Thursday, June 7th, 2012 at 10:03 am  |  116 responses

Post Up: OKC Wins West

Kevin Durant leads the Thunder to the NBA Finals with a 34-point Game 6 against the Spurs.

Thunder 107, Spurs 99 (OKC wins 4-2)

So this is what a superteam looks like.

The Thunder were down 18 in the first half to the Spurs. Fifteen at the half. It didn’t matter. Oklahoma City cordoned off the last vestiges of the old NBA and put it out of its misery last night. They won 107-99. The Thunder are going to the NBA Finals. A bunch of respectful, better young men were wielding the axe.

The best of them all was Kevin Durant, who is now arguably the best player in the NBA. He has all of the tools, the freakish mold, the statlines from the core of the Earth. But now, too, he has splayed out these guts or balls or a careless disregard for his body and his future. It is the final intangible.

He played all 48 minutes because they needed him to, because they were down 18 so quickly, because he’s 23 years old, because that’s what young players tend to do when they want statues of themselves melded into the sidewalk outside of their home arenas. It’s the only way the Thunder could’ve won, so he did it. They won.

The Spurs came out firing like a guy feverishly trying to build a bomb shelter before the world came tumbling down. Stephen Jackson and Tony Parker almost pulled it off by themselves.

San Antonio already led 19-14 when Parker started heaving floaters and distant threes in from everywhere. He scored 9 in a row. It looked like that time in the 2007 NBA Finals when no one could figure him out, when that spin/floater combo was too quick for even the camera guy.

But it’s not the 2007 NBA Finals anymore. That was five years ago. Stephen Jackson can go 6-6 from three—and he did—and nothing’s going to stop it from being five years later.

The Thunder figured that out at halftime. You know those bad Russell Westbrook shots from the elbow that make everyone in Oklahoma City want to set their TVs on fire? Those were all going in. The Spurs held it off initially with Tim Duncan ignoring double teams and bulleting home mini-hooks.

Then things fell apart completely. It doesn’t usually work like this, but it’s readily traceable to one play with 9 minutes left in the third quarter. Tiago Splitter messed up an assignment. Gregg Popovich wanted him doubling Durant on the touch. He didn’t. He doubled a little late and Durant was fouled. So what.

Popovich—bless his heart, one of the best we’ve ever seen—lost it. He threw in DeJuan Blair, who hadn’t played yet, and spent the next two possessions admonishing Splitter and certifiably scaring the living hell out of Boris Diaw and everybody else who wasn’t on the floor. This kind of stuff worked in the late 1800s, when overcoming shame was a badge of honor and Tim Duncan was a rookie. But it sure as hell doesn’t work now.

Greg Popovich was talking to a whole different generation right then. He was talking to a team with Robert Horry and Bruce Bowen on it. They’re all out of Robert Horrys and Bruce Bowens.

The Thunder went on a 9-2 run. San Antonio’s time was up.

James Harden and Westbrook put them away. The superteam that the Heat were supposed to be was quietly and simultaneously assembled in Oklahoma City, fairly and without any creepy, underhanded backroom dealing in clubs throughout Toronto and Miami and Cleveland years beforehand.

Durant and Westbrook and Harden—a true, vicious Big Three if I ever saw one—grew as a team and invited Derek Fisher in to give them a last push out of the cold, dark cellar. He hit a leaner with two minutes left. It gave the Thunder a six-point lead that they never lost. The Thunder became the first Western Conference team since 1998 to make the NBA Finals not named the Mavericks, the Lakers, or, yes, the Spurs.

Now they go either to Boston to prove the same point but louder, or to Miami to prove a much bigger one.

The point, by the way, is this: This is the Thunder’s decade. —Ben Collins

  • Add a Comment
  • Share
  • RSS

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

  • deafballer

    great game!Durant is starting to prove that he can be the most clutch player in the NBA right now in the 4th quarter.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Jahmai

    What a game, what a moment.

