Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Thunder rolls to biggest win of the season, 114-93 over Utah

Three sets of numbers: 48-26, 54.9-42.2 and 38-27. That's the difference in rebounding, field goal percentage and free throw attempts for tonight's game against Utah, all in favor of Oklahoma City. In other words, that's the difference in the game.

The Thunder still turned the ball over 19 times to the Jazz's nine, but OKC (7-33) made up for it on the glass, at the free throw line and by shooting extremely well. Kevin Durant had *just* 21 points, and 10 of it came from the free throw line. On top of getting to the line 38 times, the Thunder hit 33 free shots for a clip of about 87 percent. That's huge. KD also had nine rebounds, continuing this very good trend of scoring and rebounding. But he did turn it over six more times himself, which is still an area of concern.

Though the Jazz (23-16) scored 25 points off the 19 OKC turns, I think some turnovers are necessary for this team to be successful on the offensive end. And what I mean by that is that there are a lot of risk takers and instead of playing tight, half-court offense, the Thunder likes to run, make tight passes and score on the fly. So obviously while you want to cut down on the freebies, you don't want to lose what's making you a solid offensive team, if that makes sense.

There's nice things to take out of this one. First, this is Oklahoma City's biggest win of the year in two ways: 1) In terms of margin, 21 points is the most OKC has won by and 2) This is the first plus-.500 team the Thunder has beaten this year. Second, that makes the Thunder 4-4 in its last eight and 3) OKC outscored Utah 64-45 in the second half after leading by just two at the break. That's the way to beat up a division rival at home.

But look at the +/- for OKC's starters: +21, +17, +22, +20, +21. The three did their work. Russell Westbrook had 22, KD had the previously mentioned 21 and Jeff Green had 23. Chip in with Nenad Krstic playing his best game with 14 and 11 and Nick Collison continuing to play well with 13 and 11 and you've got a certain recipe for a win. And again, Westbrook played an excellent game, showcasing why he may actually win Rookie of the Year -- on top of a solid scoring game, he dished seven assists and picked up three steals. He's totally under control and looks like everything has slowed down for him. He runs the break and instead of driving hell-bent to the bucket, he pulls up and hits a jumper or drops a beautiful pass to Collison. He's really getting it and it's really making a difference.

Of course, it has to be acknowledged that this Utah team was missing Paul Milsap, Carlos Boozer and C.J. Miles, but still a win over a potential playoff team is still a big win. OKC has been getting closer and closer to this type of win and tonight, got over the hump. For whatever reason, the Jazz are awesome at home and not so awesome on the road. This win is going to do big things for the Thunder's confidence. The Jazz may have been without some of their best players but they were still 23-15 and this is still the best win OKC has. I just wish this was the Thunder team that tipped off at the Ford Center Oct. 29. I truly think we'd be looking at a near .500 club if they had played like this to start with.

I haven't said anything about Brian Davis in a while, but I have to point this out. During the second quarter, the camera flashed over to Desmond Mason and Kyle Weaver sitting by each other on the bench and Davis said confidently, "The Master and the Pupil." Huh? Who's the Master? Dez? And what exactly is he a master of? Bad shooting? That was just a weird moment among many nightly weird moments when Brian Davis is involved. If we give him 30 more years of this, he'll probably reach "lovable, crazy-man" status like Bob Barry, where he can say anything and we all just say, "That's Brian for you." But he hasn't been here 30 years so right now it's kind of not so lovable.

One note to point out: Chucky Atkins was an official Trillionaire tonight. He played one minute and didn't notch anything -- no points, no fouls, no assists, no nothing. So his stat line looks like: 1-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0. Congrats Chucky. You earned it.

Game one of the three-game stand is down and next up is the Pistons Friday night. Of course, we all remember how Allen Iverson nipped OKC with a runner beating the Thunder 90-88 a few weeks ago. It would be nice to get a little revenge against a second straight opponent, start a winning streak and get to .500 for 2009.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

hey Royce... you gotta hear this... a friend of mine goes to the game with me tonight... first Thunder game... right?... He looks over in the late 3rd or early 4th and says...

"Man... this is kind of boring... they're winning by so much they've got it in the bag"...

I laughed and said... "maybe you should have watched some of those 33 it took to get here"...

good game...

Royce Young said...

Ha, that's great. Hopefully, there's a lot more "boring" games in our future.

Anonymous said...

WOW...didnt see this one coming at all! Great win!

The improvement in play seems to have come from a combination of the induction of scotty brooks, learning from one of the many close games we have lost this season, role players becoming confident that the trio of KD, Westy and J Green will produce for them night in night out and just an overall maturation and understanding of our young team on how to win games at this level.

I have to say that people keep making the comparison of Russ and D wade but i dont think Russ quite has that silky touch and feel that D wade has....yet. This isnt a bad thing but he definetly plays a game built on a more bullish type style at the moment.

I think a more apt comparison is a bigger, stronger and more efficient version of monta ellis.

On a different note, my praise and respect for Sam Presti as a Gm just continues to rise. At first i thought the acquisition of Nenad was just one of those "patch the hole" type solutions which will continue not to suffice for team success. However with Krstic's play thus far has led me to believe Presti and his team have put alot of thought into the move and its paid off!

Also taking Westy at #4 in the draft was a bold but excellent decision especially when he was projected to go anywhere from 4 to 12 bcause of his still raw game but vast potential.
Put all this together with the fact that we now have about 10 billion picks over the next couple of years in the draft and have Serge the athletic freak developing overseas for the next few years and times are becoming exciting!!!

On a side note, as a topic of discussion with the college season continuing to evolve, i know Griffin is from Oklahoma and will probably win national player of the year, but hypothetically would we consider taking Greg Monroe if we have the chance over Griffin?

I see Monroe as being an Al Jefferson type player but with more range (can extend out to three...masssssssive potential!). Griffin on the other hand i would say is a rich mans version of carlos boozer because of his crazy athleticism.

Its just interesting to discuss because Griffin plays such a similar style to Beasley in college ball (being bigger, stronger, more athletic) and Beasley has struggled initially in the pros.

I would still take Griffin at the moment obviously because i think we need some beasty attitude and because he is just such a great player but ive got Monroe looming very large on my radar aswell.

Anonymous said...

What a blast watching the Thunder dismantle the Jazz last night.

Krstic was a great pick up by Presti. We filled a need without giving up any assets. Great job.

My favorite stat was from my favorite player...Westbrook 7/1 - a/to...