logo
OKC crush Timberwolves, clinch spot in NBA Finals

OKC crush Timberwolves, clinch spot in NBA Finals

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has scored 34 points, and Oklahoma City routed Minnesota 124-94 to win the Western Conference finals series 4-1 and advance to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2012.
Chet Holmgren had 22 points, seven rebounds and three blocks and Jalen Williams added 19 points and eight rebounds for the Thunder on Wednesday night.
A fanbase that had suffered through the loss of Kevin Durant through free agency in 2016, and a rebuild that took the team near the bottom of the league's standings just four years ago, let loose in the fourth quarter when OKC sat their starters with 5:14 remaining and a 108-74 lead.
Oklahoma City will play the Indiana Pacers or New York Knicks in the finals. Indiana lead the Eastern Conference finals series 3-1 with Game 5 to be played in New York City on Thursday. The Thunder will have homecourt advantage when the Finals begin on June 5 because of their league-best 68-14 regular-season record.
Julius Randle scored 24 points and Anthony Edwards added 19 for the Timberwolves, who shot just 41.2 per cent from the field and committed 21 turnovers.
Oklahoma City opened the game on an 11-3 run and extended the advantage throughout the first quarter. Cason Wallace drained a three-pointer as the first quarter expired to put the Thunder up 26-9 at the end of the period.
Oklahoma City led 65-32 at halftime and 88-62 heading into the fourth quarter.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Geraldton Buccaneer Alex Ducas is one step closer to an NBA championship ring with Oklahoma City Thunder
Geraldton Buccaneer Alex Ducas is one step closer to an NBA championship ring with Oklahoma City Thunder

West Australian

time7 hours ago

  • West Australian

Geraldton Buccaneer Alex Ducas is one step closer to an NBA championship ring with Oklahoma City Thunder

Former Geraldton Buccaneer Alex Ducas is one step closer to an NBA championship ring with Oklahoma City Thunder. Thunder have stormed into the NBA finals for the first time since 2012, dominating in the regular season and booking the finals berth after a 4-1 semifinal series win over the Minnesota Timberwolves. Ducas messaged his dad Aaron after the game on Thursday, telling him the team felt confident in their play and that they're looking forward to the finals. When asked about having an NBA championship ring in the house, Aaron Ducas told the Geraldton Guardian on Friday: 'Yeah, it's huge, slightly better than the SBL title, it would be amazing.' 'He's put all the hard yards in, done all the little things to get him where he is, and he deserves every accolade he can get.' While Ducas hasn't had game time since mid-April he is still on the roster as a two-way player and could get some minutes on the court should the Thunder roll deep into the finals series. Competition is fierce within the squad, with teammate Jalen Williams combining with NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Chet Holmgren to score 170 points in games four and five against the Timberwolves. Luc Longley is the only West Australian basketballer to have won an NBA championship. In fact, he has won three. Ducas debuted in 2016, playing 51 games over four seasons for the Buccs, including the SBL championship in 2019, the same year he was named NBL1 youth player of the year. He played a full five years of college basketball in the US, for St Mary's Gaels in California. The 24-year-old signed with the Thunder mid-2024 and has played 21 games in the 2024-25 season, averaging six minutes and 1.7 points a game. Oklahoma will face either the New York Knicks or the Indiana Pacers in a best-of-seven series, starting June 6.

New York Knicks keep Eastern Conference series alive
New York Knicks keep Eastern Conference series alive

