Thunder 101, Jazz 87

Scott Brooks will coach the Western Conference All-Stars.

 

Observations from the Thunder’s 101-87 victory at Utah on Friday night. Forgive the delay in posting. Massive wireless issues for me in the Great Salt Lake:

Darnell Mayberry returns in this slot on Tuesday. Commence cheering.

- JOHN ROHDE


Kings 106, Thunder 101

 

The Thunder's game at Sacramento on Thursday essentially was "Chris Webber Night" on TNT and the Kings responded with a 106-101 victory over OKC. Reggie Miller looks on as Webber receives a commemorative Kings "black" jersey.

 

Some thoughts on the Thunder’s 106-101 loss at Sacramento on Thursday night at Power Balance Pavilion:

- John Rohde


Scott Brooks On The Brink Of Coaching West All-Stars

Thunder coach Scott Brooks (left) is one win away from coaching the Western Conference All-Star team. Will James Harden be selected as one of his reserves?

With the Los Angeles Clippers laying an egg at Cleveland last night, Thunder coach Scott Brooks moved one step closer to being named the coach of the Western Conference All-Star team, our man John Rohde notes.

    With the Los Angeles Clippers losing 99-92 at Cleveland on Wednesday night, Scott Brooks’ magic number to become the Western Conference All-Star coach is down to one.

One more victory by the Thunder between Thursday and next Wednesday clinches the best record by the league’s Feb. 15 cutoff date. The coach with the best winning percentage in each conference at that time gets to coach his conference at the NBA All-Star Game in Orlando on Feb. 26.

The best record Clippers coach Vinny Del Negro can have is 19-8. (.704). The best record San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich can have is 21-9 (.700). With one more victory, the worst record Brooks can have is 21-8 (.724).

Nothing is guaranteed, of course. But this is as close to a sure thing as you’ll find. The Thunder has three cracks at notching one more win before Feb.1 5, starting with tonight’s game at Sacramento. And Oklahoma City has had only one three-game losing streak in its past 107 games. Additionally, the Kings, at 9-16, are the second worst team in the Western Conference. Sacramento has given up 100.6 points per game, the third most in the league, and has been outscored by an average margin of 8.8 points, the NBA’s fourth worst discrepancy.

The next two games will be a home-and-home set against Utah, with the Thunder playing in Salt Lake City on Friday before hosting the Jazz on Tuesday. In that second meeting, the Thunder will be on three days rest, while the Utah will be playing its third game in three nights, all of them on the road.

While it’d be premature to pop the champagne and congratulate Brooks at this point, the mere fact that he’s on the brink of earning this honor is a testament to the job he’s done in OKC. He took a team that was 1-12 and headed nowhere fast and helped to turn it into a perennial 50-win club. He’s helped develop two All-Stars (and maybe three if James Harden joins Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook in Orlando as a reserve) . He’s won a Coach of the Year award. And he’s led his team to the Western Conference Finals.

Now, Oklahoma City has the best record in the league at 20-5. With that, central Florida is officially under a Thunderstorm watch for All-Star Weekend.

-DM-

 


Thunder 119, Warriors 116

Nuggets from my notebook from Tuesday’s win at Golden State.

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NBA Says Kevin Durant Basket Shouldn’t Have Counted

The NBA has released a statement saying that Kevin Durant’s basket with six seconds remaining in regulation of last night’s 111-107 Thunder win at Portland should not have counted. Durant was awarded two points when an official ruled that a blocked shot by LaMarcus Aldridge was goaltending.

Here’s a better look.

With six seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, the Blazers’ LaMarcus Aldridge was called for goaltending on a shot attempted by the Thunder’s Kevin Durant. With the benefit of slow motion replay following the game, it has been determined that Aldridge made contact with the ball just before the ball hit the backboard. Therefore, this should have been ruled a good block and goaltending was the incorrect call. (As determined by the NBA’s Competition Committee, referees may not use instant replay on goaltending calls.)”

-DM-


By The Numbers: Thunder-Blazers

Numbers to note from Monday’s 111-107 overtime win at Portland.

1: Free throw attempt by Kevin Durant. It was his least amount of foul shots in a regular season game since April 13, 2011, when he played just 23 minutes in the season finale against Milwaukee.

2: 3-pointers made by Durant on eight attempts. It continues a bit of a slump from deep for Durant. In four February games, KD is now 4-for-21 (19.3 percent) from beyond the arc. In 15 January games, he was 21-for-67 from 3 (31.3 percent).

4: Overtime points scored by the Blazers. The Thunder held Portland to 1-for-9 shooting in the extra session.

7: Rebounds for KD. By finishing three shy of double digits, Durant’s streak of double-doubles ended at five games.

13: Lead changes Monday night. The two teams also exchanged the lead 13 times.

19: Points scored by James Harden…on the road! Harden was 6-for-12 from the field, the second time in as many road games that he’s shot exactly 50 percent. He’s just 1-for-8 from 3 in those games. But baby steps are better than no steps.

20: Turnovers by the Thunder. OKC had just 17 assists, marking the ninth time in 24 games that the Thunder has finished with more turnovers than assists.

23: Thunder points off Blazers turnovers. Portland committed just 13 turnovers, but the Thunder scored six more points off seven fewer Portland turnovers.

24: Wins the Thunder has after losses over the past two seasons. OKC is 4-1 after a loss this season and 24-7 after a loss including last season.

