys that have played 3-4 years in college and are safe bets to contribute right away and fill a role that we need. These are the kinda players that won't necessarily ever be all-stars, but be potentially stud role players. And with Presti at the helm, I am confident we will be picking off a number of very solid players at that point in the draft. Basically we wont have to be swinging for a homerun anymore with our 1st round picks. We can now start picking safe bet kind of players, in the mold of a Ty Lawson or Hansborough or DeJuan Blair in this past draft.

For some reason, I feel very good about that kinda positioning in the coming drafts with Presti. I am very confident he will make all the right picks that will come in and be "right now" kind of players for us instead of "lets wait 3 years for him to develop" kind of players. We are now in a position where we have to start getting players that can help immediately

The DON
The DON 5pts

Bryan :
And I’m going to go out on a limb and say, um, yeah…. the roster could definitely handle Aldrich.
There I go agreeing again.

http://i994.photobucket.com/albums/af61/mogklav2/95InternetHigh-Five.jpg

justin
justin 5pts

A lot of it is how defenses are starting to play us when Kevin Durant is having a good night. The Wizards were basically leaving Thabo Sefolosha / Serge Ibaka / whoever alone and hounding Kevin Durant - who despite his scoring ability isn't the best ball handler when double teamed.

I agree that the offense sometimes leads to the wrong people taking shots but it's hard to argue that point when we shoot 47% from the field and score 110+ points.

Kev
Kev 5pts

Bryan :@Kev It should be interesting to see if the Thunder can put it all together against the Jazz. If Harden keeps taking it to the rim and forgetting to dish, and if RW freezes out Durant again, it could get ugly.

can't wait for that game . . .

Kev
Kev 5pts

Bryan :@Kev It should be interesting to see if the Thunder can put it all together against the Jazz. If Harden keeps taking it to the rim and forgetting to dish, and if RW freezes out Durant again, it could get ugly.

it bothers me because I cant believe he has made a 180 like that . . .

he is unique - he ia (usually) a true passer that isn't a point guard, and that's pretty rare in the NBA . . . the taking it to the rack (regardless of resistance) and taking contact and hoping for a foul call is not good basketball . . .

either pass the ball or develop your mid range game . . .

Bryan
Bryan 5pts

@Kev
And here's the thing. The Thunder had one ot their best stretchs of the game offensively with Maynor and Westbrook sharing ball handling duties. I know that Brooks will continue to let Harden make his mistakes. But he had better think about what he's doing.

And it does not help Harden to have Thabo to 4 of 5 from the floor and 2 of 2 from long range.

Bryan
Bryan 5pts

@Kev
It should be interesting to see if the Thunder can put it all together against the Jazz. If Harden keeps taking it to the rim and forgetting to dish, and if RW freezes out Durant again, it could get ugly.

Kev
Kev 5pts

DizzyDai :Sadly, I still want high draft picks. So deep down inside, I’m not wanting a playoff run. I need to switch from “rebuild” mode to “rise” mode. That is slowly turning around now that I feel we are becoming legitimate post season contenders.
Anyone else feel the same?

no . . .

you play to WIN the game . . .

you don't play to just play it . . .

Kev
Kev 5pts

Anonymous :@Anonymous = Bryan from another computer
I might also add, that Harden better wake up and start sharing the ball a little more if he want’s to keep Maynor from stealing some of his minutes. Harden had just ONE assist last night. O. N. E.
I know that Brooks has likely allowed Harden some freedom in this regard now that he is not the sole distributor off the bench, but come on. One assist? Really James? How many shots did you clank off the rim after blasting into traffic, James?
Yeah just 3 of 7 for 11 points. I’m your biggest fan but, seriously, you have got to step it up young fella. With Westbrook, Maynor and Sefolosha competing with you for minutes, you MUST bring the A game.

he continues to look (only) for his shot . . .

not good . . .

Bryan
Bryan 5pts

And I'm going to go out on a limb and say, um, yeah.... the roster could definitely handle Aldrich.

There I go agreeing again.

