Oklahoma City Thunder Make History Early In Game Against New Orleans Pelicans
Itโs one thing to be the reigning champs. Itโs another thing entirely to come out a month into the new season and look like youโve somehow gotten better. But that’s exactly the statement the Oklahoma City Thunder made Monday night against the New Orleans Pelicans. It was less of a game and more of a 12-minute hostile takeover that left the box score smoking.
Letโs be clear: the Thunder didn’t just beat the Pelicans in the first quarter; they took them apart, piece by piece, and then reassembled them into a small, sad-looking canoe.
A First-Quarter Onslaught For the Thunder Record Books
The final tally for the opening frame was 49-24. Thatโs not a typo. The Thunder hung a franchise-record 49 points on the board before the Pelicans had even finished their warm-up stretches. It was an offensive explosion of epic proportions, a symphony of swishes and rim-rocking dunks that had the home crowd buzzing and the Pelicans looking for the nearest exit.
Superstar Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, cool as ever, orchestrated the chaos with a casual 11 points. Lu Dort decided to turn into a human flamethrower, splashing four three-pointers, while Chet Holmgren chipped in 9 points of his own, likely just for fun. It was a beautiful, brutal display of what happens when this team clicks. They were so close to the NBA record of 55 points in a quarter that you could almost taste it. The Warriors can breathe easyโฆ for now.
More Than Just a Hot Start For the Thunder
Sure, they cooled off a bit. You can’t maintain that kind of supernova pace for a full 48 minutes unless you’re playing on rookie mode in NBA 2K. The Thunder “only” scored 20 points in the second quarter, heading into halftime with a comfortable 69-56 lead. But the damage was done. The message had been sent, stamped, and delivered via express courier.
What makes this 13-1 start even more ridiculous is who they’re doing it without. All-NBA swingman Jalen Williams has yet to play. Key vets like Kenrich Williams and Alex Caruso have missed time. Even youngsters Nikola Topic and Thomas Sorber are on the shelf. It doesn’t matter. This Thunder team has adopted a “next man up” mentality that borders on absurd. They’ve faced back-to-backs, double-overtime thrillers, and a shortened offseason, and theyโve barely broken a sweat.
Holding the best record in the NBA isn’t a fluke; it’s a testament to a deep, talented roster with the kind of chemistry most teams can only dream of. When you can drop a historic 49-point quarter while missing key players, you’re not just a good team. You’re a force of nature. You’re the Thunder. And the rest of the league has officially been put on notice.
