Thunder 101, Grizzlies 94

Nuggets from my notebook from Friday’s win over Memphis.

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Thunder 95, Mavs 86

Nuggets from my notebook from Wednesday’s win at Dallas.

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Thunder 120, Warriors 109

Observations from the Thunder’s 120-109 victory over Golden State at Oracle Arena on Friday night:

 - John Rohde


Thunder 101, Hornets 91

Nuggets from my notebook from Wednesday’s win over New Orleans.

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By The Numbers: Thunder-Pistons

Numbers to note from Monday’s 99-79 win over the Pistons.

1: Blocked shot by Detroit, tying an opponent low for the Thunder. Dallas also had one block against OKC on Dec. 29.

3: Thunder players with at least 20 points: James Harden, Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant. It’s the second time the Thunder has had three 20-point scorers. OKC is 2-0 in those games.

5: Blocks by Serge Ibaka, tying his season-high just one game after establishing it at New Jersey. Led by Ibaka, the Thunder recorded 10 blocks, the fourth time this season OKC has had at least 10.

6: Technical fouls called on Kendrick Perkins this season after picking up one late in the first half Monday. Perk is now seven away from an automatic one-game suspension.

7: 3-pointers made by the Thunder. OKC made just eight (on 36 attempts) in its previous two games combined.

10: Rebounds by Ibaka, a game-high. Over his past three games, Ibaka now has 29 rebounds.

14: Free throws attempted by the Thunder, a season-low. The previous low came against Phoenix on Dec. 31. Detroit attempted 13 more than Oklahoma City.

16.7: Percent shooting by the Pistons in the first quarter. Detroit was 3-for-18 in the period and missed 15 of its final 17 shots in the frame.

21: Assists by the Thunder, the first time in eight games that OKC has handed out at least 20 helpers.

24: Points scored by Harden, who is now averaging 19.8 points on 55.4 percent shooting in eight home games.

30: Team-high minutes played by Westbrook. Ibaka was the only starter to log a single second in the fourth quarter. His 2 minutes, 5 seconds of action in the final period kept the Thunder from extending its count of games in which all five starters could sit for the entire fourth to five.

32: Biggest lead for the Thunder, the largest of the season. The previous high was 31, set against New York on Jan. 14.

33: Pistons points at halftime, a new opponent low for the Thunder in any half. OKC set the previous low one game earlier, when the Thunder held the Nets to 35 first-half points.

34.1: Percent shooting by the Pistons. It became the second lowest field goal percentage by a Thunder opponent this season. New Jersey’s 31 percent, set on Saturday, is the low mark.

53.2: Percent shooting by the Thunder. It was the fifth time this season that the Thunder has connected on at least 50 percent of its shots.

18,203: Announced attendance inside Chesapeake Energy Arena, a sellout. It was the eight sellout in as many home games. If Thunder fans can sellout a Monday night game against the Pistons, it looks like the entire season will be sold out.

-DM-


Thunder 99, Pistons 79

Nuggets from my notebook from Monday’s win over Detroit.


Monday Morning Mailbag

Are Thunder fans beginning to bail on Serge Ibaka?

It’s been a long time, but it’s time we bring back the old mailbag.

Since our last edition, the Thunder has become the best team in the Western Conference, Russell Westbrook has signed a lengthy contract extension and, oh yeah, there was this really annoying thing called the NBA lockout.

But in this week’s mailbag, we talk Serge Ibaka, Reggie Jackson and Kevin Love on the Thunder. Feel free to join the conversation next week if you like.

What’s your thoughts on Serge?  He finished so strongly last year (around 12 points, 10 rebs and 3 blocks the last couple months I believe) and yet, it doesn’t look like any of that has carried over into this season.  Is he just a victim of the short training camp?  Did he play over his head last year?  Is there anything you see that leads you to believe he’s going to revert back to what he was doing at the end of last season?  The Thunder really need his rebounding.  Take care! — Matthew R.