Kev
Kev 5pts

The DON :

Clifton :Great win for the Thunder, but one thing in the first half kept driving me crazy…were the other guys comPLETEly oblivious to the fact that Durant was BLAZING hot near the end of the half?! I was trying to understand why particularly Harden and Westbrook seemed to go everywhere with the ball but to Durant! He had that “I’m not losing in D.C.” look on his face the whole first half, but a number of times they didn’t even swing the ball to his side and settled for a Krstic 19-footer instead.I guess it sounds a bit ridiculous, especially since he scored 35 AND they won, but I think the guys responsible for distributing the ball need to be a bit more aware of these moments. I really think KD could’ve scored 30+ just in the first half tonight, maybe closed things up even earlier. And he’s got the Kobe81/Jordan69 gene, so in the future when he’s ready to go off I hope his teammates learn how to start finding him!

I have been stressing this phenomenon to death on this site, yet you’re getting the same treatment I do, which is that no one acknowledges it and this point keeps getting ignored.
This team does a horrific job of recognizing when KD is on fire and feeding his hot hand. He will make 3 baskets in a row, and then for the next handful of possessions RW will just come down and not so much as look at him and instead opt to pass it off to the opposite side.
Obviously we’re still good and this isn’t something that’s killing us right now. But this sort of a subtle deficiency will MURDER a team in the playoffs where such subtle tendencies are the difference between a win and a loss. This is just a bad habit I am noticing that’s developing and I would like for it to be corrected. The one game that REALLY stands out this season is the home loss to the clippers where KD had 40. He was well on his way to a like a 53 point game, but in the 4th he got absolutely frozen out by RW. It was as if to RW he didn’t even exist, and the rest of the way we had to watch RW make wild drives that resulted in nothing and a devastating loss when the final horn sounded

good post . . .

these are the things that make you lose to the Lakers in 4 or 5 in the first round . . . It's always chalked up to youth, and that is partly true, but a better reason is things like these . . .

The Thunder are playing good ball, but it can get better . . .

TEAM first . . .

Bryan
Bryan 5pts

@The DON
I seem to be agreeing with you lately, which is strange considering how little I appreciated your innitial appearence on this site...lol

So yes, I agree that Durant was denied the ball too much last night... esp at the end of the second quarter. He was obvioulsy in the flow of the game and nobody seemed to notice.

A Favre-eque fit would have been totaly acceptable to me.

Bryan
Bryan 5pts

I have to say that it appears that Collison either really wants to stay on this team, or he is hoping to increase his worth elsewhere. You really can't ask for much more from a scrap-minutes, energy type of guy. To give this much effort every night says something about him.

The DON
The DON 5pts

@f5alcon

You don't think our roster could handle Cole Aldrich?

The DON
The DON 5pts

Clifton :
Great win for the Thunder, but one thing in the first half kept driving me crazy…were the other guys comPLETEly oblivious to the fact that Durant was BLAZING hot near the end of the half?! I was trying to understand why particularly Harden and Westbrook seemed to go everywhere with the ball but to Durant! He had that “I’m not losing in D.C.” look on his face the whole first half, but a number of times they didn’t even swing the ball to his side and settled for a Krstic 19-footer instead.
I guess it sounds a bit ridiculous, especially since he scored 35 AND they won, but I think the guys responsible for distributing the ball need to be a bit more aware of these moments. I really think KD could’ve scored 30+ just in the first half tonight, maybe closed things up even earlier. And he’s got the Kobe81/Jordan69 gene, so in the future when he’s ready to go off I hope his teammates learn how to start finding him!

I have been stressing this phenomenon to death on this site, yet you're getting the same treatment I do, which is that no one acknowledges it and this point keeps getting ignored.

This team does a horrific job of recognizing when KD is on fire and feeding his hot hand. He will make 3 baskets in a row, and then for the next handful of possessions RW will just come down and not so much as look at him and instead opt to pass it off to the opposite side.

Obviously we're still good and this isn't something that's killing us right now. But this sort of a subtle deficiency will MURDER a team in the playoffs where such subtle tendencies are the difference between a win and a loss. This is just a bad habit I am noticing that's developing and I would like for it to be corrected. The one game that REALLY stands out this season is the home loss to the clippers where KD had 40. He was well on his way to a like a 53 point game, but in the 4th he got absolutely frozen out by RW. It was as if to RW he didn't even exist, and the rest of the way we had to watch RW make wild drives that resulted in nothing and a devastating loss when the final horn sounded

f5alcon
f5alcon 5pts

@DizzyDai

The thing is our roster really cant handle more top picks, at some point we have too much talent to develop and not enough minutes to give them for them to play, we already see this with dj white and weaver they are stuck on the end of the bench when they might see playing time on a different team.

