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Chet Holmgren's ridiculous flop in Game 2 hurts Thunder's reputation
Oklahoma City Thunder center Chet Holmgren blocks a shot by Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James in the first half during Game 2 of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center. Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

Chet Holmgren's ridiculous flop in Game 2 hurts Thunder's reputation

Chet Holmgren is one of the finest young big men in the NBA. In Game 2, he proved he was one of the NBA's finest actors as well.

The Oklahoma City Thunder's 24-year-old big man delivered the most egregious flop of the playoffs so far in the first quarter of Thursday's 125-107 win over the Los Angeles Lakers. Holmgren threw himself to the ground and grabbed his face after the referees called a foul on Deandre Ayton, only for the call to be reversed after a replay review showed the foul was committed by Holmgren.

Chet Holmgren isn't helping the Oklahoma City Thunder's reputation

The Thunder have been a historically great team for the last two seasons, winning the title last year and going 64-18 this year while outscoring opponents by 11.1 points per game. But they've also developed a reputation as "foul merchants," something opposing fans have chanted at the Thunder since their series with the Minnesota Timberwolves last spring.

Much of the ire is directed at reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who is one of the NBA's best scorers and one of its most effective foul-drawers. But even SGA's most extreme head snaps, arm flails and undeserved shouts of "And one!" pale in comparison to what Holmgren attempted against Ayton.

Holmgren actually fouled Ayton first by grabbing his arm and got called for it after Lakers coach JJ Redick challenged the call. While Ayton's arm did make contact with Holmgren's chest, it came nowhere near his face. That didn't stop Holmgren from lying on the floor and holding two hands over his mouth, perhaps trying to muffle his laughter.

Holmgren's flop was so bad that even Foot Locker weighed in.

Oklahoma City Thunder's flopping diminishes their success

Are the Thunder the only team that exaggerates contact to get calls? They're not, but they might be the most blatant about it. SGA earns the majority of his free-throw attempts legitimately, but when he does flop, SGA flops like no one else.

In Game 2, Gilgeous-Alexander was on the wrong end of the whistle. He picked up his fourth foul with 10:34 to play in the third quarter and had to leave the game, a call that was upgraded to a flagrant foul against Austin Reaves, another one of the NBA's finest foul-seeking thespians.

Without SGA, the rest of the Thunder stepped up, outscoring the Lakers 32-14 the rest of the third. Holmgren was a big part of that, delivering eight points and an assist with two steals in the third. He finished with 22 points, nine rebounds, two blocks and four steals and a game-high plus/minus of +19.

And he did it while committing only two fouls aside from the Ayton play. Best of all, he didn't hit the ground and nurse a fake injury for all of the final three quarters.

Holmgren and the Thunder are dominating the Lakers, winning each of the first two games by 18 points. The only thing sweeter than a second-round sweep would be completing the sweep with no flops.

Sean Keane

Sean Keane is a sportswriter and a comedian based in Oakland, California, with experience covering the NBA, MLB, NFL and Ice Cube’s three-on-three basketball league, The Big 3. He’s written for Comedy Central’s “Another Period,” ESPN the Magazine, and Audible. com

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