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Thunder sign second-year center to two-way contract
Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

The Oklahoma City Thunder signed Branden Carlson to a two-way deal, which they announced on Friday. The Thunder’s second-round pick in this year’s draft — Brooks Barnhizer — occupies their second two-way slot, while the third remains vacant ahead of training camp.

Carlson joined the Thunder last season after Chet Holmgren suffered a hip injury amidst Isaiah Hartenstein’s recovery from a fractured left hand. Oklahoma City was really thin at the center position at the time. Then, Carlson spent most of the season with the Blue, the Thunder’s G League affiliate.

The Thunder announced Carlson’s signing on their X, formerly Twitter.

Carlson is a stretch big who can shoot on one end of the floor and protect the rim on the other, as his seven-foot frame showed promise from an undrafted center. He scored a career-high 26 points in the Thunder’s last game of the regular season — a 115-100 win against the New Orleans Pelicans. Carlson also finished with 10 rebounds, three blocks, and two assists while going 10-for-19 from the floor, including two threes.

This came after Carlson’s tenure with the Thunder ended mid-season. After Hartenstein and Holmgren made their return from their respective injuries, he was waived before Carlson earned a second 10-day contract, and subsequently, a two-way contract, which allowed him to play for both the Thunder and the Blue.

In the wake of the devastating season-ending ACL injury to the Thunder’s first-round pick Thomas Sober, a 19-year-old prospect center, Carlson will have the opportunity to compete for a roster spot in October.

Mark Daigneault addresses Branden Carlson’s work ethic


Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

One of Thunder center Branden Carlson’s most memorable moments of the season came in a game against the Cleveland Cavs when Mark Daigneault gave him first-quarter minutes. With both Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein out, Daigneault turned to Carlson, who drained a pair of threes amid a 30-2 Thunder run that stretched into the second quarter, and finished with 11 points on 4-of-8 attempts, including 3-of-6 from deep.

After the game, Daigneault revealed he hadn’t told Carlson he’d play him that early in the game.

“I didn’t tell him, no,” Daigneault said. “[With] Hartenstein out, that’s the first thing. So, that frees up thirty minutes. And then, I give Branden a ton of credit. All the invisible stuff you guys don’t see, and most people don’t see, high-intensity workouts, the low-minute group, his Blue minutes, the way that he approaches practice, and then, these late-game minutes, when it’s a blowout. Across all of those platforms, he plays the same way. And he executes.”

The Thunder will host Media Day on Monday.

This article first appeared on NBA on ClutchPoints and was syndicated with permission.

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