Aside from getting a real center and maybe a 3 pt gunner out long term rotation is set, maybe flip flop starters and reserves but thats about it.

westbrook and maynor are our PGs, harden, thabo, durant and a bit of green play the wing positions, green, collison,ibaka at PF, some center and krstic play center. The rest of players are sitting the bench

andrew
andrew 5pts

@DizzyDai

The only high draft pick i want is from phoenix :)

DizzyDai
DizzyDai 5pts

Sadly, I still want high draft picks. So deep down inside, I'm not wanting a playoff run. I need to switch from "rebuild" mode to "rise" mode. That is slowly turning around now that I feel we are becoming legitimate post season contenders.

Anyone else feel the same?

happy247
happy247 5pts

@Crow
Thanks Crow, we can always rely on you to bring your analytical insights. You bring a lot to this site.

James
James 5pts

Ezellion :@John-o Green gets the tough rebounds. The Thunder as a team rebounds they don’t just rely on their forwards to do it. If Green and Krstic were as bad as everyone seems to think the Thunder would not be winning the rebound battle consistantly. I also think at this point Green is a better defender than Jamison ever was, and he is getting better.

Exactly. You can't look at individual rebounding stats on this team and say difinitively that a guy isn't getting it done because they are team rebounding so often. Durant is getting a lot of Green's rebounds when they are standing right next to each other. Those are rebounds that Green got last year that he's not getting this year only because KD has made an obvious conscious decision to get more rebounds. Does this mean Green isn't playing as well? Obviously not. He's playing good defense and he's shooting when he's open or when the team needs a tough basket. That's team ball and that's what you want. If you make it too much about individual stats it can be a detriment to the team.

troy wood
troy wood 5pts

It's looking good right now, Durant should be a senior in college, westbrook a senior, ibaka a sophomore, Harden a junior, Green looks like a sixth man of the year type, they could use a monster defensive rebounding power forward and a athletic shot blocking rebounding center and the championship will be coming to Seattle, I mean Oklahoma next year, give us our team back,ha yeah how's it feel? What if the team moved to north dakota next year? how would you guys feel after just two seasons? It would suck yeah! Think how us old sonics fans feel after 30 years! Go Thunder!

Ezellion
Ezellion 5pts

@John-o
Green gets the tough rebounds. The Thunder as a team rebounds they don't just rely on their forwards to do it. If Green and Krstic were as bad as everyone seems to think the Thunder would not be winning the rebound battle consistantly. I also think at this point Green is a better defender than Jamison ever was, and he is getting better.

Kev
Kev 5pts

nick :Completely unrelated, and kind of directed at Kev because I know he likes to watch them: I’m watching the Warriors play the Lakers, and am shocked at how little everybody other than Curry passes.

That's how they p;ay - and Nelson allows it. They are first in pace in the NBA because they usually come down and jack up the first shot. Nellie also lets anyone bring the ball down the court, this also stalls the offense. If he would just give Curry the ball (bias alert - see avater) and let him start the offense (see Nash, Steve) I think their efficiency would imrpove markedly . . .

Kev
Kev 5pts

Defensive Breakdown

The Thunder again graded out below average (+13). And just like last night, the first half was not good. They did tighten up and play better in the second half.

Defensive MVP – Kevin Durant (+7)

You have to like it when your leading scorer is not one-dimensional. While some of his teammates took the night off defensively, Kevin was making plays on both ends. His rotations were solid, and he only made two mistakes. KD’s best play came right before halftime.

It’s less than a minute to go in the first half, and the Thunder trails by four. Nenad Krstic has just missed from the deep left corner. The Wizards’ Andray Blatche secures the rebound and he attempts to do his best Wes Unseld impersonation. He spots Randy Foye at halfcourt and directs an overhead pass to him. KD had been retreating, but he reads the action and intercepts the pass. Unfortunately, he also steps out of bounds, so the Wizards retained the basketball. Still the break was thwarted, and the Wizards ended up missing on the same possession.