  • http://slamonline.com Spaceship Jay

    ‘They got every whistle possible.’- Tim Duncan

  • Da-Meat-Hook

    I called it. All you know-it-all internet GMs were wrong! Yes, especially you nbk and Allepeanut head. I’m going to make another bold prediction. Miami wins tonight and game 7. They take the title in 7 games. I hate the Heat but Stern has already decided.

  • EGOT

    Good job, good effort.

  • http://redoftoothandclaw.ca/ niQ

    I said OKC in 7, I guess 6 will do =)

  • http://slamonline.com Caboose

    Talent beat superior coaching. Brooks made almost no adjustments in the second half and they still won. Thunder may as well go ahead and get fitted for their rings now…and scratch monkey balls and sniff.

  • thegfunk

    I thought what was missing for the Spurs was giving the rock down low to Tim Duncan late in the 4th quarter, the Thunder were not doubling the big man in the post. The spurs panicked and took threes which they died by.

  • robb

    Those kids are relentless. I love how they play without fear, they don’t panic, they just keep attacking and playing hard.

  • RunNGun

    KG vs KD… make it happen, LeChoke!

  • http://redoftoothandclaw.ca/ niQ

    Great write up btw!

  • http://thosefishtacosarethetits.blogspot.com Chris_Griff_3

    But, the way they’re playing, KG & Rondo are a whole ‘nother monster than Duncan and Parker were.

  • Mike From Spain

    I was rooting for the Spurs, but this Thunder team has the makings of greatness…

  • T-Money

    spurs got some tough, tough whistles but that’s not why they lost. i actually think pop blinked first and overreacted. spurs got where they are playing 10 guys and limiting manu and tim’s minutes so they could go all out in the last 6 minutes of a game. all of a sudden, he starts manu plays splitter and blair 1 minute each and chews them out.. bonner gets dropped from the rotation… he goes with a neal-parker backcourt, plays leonard 40 minutes. too many changes. guys were out of their comfort zone. except that dude from port arthur, you know he would go hard.

  • T-Money

    as for tonight’s game, if lebron doesn’t at least go out guns blazing (i.e. taking charge of the offense, shooting at least 25 times), i’ll start to believe the narrative.

  • Da-Meat-Hook

    They’d still beat the Celts at most in 6 games. Celts couldn’t handle those Philly kids running all over. They damn sure can’t handle the Thunders. Kinda like how ya moms couldn’t handle my Thunderous c…..

  • http://slamonline.com Ben Osborne

    Nice write up, Ben!

  • http://www.slamonline.com/online/nba ti-sizzle

    @DMH …unt?

  • fruizm

    For the first time in my life I wanted the Spurs to win…but no.

  • tpathi1

    Congrats to the thunder, with that being said, in no way do I want the Chicago Bulls (my team) to even think about pursuing James Harden. I used to give him praise for his game, but he went over the top after the pregame show…talking about how he studies Ginoblis footwork and game and bla bla, why didn’t he mention he studies the flopping too? The NBA is way too talented these days to have these clowns run around and ‘influence’ calls with acting. The fact that coaches probably teach these guys to do it is despicable, I swear if Harden was a friend of mine, I would tell him straight up to stop that act. On another note, I really do like KD’s game, but does anyone else think that he gets way too many whistles in his favor? I mean the man averaged just as many ft’s in the regular season as Lebron and Howard, and he probably averages more in the playoffs. Not to say that he is not deserving, I just don’t look at KD as a physical ball player. Its like every single foul committed on him gets called, but calls are often missed with the other superstars in the league. KD got the juice but I dont remember him being the MVP. What gives??

  • http://nba.com GP23

    I’ve still got Heat winning it all. So do you think the Spurs missed somebody like Bruce Bowen to shut down KD? I don’t know…

  • BlackStar

    OKC surprised the hell out of me. They are gangsta and have no regard for their elders at all! But think about this – Durant, Westbrook and Harden are 23 and younger while Miami’s Big 3 are 27 and older. If OKC wins this year, it might become exponentially harder for Bron to win a ring because OKC will only get better (provided they can keep the team intact). Durant can turn into MJ and keep a number of today’s stars from winning rings. Crazy …

  • Da-REAL-Meat-Hook

    @ ti-sizzle, that just made my day, Brother!

