50-40 combo from 1983 revisited

Denver's Alex English had 47 points the same night teammate Kiki Vandeweghe scored 51.

          When Sunday night’s historic game at Chesapeake Energy Arena finally was over, a safe assumption quickly was confirmed as fact: No team in NBA history had ever had a player score 50-plus, another player score 40-plus and a third player register a triple-double, all in the same game.

          The Thunder’s communications staff was in perpetual contact with the Elias Sports Bureau, asking the last time such-and-such happened – if ever.

          This much I knew. The first two parts of OKC’s three-headed achievement had been done before. Two players from the same team had scored 50-plus and 40-plus. It happened Dec. 13, 1983, and I was there as a 23-year-old NBA beat writer covering the Denver-Detroit game for the Colorado Springs Sun. Durant and Westbrook were five years away from being born, and Ibaka was six.

          A crowd of just 9,655 was on hand at McNichols Sports Arena as Detroit beat Denver 186-184 in triple-overtime that night. Some fans actually left early, perhaps from exhaustion, or because their beer buzz had worn off when sales were cut off in the fourth quarter.

         This game was vintage Doug Moe, the Nuggets coach who chose to beat teams by outscoring them, not defending them. The entire NBA was offensive-minded.

         Denver led the league in scoring at 123.7 points per game that season. Detroit, even with “Bad Boys” members Bill Laimbeer and Isiah Thomas on its roster, was third in scoring at 117.1 per.

          Kiki Vandeweghe had 51 points and was 21 for 29 from the field that night. Teammate Alex English added 47 points (18-for 30 from the field), 12 rebounds and seven assists. Dan Issel had a ho-hum 28 points. For the Pistons, Thomas had 47 points and 17 assists, John Long had 41 points and shot 18 for 25 from the field. Kelly Tripuka had 35 points.

          The score was tied at 74 at halftime, at 145 at the end of regulation, at 159 through the first OT and at 171 through the second OT. The teams combined for 113 rebounds, an NBA record 93 assists and shot 142 for 256 from the field (.566).

          Though the Durant-Westbrook-Ibaka combination was truly impressive, the 1983 contest was mayhem up and down both rosters. It was a night that will never be matched.

          A team having a 50-plus, 40-plus and triple-double on the same night also might never happen again, unless it’s done by the same Thunder trio.


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


Clippers 112, Thunder 100

Some observations from the Thunder’s 112-100 loss against the Los Angeles Clippers on Monday night at Staples Center:

- JOHN ROHDE

 


Thunder 120, Warriors 109

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

 - John Rohde


Now Kevin Durant is asking the questions

Prior to Friday night’s game against Golden State, Thunder All-Star Kevin Durant approached television commentator Matt Steinmetz of CSNBAYAREA.COM and asked some questions about the alleged controversy between Durant and teammate Russell Westbrook.

Here is what transpired, according to Steinmetz.

 


Nick Collison goes all GQ

Thunder reserve forward Nick Collison will be writing blogs for GQ.com throughout the 2011-12 season. He has posted two entries so far. The second appeared four days ago. Much like on the basketball court, Collison’s work for GQ has been superb.

You can find Collison’s work at “Balls Out” here. Here is the opening paragraph for his Jan. 20 entry. As you can see, Collison did not “bury the lead.” Great stuff.

I’m writing this while sitting on a plane after a game. I just finished eating some delicious teriyaki chicken wings and drinking an Arnold Palmer. My seat is comfortable and covered in leather. I have about four feet of legroom between my seat and our shooting guard James Harden, who is sitting at a hardwood table playing cards with three other guys. I have wi-fi, and I’m listening to the new Roots album. The previous ninety minutes were spent finishing off a win, sitting for ten minutes in a portable cold tub (think: inflatable kiddie pool with 50 degree water), then a shower, a quick security screening, a short bus ride, and a walk onto one of the chartered Delta Planes we always fly on. A U-Haul truck filled with the bags of personal stuff and equipment of our 42-person traveling party has already been loaded into the belly of the Airbus 319 that comfortably takes us to the next city. (Our travel party includes fifteen players, seven bench coaches, one video guy, and a training staff consisting of two strength coaches, a trainer, a physical therapist, plus two PR guys, an equipment manager and his assistant. The rest of the group includes our general manager and a couple other front office guys, as well as our local TV and radio crew.) When we land we will hop on a bus and head to a beautiful Four Seasons Hotel. Our bags will be delivered to our rooms, which we do not have to share with a roommate.

This is how NBA teams travel, and it is awesome.”


Thunder still not best in West

NBA on TNT crew of Shaquille O'Neal, Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith and Charles Barkley.

On Monday night on TNT, the Thunder beat the Boston Celtics for the third straight year inside TD Garden. For more than two hours, the telecast crew of Kevin Harlan, Mike Fratello, Chris Webber and David Aldridge heaped praise upon the Thunder, which has the NBA’s best record at 12-2 after its 97-88 victory at Boston. But when TNT joined its studio crew of Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Shaquille O’Neal outside Staples Center in Los Angeles, the Thunder quickly played second fiddle again.