Matthew, unfortunately Serge appears to have been a victim of hype and expectations. Although he’s coming around (a season-high five blocks in his last game and 19 boards in his last two games), he clearly hasn’t been the same dominant defensive presence he was last year. But maybe it just looks worse because we all anticipated he’d come back so much better. Some, as early as two seasons ago, even threw his name out as a dark-horse Defensive Player of the Year candidate. I think Serge will be fine. It’s important to remember that Ibaka still hasn’t been a starter for a full season. He’s started 60 career games. That fact, coupled with him still being just 22, suggests he’ll figure things out and continue to develop nicely. But his flaws have  become obvious, and when I see them I get the sense that his ceiling simply isn’t as high as we once thought.

I love Harden and like Ibaka, but if there is any chance we can’t sign both, is there any chance we could package both of them for Love?  The money is right pre- Love extension.  We could max him out to have arguably the best 3 man combo in league.  He rebounds like a demon (imagine Perkins helping with box out), is a great post threat, and passes well.  This would allow us to work pick and roll like never before.  Opposing teams would have fits trying to guard Westbrook and Durant if they actually had to worry about a post threat.  Also on radar as post threats for lesser compensation:  Greg Monroe and R Hibbert. — Todd B.

Todd, there’s a really good chance of that happening — if this were NBA 2K. In real life, fuggedaboutit! This ain’t a fantasy league. Love is one of the best power forward’s in the game. Minnesota isn’t going to trade him unless it absolutely has to. And the Thunder isn’t trading James Harden for him. That’s a deal neither team would have any interest in. Greg Monroe and Roy Hibbert? Dream on, my friend. They’re close to untouchable, too. Everyone would love to see a post scorer and dominant rebounding big man on the Thunder. But that’s beyond realistic at this point. Just be happy with the two All-Stars currently in the stable and the nice complement of role players that surround them. There are about 27 other teams that would give up everything to trade rosters with the Thunder. So you can bet the Thunder realizes what it has and isn’t in a rush to make a move. For that reason, I wouldn’t anticipate much turnover over the next few seasons. It looks like Perk and Ibaka are here to stay, assuming Ibaka gets extended of course.

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By The Numbers: Thunder-Nets

Numbers to note from Saturday’s 84-74 win at New Jersey.

4: Missed free throws by Kevin Durant. He was 2-of-6 on the night. In his previous six games, Durant had made 46 of 48 from the stripe.

5: Blocked shots by Serge Ibaka, a season-high. Ibaka helped the Thunder record 10 blocked shots, the third time this season that the Thunder has had at least 10 swats. Ibaka also had nine rebounds, giving him 19 boards in the past two games. Ibaka had pulled down only 19 rebounds in his previous four games prior to the last two.

8: Rebounds by guard Thabo Sefolosha, a season-high.

9: Rebounds by James Harden, a career-high. Harden also scored 16 points on 5-for-9 shooting, salvaging something of the three-game road trip. In the first two games, Harden averaged just nine points on 31.2 percent shooting.

12: Turnovers by Durant in his last two games. KD had five against the Nets after seven at Washington.

13: Percent shooting from 3-point range by New Jersey. The Nets were just 3-for-23.

14: Points scored by Nets guard Deron Williams on 5-for-18 shooting. Williams missed all six of his 3-point attempts and had six assists and three turnovers in 39 minutes.

16: Offensive rebounds by the Nets. Oklahoma City out-rebounded New Jersey 55-46 but got beat by two on the offensive end. The Nets’ total on the offensive end raised the Thunder’s league-worst opponent offensive rebounds to 13.5 per game.

17: Biggest lead by the Thunder. OKC led for good after taking a 13-12 lead with 4:49 left in the opening period.

19: Turnovers by the Thunder. The Nets scored only 10 points off those giveaways. But OKC had just 13 assists. It was the sixth time the Thunder has finished a game with more turnovers than assists.

22: Points off turnovers for the Thunder. OKC had 18 points on 12 Nets turnovers by halftime alone.

31: Percent shooting by New Jersey, an opponent low for the Thunder.

35: Halftime points by the Nets, an opponent low for any half this season by the Thunder.

74: Points scored by the Nets, an opponent low for the Thunder this season. In the previous game, the Thunder allowed Washington to score 105 points, which set an opponent season high.

84: Points scored by the Thunder, a season-low. The previous low by OKC was 87 at Dallas on Jan. 2.

-DM-


Thunder 84, Nets 74

Nuggets from my notebook from Saturday’s win at New Jersey.

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Wizards 105, Thunder 102

Nuggets from my notebook from Wednesday’s loss at Washington.