  • Mike From Spain

    I like KD, I like Harden, I like Ibaka. I don’t like Westbrook much and I can’t stand Perkins. All from the perspective of a sports fan of course… what do I know about them

  • BlackStar

    And the funny thing is that Portland had a chance to select both MJ AND Durant, but went with big men. SMH … Epic failures to the highest degree.

  • http://redoftoothandclaw.ca/ niQ

    @GP23, they’re grooming Kahwi Leonard to be their next Bruce Bowen. He’s still just a rookie though, so he’s got a lot of room to improve.

  • http://www.slamonline.com/online/nba ti-sizzle

    @tpathi1 KD gets calls, because like you said he’s deserving. He’s just a horrible mismatch for anyone and no one can stop him effectively without fouling him a couple of times here and there. His release is so high, it’s normal for people to hit him accidentally when trying to block him. At the same time, he’s too quick for the bigs, so they end up fouling him when trying to keep up with him or trying to get into position before him. He’s a crafty player and most of the time the fouls are obvious enough that they will get called.

  • http://slamonline.com Datkid

    lmao cosign da-meat hook. Miami wins in 7.

  • tpathi1

    @ti-sizzle, i hear you and i get it..but this man has made a career from the ft line and he is only 23 yrs old. He is a mismatch, but isnt guarding D Rose a mismatch, or LBJ? My take is that he gets all the calls because like Kobe, they have skinny frames and when someone fouls them the effects are a lot more clear to the ref. Whereas if your Lebron or D Rose type who are ‘Big’ at their positions, they bounce off that kind of contact and still can put up a quality shot at the rim..most of the time they will miss bc they are getting fouled but the refs only sees the end result which is a shot hitting the rim. I just feel like he gets way too many ticky tack calls, its just too much, like he the next Jordan or something but he hasn’t even won a ring yet. Its been like this for the past two years for him. IDK i just wish the NBA went back to hand checking and no zone defense…KD is re writing the history books with the way the current rules are in place. The pace he is setting right now will have him going down as a top ten of all time.

  • bike

    It did seem like the Spurs unraveled in the 3rd after Pop’s outburst. It was like Pop was saying to himself ‘I see what’s coming and I can’t do a dam^ thing about it’.
    On another note, rumor has it several Portland front office guys were seen weeping in a dark downtown bar.

  • davidR

    that ginobli offensive foul on harden while setting a screen in the 4th was huuuuge.
    it nullified leonards 3, gave manu his 5th foul and sent him to the bench.
    even worse, harden already had his head cocked back BEFORE the contact.
    spurs just couldnt catch a break.
    regardless, good isht to the thunder.

  • http://slamonline Brion

    The clouds and rain feel extra depressing this morning in Seattle.

  • http://www.slamonline.com/online/nba ti-sizzle

    @tpathi1 You’re probably right about how refs perceive fouls on certain physiques. Durant is basically a tall shooting guard, so he gets shooting guard calls. Just for perspective though, while Durant’s career fta is 7.9 per game, Lebron’s career fta is 8.5. Rose’s career fta is 5.0, but I think that has to do with him driving “recklessly” to the rim too often. Speaking of preferential treatment from the refs dwyane wade’s career fta is 8.6. Durant may average high fta, but IMO most of the fouls are warranted. The NBA rulebooks are definitely different now, but players gotta adjust. Durant will probably win a title if not this year, then next.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Who wrote the series preview? Was it Cub?
    .
    Whoever it was, you were right about calling it in 6, good work. Your crystal ball is on the money.

  • http://www.soundcloud.com/tray-5 T-Ray

    The game was probably the best one of the conference finals. OKC got a lot of whistles but they were attacking. Harden flopped twice but for the most part the calls were legit. Since they beat the Lakers I guess I’ll be rooting for them to bring the title and beat either the Celtics or Heat.