Johnson asked the panel to pick a series winner between the Los Angeles Lakers and Thunder right now and all three without hesitation picked LA. The Lakers are too big and Kobe Bryant is simply too good for OKC to win.

LA then went out and nipped Dallas 73-70 on a 3-pointer from Derek Fisher with 3.1 seconds left. The Lakers scored seven total points in the third quarter, shot 38.2 percent from the field, shot 10 percent from 3-point range (1 for 10) and Bryant went 7 for 22 from the field and finished with 14 points.

Some excerpts from the TNT experts:

Webber on Thunder forward Serge Ibaka: “He is athletic, smart defensively. He’s a great shot blocker and a great inside presence.”

Fratello on Thunder head coach Scott Brooks: “He really knows his players and he knows which guys to let grow and develop and which ones he can get on a little bit harder.  He wants players to grow and experience this learning process and by the way, they’re winning a lot of games in this process.”

Webber on Thunder sixth man James Harden: “The best teams that I played against had role players that were superstars.  They took their role seriously and they knew the importance of their role to the team.  (Harden) has embraced his role (as sixth man) and has made sure that the bench is better for that.”

Smith on point guards Rajon Rondo of the Celtics and OKC’s Russell Westbrook: ”They are the only two teams that have guards, besides (Chicago’s) Derrick Rose, that consistently get into the paint.”

Fratello on Thunder forward Kevin Durant: “He is a very unselfish player.  He has the God-given ability to score the basketball whenever he wants to. He understands the team aspect of the game and is a willing passer.”

Barkley’s predictions on the best teams in the Western Conference: “The Portland Trail Blazers and the Denver Nuggets are the two best teams I have seen in the West.”

O’Neal on the Thunder being 12-2: “They’ve had an easy schedule.”

As you can see from ESPNstats, the Thunder ranks No. 1 in the NBA in RPI and No. 8 in strength of schedule. O’Neal is partically right in that OKC often has played teams not at full strength such as San Antonio (no Manu Ginobili), New York (Carmelo Anthony), Memphis (Zach Randolph, Darrell Arthur) and New Orleans (Eric Gordon and Trevor Ariza), but other teams also have enjoyed the same benefit. In addition, the Thunder also swept its back-to-back-to-back, won five games in six days and is on a seven-game winning streak.


Thunder 100, Grizzlies 95

           Tidbits from the Thunder’s 100-95 victory over the Memphis Grizzlies on Tuesday night inside FedExForum:

 - John Rohde


Special matchups for Brooks and Presti

Thunder coach Scott Brooks leads the Houston Rockets out of the tunnel in the mid-1990s. Over his left shoulder is former Rockets teammate Matt Bullard.

Thunder coach Scott Brooks admits “it’s always special” to face the Houston Rockets, which is what OKC just did with back-to-back victories on Friday and Saturday night.
Brooks played 2 1/2 seasons for the Rockets from 1992-95. He won a world championship with Houston in 1994 and would have been part of the Rockets’ second straight title had he not been traded at halftime on the same day as the NBA trade deadline. Brooks played 183 total games with the Rockets and never started one game.

Sam Presti in 2007, his first season as general manager for the Seattle SuperSonics.

On Sunday, when the Thunder faces the San Antonio Spurs at 6 p.m. inisde Chesapeake Energy Arena, it will be Sam Presti’s turn to face an old friend.

The Thunder general manager got his NBA start as a summer intern with the Spurs in 2000. He was promoted to special assistant in the summer of 2001 after leaving Emerson College in Concord, Mass., as that school’s first-ever Rhodes Scholar nominee. He served as the Spurs’ assistant general manager from 2005-07.

Presti then became general manager of the Seattle SuperSonics in 2007 at the age of 32 and already is considered among the league’s premier GMs. He promoted Brooks from assistant coach to interim head coach just 13 games into the franchise’s first season in Oklahoma City after relocatiing from Seattle in 2008.

As Brooks spoke of his days with the Rockets, standing to his left was former Houston forward Matt Bullard, now a television analyst with the Rockets. Brooks and Bullard were teammates in Houston from 1992-94.

Brooks still looks back on those days fondly, as you might expect given the Rockets’ tremendous success. “We were the first team to ever win a championship in a major sport in Houston,” Brooks said. “The fans were terrific. They supported us and those were great times playing games in The Summit (which is now Lakewood Church).”

One of Brooks’ teammates in Houston was Hall of Fame center Hakeem “The Dream” Olajuwon, whom Brooks frequently refers to when discussing the best who ever played.

Center Hakeem Olajuwon led the Houston Rockets to two world titles.

Hakeem was the best on both ends (offense and defense) for five straight years,” Brooks said. “Olajuwon at that time, those two or three years I played there, he was at a level that we didn’t see and you might not ever see again. The guy never missed a shot in the fourth quarter. He made free throws, he made the right plays. He blocked everybody’s shot and he made guys like Bullard and myself lucky to play in the NBA.”

“And that’s the truth,” Bullard said. “We were just living with ‘The Dream.’ ”

Bullard playfully suggested it was he and Brooks who helped Olajuwon block all those shots by “funneling” the players they were guarding toward the basket.