What a difference a year has made for the Oklahoma City Thunder. Last fall many local sports fans were excited to be gearing up for our state’s first major professional sports team.
(Unless you count the one season of the Oklahoma Outlaws in the USFL, who played down the street from my house in Tulsa. Not sure ‘major’ is the right word for that football league.)
Well, last year’s season started about as badly as anyone could imagine for the Thunder. At this time last year they still only had 3 wins, eventually winding up with 3-29 start to the season.
Things turned quite a bit from there. OKC went 20-30 the rest of the season, making good strides with its young nucleus.
So far, this year is another stride. The Thunder is right at .500, 13-13, after a close loss at Houston Saturday night. Kevin Durant, despite a recent slump, is playing at an All-Star starting caliber, and Jeff Green and Russell Westbrook continue getting better.
What impresses me about this team is its overall youth and an improved bench. The nine-man rotation they play features seven players age 25 or younger and no player older than 28.
The Thunder also is getting much improved bench play this year. Nick Collison, forced to start out of position at center a lot the last few years is now an energy guy off the bench. Youngster Serge Ibaka gives them an athletic presence inside, and Shaun Livingston has given solid minutes as the backup to Westbrook.
But the hit of the season may be rookie James Harden, the third pick of last summer’s NBA Draft. A few eyebrows were raised when OKC passed on several good-looking point guards to take Harden, but he’s been a find. His all-around game is ahead of his years, and he has had stretches of games where he, not one of the big three in the starting lineup, has taken over to hit the big shot. Not to mention he’s thrown down a handful of highlight reel dunks this season.
This team is going in a good direction. It might be tough to secure a playoff berth this year, but the fact it’s even realistically in the conversation says how far they’ve come in just a year’s time.