  • http://www.sportsgrid.com/media/shaq-kobe-highlights/ shutup

    Cub called the Thunder in 7. I don’t want to take anything away from Durant’s game, dude has been balling out of his mind, and I think the Thunder’s success directly correlates to the love of his game in the off-season all those league games kept him in shape, when a lot of players came in slow after expecting a lockout. With that being said how is anyone supposed to guard someone when they get to set a moving screen on almost every possesion? In the third when the game turned either Ibaka or Perkins set the pick in the high pick-and-roll for Durant and maybe one out of like 12 possessions they set a legal pick. Stern said he wants flopping looked into and goaltending changed but really these moving screens need to be addressed, these players are talented enough that they don’t need another advantage. I don’t think the refs were that bad some questionable calls, the one in the fourth where Y hit that 3 and they called it on Ginobili sticks out in my mind but I don’t make it a point to complain about those sort-of calls. Good luck to the Thunder and I will be rooting for them to take it all.

  • http://www.dimemag.com Showtime

    As i predict OKC in 6… Am i Nostradamus or what…even stuck to it when the spurs had 2-0 but this not and odd year so it just didnt add up for Timmy. I go out on a limb ,when heat makes finals them in 6, iF and do mean if they lay down and boston close out..ehh OKC in 5…

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Ah damn, then your Crystal Ball needs a new antenna.

  • http://slamonline.com Nella

    Big props to OKC. As much as I wanted to see the Spurs/Celts (and TD possibly getting a 5th ring), what OKC did to turn around this series was damn impressive. They took out a team that looked near invincible with solid adjustments and a lot of athleticism. Will be interesting to see how they come out in the Finals, regardless of who they are playing.

  • Ill Smith

    Great game & series from KD & the Thunder. For a young team to not fold after going down 2-0 vs a juggernaut on a roll says a lot about the entire teams character, which usually derives from the star player. & following KD’s relentlessness they beat a deeper, hotter & better-coached team. I named Durant MVP this year & never felt better about it. That 3rd quarter he fed off the crowd & showed his team the way. Some beautiful basketball from Tony P from tipoff, a classic Duncan game & Cap’n Jack came out bustin but OKC was never shook & played some marvelous ball.

  • permaculture james

    hats off to OKC – they took it and deserved it.

  • davidR

    shutup, there was also that and1 westbrook got on parker off the backdoor cut. westbrook went up off balance because he reversed it, and fell down. parker didn’t touch him, but the refs call the foul and count the bucket.
    that pretty much sealed the game.

  • davidR

    and i feel you on the screens. perkins pretty much does it every time.
    but, there are so many other teams that set illegal/moving screens. it’s not just the thunder.
    it’s definitely something that needs to be looked at though, cuz you’re right. how can you hope to guard someone without handchecking, and having to deal with illegal picks?

  • Da-REAL-Meat-Hook

    The Thunder now get a few days off. Does a long layoff hurt of help them?

  • tpathi1

    @shutup i think the only way for all of this to change is if you just let grown men be grown men..the rules need to change back to the way they were in the 80s and 90s..there are way too many talented players in the league right now that are just abusing the current rules. The flopping by james harden swung momentum in the thunders favor (i think) and it just got worse as he did it again and again. This one guy is pretty much making me root against the thunder to win it all this year. I wonder what KD and Westbrook think of this guy sometimes..they know that the rest of the league and non thunder fans think he is the biggest lame and thats accepted but they tolerate it cause he plays on their team

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    DMH – No layoff in these playoffs hurts anybody. All of these guys need a rest. Even the young Thunder.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    Wowsers. KD! This team is pretty special. If only they could somehow keep them all together…

  • http://www.soundcloud.com/tray-5 T-Ray

    Cosign nbk everyone needs a break this year in particular. Legit question for the slammily but if KD wins a ring this year do you think he’ll surpass LeBron has the best player in the L? If yes/no how so?

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    No.
    .
    If you put LeBron on the Thunder, do you think they get worse?
    .
    That should answer that question.

  • http://www.soundcloud.com/tray-5 T-Ray

    Ah good answer. I personally think LeBron would still be the best player in the L. But I guarantee you that ESPN will bring this up if the Thunder win it all. I’m willing to bet all the money in my piggy bank.

Advertisement