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Thunder's subdued title celebration should scare the NBA
The Oklahoma City Thunder celebrate after winning Game 7 of the 2025 NBA Finals. Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

Thunder's subdued title celebration should scare the NBA

The Oklahoma City Thunder celebrated like they won the NBA Cup, not the NBA championship, on Sunday night.

Perhaps it was their collective age — the second-youngest NBA finalist in history — or the fact that they got to the mountaintop without enduring years of heartbreak. Now, compare that to last year when confetti rained down on TD Garden in Boston. Jayson Tatum burst into tears and yelled out, "Anything's possible!" replicating Kevin Garnett's iconic celebration from 2008, while the rest of the Celtics were equally animated after finally crossing the finish line following six years of painstaking NBA Finals and conference finals losses.

The Thunder were almost solemn after hoisting the Larry O'Brien Trophy. The Athletic's Marcus Thompson II described the locker-room scenes as the "most tempered" title celebration he had ever seen in any sport, resembling "an office party for someone who retired."

"Most of the players left. No champagne splashing. No yelling," he wrote. "I've seen celebrations from AL Wild Card clinchers more turnt."

OKC's business-like approach to a championship should alarm the NBA. The franchise is projected to own up to 15 first-round picks over the next five years. Jalen Williams, 24, and Chet Holmgren, 23, have only begun to tap into their potential. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, 26, has displayed the work ethic to improve each year since entering the NBA, and there's no reason to think that trend won't persist.

This team promises to get incrementally better over the next few years, and it has already tasted a championship.

What's even scarier is that SGA is aware his team is just getting started.

"To win an NBA championship this young as a group is impressive," he told "SC with SVP" after winning Finals MVP. "We have so many guys who aren't even in their prime yet. Like Chet and Dub haven't even scratched the potential of what they think they can be. That's insane to me. It's crazy. We know we have room to grow, and that's the fun part."

"Fun" for OKC and its fan base. Not so much for 29 other teams.

Sai Mohan

A veteran sportswriter based in Portugal, Sai covers the NBA for Yardbarker and a few local news outlets. He had the honor of covering sporting events across four different continents as a newspaper reporter. Some of his all-time favorite athletes include Mike Tyson, Larry Bird, Luís Figo, Ayrton Senna and Steffi Graf.

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