Thunder 121, Knicks 118

The defense was awful, the offense was out of sync and the energy was unmatched.

And yet, the Thunder found a way to win, marking the latest leap this team has taken since Oct. 28.

Rarely this season has Oklahoma City won when it hasn’t played its best, or close to its best, ball. But in Saturday’s 121-118 overtime thriller at New York, The Thunder overcame the obstacles — on the road, after a three-day break, playing on the game’s grandest stage, in front of 19,723 frenzied fans eager to witness their newest star make his debut. Not to mention OKC’s own sub par performance.

The Knicks had this game won. More times than once. But the Thunder never went away, battling back from an 11-point, second-quarter deficit to tie the score at 52-all before going into the locker room down five at the half. When the Thunder built a 91-86 lead, the Knicks stormed back with a 17-6 run to go ahead by six.

It was at that point the Thunder showed its growing toughness and trust in one another. Jeff Green hit a 3-pointer, set up by James Harden. Russell Westbrook attacked the rim and converted a layup to pull the Thunder within 103-102 with 26.9 seconds remaining.

The only thing the Knicks did wrong in that 1 minute, 7 second span was miss a pair of free throws, with Tracy McGrady oddly enough serving as the culprit on a night he otherwise dazzled the Madison Square Garden crowd.

Eddie House sank two free throws to make it a three-point game, but Kevin Durant responded with a game-tying 3-pointer from the top of the key to send the game into overtime.

When the Knicks went ahead by four on a pair of Sergio Rodriguez free throws with 2:10 left to play, it didn’t look good for the Thunder. To that point, the Thunder had allowed McGrady, Rodriguez, Eddie House and David Lee to have their way on the offensive end. The Thunder had turned the ball over 18 times, had just 16 assists and had missed 28 of 39 free throws. But OKC ended the game on an 11-4 run, with three different players (Durant, Green and Nick Collison) providing the scoring punch. Durant’s 16-footer was the game winner and his two free throws with 10.2 seconds remaining clinched it.

“We kind of stole this one,” said Collison. “It’s big to be able to win games like this when you don’t necessarily play your best basketball. To be able to win down the stretch like that is huge for us.”

Only the good teams win despite their difficulties, and the Thunder is developing all the traits of a good team. Oklahoma City is now 32-21 and a stunning 16-11 on the road. The team is riding an eight-game winning streak, and Saturday’s win might have been the biggest momentum-builder during this stretch. With 29 games left before a likely postseason appearance, the Thunder is now adding chunks of confidence to what already is a sky-high swagger.

The Thunder walked into MSG holding opponents to a league-low 43.5 percent shooting. The Knicks shot 48.9 percent and the Thunder still squeaked it out. It’s not a trend OKC wasn’t to start. Still, the result will work wonders for the psyche.

“It shows that we can get through adversity,” said Durant.

And that could be a scary strength for a team this young and talented.

QUICK HITS

THEY SAID IT

BY THE NUMBERS
4:
Fast break points for New York.
11: Biggest lead by New York.
13:
Lead changes.
14: Ties.
26: Points scored by Tracy McGrady in his Knicks debut.
32: Wins on the year for the Thunder.
121: Points scored by the Thunder, the second most scored this season.
19,763: Announced attendance inside Madison Square Garden, a sellout.

-DM-

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