Oklahoma City Thunder Embarrass Brooklyn Nets In 29-Point Win

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) controls the ball

If you flipped on your television Wednesday night expecting a competitive professional basketball game at Barclays Center, you probably ended up checking your local listings to see if a replay of a high school scrimmage accidentally made the broadcast. The defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder walked into Brooklyn and absolutely dismantled the Nets, walking away with an effortless 121-92 victory.

It was never a contest. It was a scheduled demolition, and the Thunder executed it with the kind of ruthless precision that should frankly terrify the rest of the NBA.

A Historically Bad First Half For Brooklyn

Let’s rip the bandage off right away and talk about the first half. By the time the halftime buzzer mercifully echoed through the arena, the scoreboard read 60-24.

You read that correctly. The Brooklyn Nets, a team paying its roster nearly $154 million this season, managed to scrape together exactly 24 points in 24 minutes of professional basketball. They shot a miserable 24% from the floor and an even more tragic 6 percent from beyond the arc. For context, Miami’s Bam Adebayo recently scored more points in a single quarter than the entire Brooklyn roster managed in two.

Naturally, the fans did not let this slide. Social media practically melted down, roasting the home team, with fans calling the performance “devious behavior” and begging the basketball gods to just hand Brooklyn a top draft pick already. The 24-point output matched the franchise’s lowest first-half total since the 1997-98 season, and it tied the NBA’s second-worst first-half scoring performance in modern history.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder Keep Rolling

While the Nets were busy building a brick house, the Thunder were putting on an offensive clinic. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander showed exactly why he is the reigning NBA MVP, treating the Brooklyn defense like traffic cones. He poured in 20 points on an insanely efficient 8-of-9 shooting. He played so well, and the lead grew so massive, that Head Coach Mark Daigneault sat him for the entire fourth quarter.

With that performance, Gilgeous-Alexander extended his mind-boggling NBA record to 62 consecutive road games with at least 20 points.

But SGA wasn’t the only one having fun. Jared McCain torched the Nets for a game-high 26 points, while Aaron Wiggins chipped in 17. The Thunder shot 53% from the field and 40% from deep, capitalizing on Brooklyn’s sloppy ball-handling by turning 23 Nets turnovers into 31 points.

The Glaring Gap Between Contenders and the Cellar

Perhaps the most absurd part of this blowout is that the Thunder were playing on the second night of a back-to-back. They had just fought through a grueling matchup down in Orlando the night before. Usually, this is the spot where a team rests its stars or comes out with dead legs. Instead, Oklahoma City locked in, suffocated the Nets on defense, and proved they have the depth and stamina to bully teams on any given night.

On the other side of the court, the Nets simply looked broken. Missing their leading scorer, Michael Porter Jr., to an ankle injury, and dealing with the news that rookie Egor Demin is shut down for the season with plantar fasciitis, Brooklyn had virtually no answers. The lone bright spot for the home crowd was Jalen Wilson, who fought hard off the bench to post 15 points and 5 rebounds.

This massacre was so thoroughly one-sided that ESPN’s Bobby Marks took to X during the game to openly question the NBA’s upcoming expansion plans. When the bottom-tier teams look this non-competitive against the league’s elite, diluting the talent pool with two new franchises in Vegas and Seattle is a genuinely valid concern.

Looking Ahead For the Thunder

With their 10th consecutive win locked up, the Thunder improved their league-best road record to 25-8. They are operating on a completely different frequency right now, blending an elite, suffocating defense with a wildly efficient offense.

Oklahoma City will look to keep the momentum going as they take their five-game road trip down to the nation’s capital to face the Washington Wizards on Saturday. As for the Nets? They get to host the New York Knicks on Friday. If they don’t figure out their offensive woes fast, it’s going to be another very long, very painful night in Brooklyn.