Jeff Green (+5)

Green opened up the game by getting owned by forward Antawn Jamison early. Jamison has that versatile game for a “stretch” four: he can score inside and out. He did just that in the first quarter. Green tightened it up later on and had a solid defensive game. I had him for two steals and two blocks. If you were able to watch the broadcast, you know that the defensive play of the game occurred in the third quarter.

Jeff had just missed from long range in the deep left corner. Jamison flew over to contest the shot and leaked out. Thabo, Russell Westbrook, and Kevin Durant are all back, but Jamison slips past all three of them. Meanwhile, Caron Butler had secured the rebound and gotten the ball quickly to Gilbert Arenas. Arenas spots the leakout and delivers a perfect pass to a streaking Jamison. He catches the ball about five feet from the rim. Meanwhile, Green had been SPRINTING past his three teammates to get in on the play. Jamison lays up the ball, but Green times it perfectly and swats the ball off the backboard. It’s amazing to see how much ground Green made up.

Nenad Krstic (+4)

Some will disagree with Nenad’s rating. They thought he had a bad game defensively. I don’t think it was great, but it wasn’t awful either. Did his man pick up several offensive rebounds? Yes. But Nenad’s first responsibility is to provide help after penetration is given up. He did that. This didn’t result in blocks, but it forced the Wizards to make extra passes. He didn’t make the spectacular block, but he wasn’t asleep at the wheel either.

Eric Maynor (+3)

I’ve been a little disappointed in Maynor’s defense. As a smaller guy, he should be able to get around picks better, but he doesn’t. Kevin Ollie and Kyle Weaver are much better at it. Maynor is better at it that than Russell, but that’s not really saying much. After Maynor runs into the pick (instead of squeezing over the top), the person guarding the screener has to step up, and then we get the opponent with a four on three advantage. This is where we have to scramble to help, and we end up getting out of offensive rebounding position. Hopefully after Maynor has been here awhile, he can improve under Brooks’ tutelage.

James Harden (zero)

Thabo Sefolosha (zero)

Brooks switched Thabo onto Gilbert Arenas in the second half, and Thabo did a better job in keeping Arenas in check than when Russell was guarding him. Still, Thabo lacked the great defensive plays to give him his typical high score.

Nick Collison (-1)

Collison gave up two “and 1s”. That is, he fouled twice when the opponent made the basket. My theory: In this situation, you either foul them hard or don’t foul at all.

Serge Ibaka (-1)

Serge entered the game late in the first quarter. Arenas passed the ball to Serge’s man, Antawn Jamison. Serge has to know that his man can shoot threes. We’ve played them before, and I’m sure it was in the scouting report. Throw in the fact that he had been shooting from outside on Green while Serge was watching, and you have a no-brainer. Jamison made the wide open three pointer while Serge was too far back.
Russell Westbrook (-4)

Westbrook struggled with Gilbert Arenas in the first half, so Brooks switched him onto Randy Foye in the second half, and Russell had better success there. I am breaking down two plays that typify Westbrook’s defensive tendencies.

Late in the first quarter, Arenas is dribbling the ball upcourt. Antawn Jamison (Ibaka) comes over to set the pick. Westbrook instinctively jumps behind Jamison and stays with him. This leaves Ibaka on Arenas. I know the coaches probably allow it (I am assuming this because Russell does it all the time) but what is the rationale? Why would you want your point guard on their power forward and vice-versa? This left Arena wide open, as Serge was back and probably scared that Arenas would blow by if he stepped up. Arenas had a wide open three and he drained it. Russell had plenty of room to go over the top and stay with their BEST SCORER, but he chose the easy way out, which is typical.

A minute later (about forty seconds to go in the first), Russell drives the ball in, and Jamison holds his ground and slows up Russell. Russell shoots a runner from about five feet and he drifts off to the left as the ball rolls around the rim. The ball finally comes off. If you still have the game on DVR, I encourage you to go watch it. After the ball rolls off the rim, Westbrook drops his head. He looks like a kid that has just been told that he won’t be getting any Christmas presents this year. He pivots SLOWLY, and starts to trot up the court. In contrast, the Thunder big men (Ibaka and Collison) hustle back and get several steps ahead of their point guard in a flash. After a moment, a wide open Gilbert Arenas drains a three.

profsearcy
profsearcy 5pts

Can't believe that you didn't make this stat more clear Royce. Last night the Thunder won their ninth road game before New Years, which is more then they managed all last season.