33: Shot attempts by Durant, a new career-high. Durant needed all 33 shots to net his 33 points. The most shots Durant had previously attempted was 31 in a home loss to San Antonio on Jan. 13, 2010. When you think about how great of a scorer KD is, it’s kind of amazing that he’s attempted at least 30 shots only twice, huh?

39: Points scored by Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge. The soon-to-be All-Star now has two of the top three individual scoring performances against the Thunder this season. Tony Parker leads the pack with 42. Aldridge also scored 30 against the Thunder on Jan. 3. L.A. was 0-for-3 in overtime, though.

45: Minutes played by Durant, a season-high. Not exactly the way you’d like to see him start a back-to-back set.

59: Rebounds by the Thunder. Oklahoma City put together its best rebounding game this season, out-rebounding the Blazers by 20, including an 18-15 advantage on the offensive end. Serge Ibaka had a season-high 13 rebounds, two shy of tying his career high. Kendrick Perkins gobbled up 10 boards, only the second time he’s pulled down at least 10 rebounds. Nazr Mohammed pulled down seven boards, tying his season high. Russell Westbrook had a season-high 11 rebounds.

-DM-


Thunder 111, Blazers 107

Nuggets from my notebook from Monday’s win at Portland.


By The Numbers: Thunder-Spurs

Numbers to note from Saturday’s 107-96 loss at San Antonio.

11: Rebounds by Kevin Durant. Coupled with his team-high 22 points, Durant registered his fifth straight double-double and his 10th of the season. Durant’s 11 rebounds raised his team-leading rebounding rate to 8.3 per game, currently 0.7 more than his career high for an entire season.

12: Made 3-pointers by San Antonio. It was one shy of tying the most a team has made against the Thunder this season. The Los Angeles Clippers made 13 on Jan. 30. Five Spurs players made at least one 3. Three Spurs players made three 3s.

15: Rebounds by Tim Duncan, tying Dwight Howard for the second most rebounds an opposing player has pulled down against the Thunder. New Jersey forward Kris Humphries holds the record with 16.

17: Second-chance points scored by the Spurs. The Thunder scored just seven second-chance points.

19: Points scored by James Harden. The Bearded One made 5-of-10 shots in 30 minutes. In his previous two road games, Harden scored a combined 17 points on 5-for-21 shooting.

24: Largest lead by the Spurs. It’s the most the Thunder has trailed by in any game this season. The previous widest margin was a 22-point lead held by the Clippers on Jan. 30. San Antonio blew open the game in a nine-minute stretch of the third quarter, using a 26-10 run to turn a 59-51 advantage into an 85-61 game.

42: Points scored by Spurs guard Tony Parker. It was the most any player has scored on the Thunder this season. The previous high was 30 by Portland forward LaMarcus Aldridge on Jan. 3. Parker’s scoring by quarter: six, 10, 16, 10.

60.7: Free throw percentage by the Thunder. OKC made just 17 of 28 foul shots to finish with the franchise’s lowest free throw percentage in a game since Dec. 31, 2008, when the Thunder converted just 14-of-28 foul shots (50 percent).

107: Points scored by San Antonio. It was the third time in five games that the Thunder allowed at least 100 points. Oklahoma City is now 3-5 when it allows 100 points or more.

4,477: Career assists by Parker, who now is the Spurs’ all-time leader in helpers.

-DM-


Spurs 107, Thunder 96

Nuggets from my notebook from Saturdays loss at San Antonio.


By The Numbers: Thunder-Grizzlies

Numbers to note from Friday’s 101-94 win over Memphis.

1: Assist for the Thunder in the first quarter. It came 61 seconds into the game. Assist No. 2 didn’t come until 6:47 was left in the second quarter. Making matters worse, OKC had six first-quarter turnovers. By comparison, the Grizzlies had eight first-quarter assists against only one turnover.

5: Turnovers by Russell Westbrook. It was the fifth straight game that Westbrook has had at least five turnovers. He now has 89 on the season, a 4.04 average.

9: Technical fouls that have been called on Kendrick Perkins this season. Perk leads the league in techs and is now four shy of an automatic one-game suspension.

10: Rebounds by Kevin Durant. All of them came in the second half.

12: More bench points for the Thunder, which saw its bench score 27 points. Grizzlies reserves combined to shoot 6-for-22.

15: Offensive rebounds for Memphis. The Grizzlies had 10 of those in the first half alone and just one in the fourth quarter. Although the Thunder did a much better job rebounding the ball defensively in the second half, Memphis still racked up 24 second chance points.

17: Fourth quarter points scored by Memphis. The Grizzlies shot just 5-for-18 (27.8 percent) in the final frame

24: Points scored by James Harden. It’s a season-high and two shy of his career-high. It’s the third time this season that Harden has finished with 24.

29: Thunder points off Grizzlies turnovers. Memphis had 19 turnovers. The Thunder, however, turned it over 17 times for 26 Grizzlies points.

30: First quarter points for the Grizzlies. Memphis joined the L.A. Clippers as the only teams to score at least 30 points in the opening period against the Thunder this season.

33: Free throw attempts by the Thunder, 13 more than the Grizzlies.

36: Points scored by Durant. He had 16 of those in the fourth quarter, and 14 of those 16 in the final five minutes. KD finished one point shy of tying his season high.

50: Paint points by the Grizzlies.

-DM-