The Oklahoman

Josh Giddey leads Thunder past Pelicans for 50th win of season

- Thunder Insider

NEW ORLEANS — The poetry didn't come from Sam Presti, who wasn't shy in penning his piece when the Thunder turned the page on its previous era. Or Mark Daigneault, OKC's quick-witted, 38-year-old coach who often flexes his sarcastic muscles.

The ink was spilled by the Thunder's young core Tuesday night. On the same night it was stripped of a 20-point lead like a gold chain, forced to wrestle it back in a 119-112 triumph in New Orleans, OKC tallied its 50th win of the season.

Only these Thunder could write such a poetic storyline; It finished a wild, anxiety-inducing game with the serenity of a poise that toggled in and out of its grasp.

So much of its season has been unpredicta­ble and yet understand­able. Pummeling good teams, falling to a few bad teams, leading the league in comeback wins from double-digit deficits, watching vast leads evaporate before sitting up in its seat.

OKC played a dangerous game on Tuesday and won. Again. And perhaps, by now, nothing can show its young core how the dice rolls quite like games of Tuesday's nature. Not Daigneault, not anyone but the whims and woes of the NBA's long season.

"In 82 games, you're just gonna get such a diverse sample of things and you're going to have to play a lot of different types of games,” Daigneault said. ‘You're gonna play with leads, you're gonna play from behind. We'd like to play with leads as much as possible and we'd like to hold leads as much as possible. … But you have to be able to handle a lot of different situations and competitio­n, and I thought our guys just showed great toughness in a pretty hostile environmen­t."

The Thunder got that lead playing the basketball that's defined its season. By sliding defensivel­y and holding the Pelicans to a first-half stretch in which it shot 2 for 11 from deep. Jalen Williams did a stepback so filthy it sent his defender flying out of the frame.

Williams and friends wrapped up

Zion Williamson (29 points & 10 assists) as well as they could. Williamson, the world's only living bowling ball, spun into his own space and creases in the defense, knocking OKC's shell down pin by pin. But the Thunder managed to make Williamson commit four turnovers in the second quarter. When Daigneault's challenge stole a bucket from him and made Bill Kennedy public enemy No. 1 in New Orleans, the lead ballooned.

Giddey blossomed, hitting the Pels in the mouth with a shotmaking display unlike he's dealt anyone. An eight-point burst to open, a nine-point third quarter without missing a shot. Giddey gave a consistent answer Tuesday. OKC needed one.

After CJ McCollum hit 3 after 3 in an explosive run, OKC's offense failed to match, with late-clock blunders any anything but responses for a scorching Pelican quarter.

With three minutes remaining, New Orleans had an inaudible building, playoff-level momentum after a series of unfathomab­le sequences, and a fivepoint lead.

Then the Thunder closed the game on a 12-0 run, the kind of switch it has flipped on almost by command this season — and perhaps more times than it'd like.

“I wouldn't say (we're) comfortabl­e with it,” said Williams, who scored six of his 26 points inside the final three minutes. “I think we just understand basketball is a game of runs. … we're gonna be on the verge of some of them. We're gonna be on the other end. It's just basketball.”

Surviving 30-point droughts, knocking off contenders. Perhaps no team has found such solace in its range of results. Then again, how many teams have floated to the surface, clutching to 50 wins with room for 60, given the Thunder's circumstan­ces?

Giddey helps carry the offensive load

Turning a corner in practicali­ty after being used in a series of different ways is one thing. But the way Giddey has played these past two games is something else entirely.

Perhaps it's a tad of variance. But there's also a notable shift in confidence that's helped him stand out to a degree he hadn't this season up to this point.

“Anytime any player sees the ball go in the rim, you start to get confidence and the rim starts to become bigger,” said Giddey, who finished with 25 points, nine rebounds and five 3s. “Those shots start to feel easier.”

Attempts like his push shot, which appeared wacky early in the year but has felt safe in recent weeks, and especially Tuesday. Or his 3-pointers, which sent the Pelicans out of their zone, then into closeouts, then (in part) sent Jonas Valanciuna­s off the floor entirely. His final one, a heartbeat during a dead stretch of OKC offense, felt as bold as any.

It even translated to the other end, a realm with less solutions for Giddey.

“A lot of it's effort,” Giddey said. “I think maybe early in my career, early in the season, it kinda wavered. I let the offensive side impact the defensive side. Just getting out of that habit and playing each possession on its own.”

This version of Giddey, at this point of the season, is an intriguing developmen­t. What parts of this stretch are sustainabl­e for him will be the question. On Tuesday, he was the driving force in pushing back on the Pelicans.

“We don't flinch,” Giddey said.

 ?? MATTHEW HINTON/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Thunder guard Josh Giddey passes next to Pelicans guard Trey Murphy III during the first half on Tuesday night at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans.
MATTHEW HINTON/USA TODAY SPORTS Thunder guard Josh Giddey passes next to Pelicans guard Trey Murphy III during the first half on Tuesday night at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans.
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