Cavs 100, Thunder 99

CLEVELAND — The last four losses have come by a combined five points.

On the season, Oklahoma City has lost seven games by three points or less and nine games by five points or less.

Surely there is sunshine at the end of this streak, right?

The Thunder has been left with no choice but to believe that following the latest last-second letdown, a 100-99 defeat in which LeBron James dominated down the stretch Saturday at Quicken Loans Arena.

“We’re getting stronger and stronger,” assured Russell Westbrook.

But when will these cubs develop a lion’s roar?

The progress is palpable. Last season, the Thunder lost 19 games by five points or less, the third most defeats by that margin. But already, the Thunder has turned some of those close losses into narrow victories. OKC has won seven games by five points or less at just over the halfway point in the season. It’s evidence that the Thunder not only is now competing consistently and giving itself a chance to win these close games but also learning how to close them out.

Looks on faces and the tone in voices inside the locker room Saturday said frustration has set in. But behind every admission of how tough these close defeats have been to bear came an assurance of how they will only make the Thunder better. No one walked out of the locker room with their head hung following the heart-breaker. Instead, players sounded eager to get back to practice, the only place they can apply and build on the lessons the Cavs and others have taught them.

“I am so proud of their toughness,” said Thunder coach Scott Brooks. “They are mentally tough. It is tough to lose the last four games by a total of four points. But they keep coming back. I don’t know if they know what they go through, but it’s a special group of guys that just love to compete for each other. These are tough losses. But you have to go through some tough losses to understand what it takes to win in this league and to win big in this league.”

Brooks went on to talk about how the Thunder is built to compete every night. And moments later, Westbrook backed up his coach before taking it a step further, boldly declaring what has long been evident.

“We think we can beat pretty much any team as long as we go out and compete every night and do what we need to do as a team,” Westbrook said.

The statement confirmed what Thabo Sefolosha said about the Thunder’s confidence.

“The confidence of the team, the confidence of the whole group, is as high as it can be,” Sefolosha said. “Even though we lost two in a row, we know what we have to do to win. So (confidence) can’t really get much higher right now. We just have to keep working as a team.”

And hope that soon a ray of sunshine will crack through this cloud of close losses.

QUICK HITS

THEY SAID IT

BY THE NUMBERS
0: Blocks by the Thunder, a season-low.
10: Rebounds by Kevin Durant, a game-high.
13: Largest lead by the Cavs.
20: Missed free throws by Cleveland.
22: Points by Shaquille O’Neal, a season-high.
38.4: Percent shooting by OKC, the lowest since Nov. 22 against the Lakers.
40: Free throw attempts by Cleveland, tying an opponent season-high for OKC.
20,562: Announced attendance inside Quicken Loans Arena.

-DM-

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