The Oklahoman

THUNDER MAILBAG

- To make future editions of the mailbag, email questions to jlorenzi@oklahoman.com or message him on Twitter @jxlorenzi.

In this edition of the Thunder mailbag, we take a look a which under-the-radar veterans could stick with OKC for the next few seasons.

@OKCobstina­cy: The Thunder have 4 contributi­ng bench guys on CRIMINALLY under-market, non-rookie deals for the next 1-2 seasons: Aaron Wiggins, Isaiah Joe, Kenrich Williams, Vasilije Micic. If you had to choose 2 to keep and 2 to trade, who would it be and why?

Sam Presti slimmed down my choices here.

But for what it's worth, we were on the same wavelength. I didn't anticipate that Vasilije Micic would be included in a three-player deal at the deadline, but he'd have been one of the two players I let walk here. Look, I get it. Micic has already helped turn things up in Charlotte, dropping 18 points and nine assists in his Hornets debut — a necessary developmen­t for an unserious developmen­tal program. The flare, the vision, the passing chops. The traditiona­l point guard qualities that helped steer the Jalen Williams-led lineups in January.

Micic can be a solid player in this league. But perhaps none of the other three names will ever have the potential to be targeted defensivel­y as the 6-foot-3 Serbian guard. His agility isn't quite there. The same burst and strength he lacks as a driver resurfaces as a defender. Not only is he limited positional­ly, but he's limited to certain matchups. There's an understand­able tradeoff with Micic. Despite the comfortabl­e, steady change of offensive pace, his deficienci­es probably would've outweighed his redeemable traits in the postseason.

Who would I keep? At this point, probably Aaron Wiggins and Isaiah Joe. No shade to Kenrich Williams. He's a foundation­al piece, an uncle for a team of young 20-somethings, the Thunder's muscle and likely protector of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's theoretica­l 60point game ball.

It's difficult to cut him loose here, but there's a notable age gap between Williams and the others in question, and his mold probably isn't as pluggable or useful as the other two with OKC's current makeup. Kenrich Williams, the pseudo center, was a fine tweak a season ago. But it feels like his best use comes as a wing/combo-forward defender with less pressure as an inside presence.

There are few high-volume, uber-efficient shooters quite like Isaiah Joe. The halfcourt line introduces his hot zones. He hardly needs a window of breathing room before chucking. His variety of shots — off-balance, moving, off-the-dribble — rarely draw any surprise.

Joe is averaging 8.4 points, knocking down two 3-pointers a game on 4.7 attempts while shooting 42.8% from deep. His 756 minutes with Gilgeous-Alexander have made for a 12.59 net rating. He's been SGA's guiding light through a sea of double teams this season.

His gravity and practicali­ty next to OKC's franchise play--er alone have made him a diamond of an asset. Corralling rebounds that shouldn't belong to him and competing defensivel­y are throwins.

Wiggins has been one of the Thunder's better role players. Gilgeous-Alexander called him a Swiss Army knife. Mark Daigneault said he's as good of a system player as the Thunder has. And after years of trying to carve a fit, the 6-5 wing is becoming a fixture in OKC's lineup.

He's impressed as a cutter. He's timely, developing this intangible element of almost always being in the right place at the right time. He's shooting a scorching 51.9% from 3, albeit on 1.9 attempts per game in his 14.3 minutes. Per Synergy, he's averaging 1.28 points per possession on spot-ups, good enough for the 92nd percentile.

Again, he's just another player that slots well next to Gilgeous-Alexander (and Jalen Williams), which is priority No. 1 these days. Sure, there are probably upgrades for him on the market. But I don't know how many teams are getting this kind of value out of a bottom-10 draft pick.

 ?? BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Thunder guard Isaiah Joe is averaging 8.5 points this season, making 42.7% of his 3-point attempts.
BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN Thunder guard Isaiah Joe is averaging 8.5 points this season, making 42.7% of his 3-point attempts.

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