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What can the Thunder change to take Game 2 of the NBA Finals?
Oklahoma City guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. NATHAN J. FISH/THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

What can the Thunder change to take Game 2 of the NBA Finals?

Prior to Game 1 of the NBA Finals, this writer listed five pressure points that could decide the championship. Some came to light even in the series opener with one. The Oklahoma City Thunder shelved their two-big lineup 30 minutes prior to tip off!

Before this evening’s second contest, let’s take a look at what the Thunder might be able to do to avoid dropping both home games and, more than likely, the series to the Indiana Pacers.

Winning the turnover battle isn’t enough

The Thunder’s ability to turn their opposition over was, as anticipated, overwhelming. What was surprising was their inability to turn live ball mistakes into transition baskets. Indiana committed a ludicrous 20 first-half turnovers in Game 1, yet OKC only generated nine points from said turnovers. Part of that was luck, with 11 of those turnovers being dead-ball and, by definition, preventing Thunder runouts.

The other factor was superb defensive transition from Indiana. No doubt Pacers coach Rick Carlisle, whose genius is finally being recognized, had his team prepped to retreat with haste whenever the ball was lost, but the Thunder simply were not ruthless enough at the basket, nor did they leak out in numbers often enough. It resulted in a 12-point halftime margin, when it probably should have been double that.

Do 'Plan A' better

Broadcaster Richard Jefferson called Mark Daignault’s decision to start guard Cason Wallace in place of center Isaiah Hartenstein a psychological win for Indiana, who had already made the Thunder deviate from two-big Plan A before the players took to the floor.

The justification for the move made enough sense, but a crossmatch can work both ways. While Wallace clearly contributed to Indiana’s first-half turnover fest, Pascal Siakam was able to hunt mismatches, his offense almost single-handedly keeping Indiana in the contest through the first half. His height and power were simply overwhelming for Jalen Williams, Wallace, or even the cinderblock that is Lu Dort. It also meant that the Thunder didn’t have backline help with Holmgren having to respect Myles Turner’s outside threat.

At the other end, Holmgren was outmuscled by Myles Turner, leading to an abysmal, six-point (2/9 from the field) performance. For all his on-ball skills, Holmgren simply doesn’t have the heft to play at the ring against behemoths. Hartenstein unlocks so much of what makes Chet tick. Expect Daignault to put Holmgren in a position to excel in Game 2.

Shai needs some help

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was superb in Game 1, pouring in 38 points at near 50% efficiency. He was unstoppable from inside and out. Yet, you can’t help feeling like that was the Pacers' plan.

As mentioned in the Pressure Points piece, Indiana has let one player get theirs all through these playoffs but shut the supply for the supporting cast. Dort is not likely to hit five threes again this series so — not to go all Stephen A. Smith — one (or both) of Williams and Holmgren need to step up.

Some fun listening before game 2 of the @nba.com finals. Here's a very short list of links of Stephen A telling people to 'step up': www.youtube.com/shorts/kFlxE... www.youtube.com/shorts/8VjCc... www.youtube.com/watch?v=ettf... www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXzu... www.youtube.com/watch?v=oTZb... 1/2

Jarrod Prosser. Accept no imitations. (@hey-hey-its-jp.bsky.social) 2025-06-08T14:06:24.697Z

SGA’s sheriffs went a combined 8/28 to score just 23 points between them. That, clearly, will not suffice. Related to the previous point, upsizing allows both players to gain physical advantages that they can exploit on offense. Given the genius of SGA, just one of these two playing to their usual level should be enough for the Thunder to come away with a split from their two home games.

Jarrod Prosser

Jarrod is a basketball lifer and has the knees to prove it.  A former player, coach, trainer, scout and administrator, Jarrod has extensive and intimate knowledge of everything that happens on the hardwood. He has covered the NBA since 2018 for publications in the USA and his native Australia

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