Lefty
Lefty 5pts

John-o :Wow, I hope to see Serge pull one of these off this year!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ebbLQCN3SfQ

The block? Or the beard?

One thing about our bench. We've commented how strong it is so far, but three of them are still rookies! How much more awesome is this bench going to be next year? The year after? I'm coming around more and more to the idea that we don't really need to do anything this offseason, and just let the team grow together a little more. Honestly, get Serge, Harden, and Maynor a year to mature, and with Collison's experience and abilities, we could have the strongest bench in the league. A lot of ifs, but not out of the question.

Exciting!

John-o
John-o 5pts

Royce - Green is at 6 boards a game (and it's been holding there for monthly totals in Oct/Nov/Dec). Green just isn't active enough - especially on defense. I don't want to say that he'll never get better, I'm just saying that it's unlikely he'll get better unless something significant occurs with how he pays the game.

Even Battier was a 14/6 guy his rookie year... it's only gone down since then for him (although Lewis would contend he's become more valuable).

Crow
Crow 5pts

The Cavs and Nuggets are probably the most notable playoff teams who don't field their best lineup as the starting lineup. Utah does it too. It is just that OKC uses their weak starting lineup about twice as much as these other guys.

They could do better.

Crow
Crow 5pts

A number of coaches seem to prefer to try to win with the bench. I have no problem with that by itself. If your starting lineup options aren't great may not make sense to put too much of your hope on it.

But some coaches also seem to tolerate or prefer starting lineups that aren't really their best so that they can upshift to something better when it isn't giving enough. It is a nice feeling and it can give the impression the coach knows what they are doing. I have mixed opinions about that. Overcoming the first bump in the road is pretty important. But I'd rather avoid it to begin with.

Crow
Crow 5pts

tend to "even" things out

But Adjusted +/- still says it a weak lineup.

Bottom 5-10 among starting lineups.

Crow
Crow 5pts

Starting lineup was -10 against NJ , -13 tonight. They tend to sneak a good game in here and there that tend to things out mostly but I notice a lot of -10s.

happy247
happy247 5pts

Is it just me or does our starting five (as a unit) seem to be our worst combination of players. Don't get me wrong I think that they are our best players right now but as a unit I think that they struggle. Maybe Crow can come up with a stat that quanfies it, and I may be wrong, it just feels like we don't really make any push until nick and harden come in.

Royce
Royce 5pts

@Robert
I'm just saying they're similar players. Plus, I'm talking Jeff Green's ceiling. Right now, he's right at seven rebounds a game.

Jamison averages eight a game for his career and had seasons in the sixes and sevens. Again, I'm talking if Green maxes out his potential. I could him as an 18-8 guy with solid percentages across the board.

dream catcher
dream catcher 5pts

really nice article on what Maynor brings to the team.....

http://www2.timesdispatch.com/rtd/sports/local_other/article/WOOD30_20091229-234802/314348/

Clifton
Clifton 5pts

Great win for the Thunder, but one thing in the first half kept driving me crazy...were the other guys comPLETEly oblivious to the fact that Durant was BLAZING hot near the end of the half?! I was trying to understand why particularly Harden and Westbrook seemed to go everywhere with the ball but to Durant! He had that "I'm not losing in D.C." look on his face the whole first half, but a number of times they didn't even swing the ball to his side and settled for a Krstic 19-footer instead.

I guess it sounds a bit ridiculous, especially since he scored 35 AND they won, but I think the guys responsible for distributing the ball need to be a bit more aware of these moments. I really think KD could've scored 30+ just in the first half tonight, maybe closed things up even earlier. And he's got the Kobe81/Jordan69 gene, so in the future when he's ready to go off I hope his teammates learn how to start finding him!

justin
justin 5pts

@John-o

It's not like they didn't like Eric Maynor, obviously they did, but making the decision to give up a back-up PG who will never play more than 11 minutes a game on your team or save $10 million.. it's a no brainer.

Carlos Boozer really screwed them by not opting out..

Trackbacks

  1. Truth About It » Denial and The River Without A Paddle: Wizards-Thunder Post-Game Locker Room Video says:
    November 16, 2012 at 8:16 pm

    [...] [Royce Young - Daily Thunder] [...]

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