The Advertiser

time9 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

New York Knicks keep Eastern Conference series alive

The Eastern Conference series finale is alive and kicking with the New York Knicks beating the Indiana Pacers by 17 points to reduce the deficit to 3-2 in Game 5. The Knicks won 111-94 on Thursday night, with Jalen Brunson scoring 32 points and Karl-Anthony Towns adding 24 points and 13 rebounds despite a bruised left knee. The Knicks won on their home floor for the first time in the series and prevented the Pacers from earning the second NBA Finals trip in franchise history. Indiana will try again Saturday night at home. Knicks fans chanted "Knicks in 7! Knicks in 7!" in the final minutes as New York extended their first trip to the conference finals since 2000 and kept alive hopes of becoming the 14th team to overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a series. No team has won a conference finals series after dropping the first two games at home. Two nights after giving up 43 points in the first quarter, the Knicks held the Pacers to just 45 in the first half and limited Tyrese Haliburton, who had 32 points, 15 assists and 12 rebounds Tuesday, to just eight points and six assists. Brunson, outplayed by his point guard counterpart Tuesday, rebounded with his franchise-record 21st postseason game of 30 or more points with the Knicks. Bennedict Mathurin scored 23 points off the bench for the Pacers, who had won six straight road games. Indiana shot just 40.5 per cent from the field in by far their lowest-scoring game of the postseason. Brunson scored 14 in the first quarter as the Knicks held a 27-23 lead, giving up 20 fewer points than in the first quarter of Game 4, when they trailed 43-35. Towns, who was doubtful to play after hurting his left knee in a collision late in Game 4, picked up the slack with 12 in the second, when Brunson went scoreless. Brunson came back with the Knicks' first eight of the third quarter as they opened a 20-point lead midway through the period. The Pacers cut that in half before New York regained control with a 12-0 burst, highlighted by Brunson's four-point play, to make it 86-64. The Eastern Conference series finale is alive and kicking with the New York Knicks beating the Indiana Pacers by 17 points to reduce the deficit to 3-2 in Game 5. The Knicks won 111-94 on Thursday night, with Jalen Brunson scoring 32 points and Karl-Anthony Towns adding 24 points and 13 rebounds despite a bruised left knee. The Knicks won on their home floor for the first time in the series and prevented the Pacers from earning the second NBA Finals trip in franchise history. Indiana will try again Saturday night at home. Knicks fans chanted "Knicks in 7! Knicks in 7!" in the final minutes as New York extended their first trip to the conference finals since 2000 and kept alive hopes of becoming the 14th team to overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a series. No team has won a conference finals series after dropping the first two games at home. Two nights after giving up 43 points in the first quarter, the Knicks held the Pacers to just 45 in the first half and limited Tyrese Haliburton, who had 32 points, 15 assists and 12 rebounds Tuesday, to just eight points and six assists. Brunson, outplayed by his point guard counterpart Tuesday, rebounded with his franchise-record 21st postseason game of 30 or more points with the Knicks. Bennedict Mathurin scored 23 points off the bench for the Pacers, who had won six straight road games. Indiana shot just 40.5 per cent from the field in by far their lowest-scoring game of the postseason. Brunson scored 14 in the first quarter as the Knicks held a 27-23 lead, giving up 20 fewer points than in the first quarter of Game 4, when they trailed 43-35. Towns, who was doubtful to play after hurting his left knee in a collision late in Game 4, picked up the slack with 12 in the second, when Brunson went scoreless. Brunson came back with the Knicks' first eight of the third quarter as they opened a 20-point lead midway through the period. The Pacers cut that in half before New York regained control with a 12-0 burst, highlighted by Brunson's four-point play, to make it 86-64. The Eastern Conference series finale is alive and kicking with the New York Knicks beating the Indiana Pacers by 17 points to reduce the deficit to 3-2 in Game 5. The Knicks won 111-94 on Thursday night, with Jalen Brunson scoring 32 points and Karl-Anthony Towns adding 24 points and 13 rebounds despite a bruised left knee. The Knicks won on their home floor for the first time in the series and prevented the Pacers from earning the second NBA Finals trip in franchise history. Indiana will try again Saturday night at home. Knicks fans chanted "Knicks in 7! Knicks in 7!" in the final minutes as New York extended their first trip to the conference finals since 2000 and kept alive hopes of becoming the 14th team to overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a series. No team has won a conference finals series after dropping the first two games at home. Two nights after giving up 43 points in the first quarter, the Knicks held the Pacers to just 45 in the first half and limited Tyrese Haliburton, who had 32 points, 15 assists and 12 rebounds Tuesday, to just eight points and six assists. Brunson, outplayed by his point guard counterpart Tuesday, rebounded with his franchise-record 21st postseason game of 30 or more points with the Knicks. Bennedict Mathurin scored 23 points off the bench for the Pacers, who had won six straight road games. Indiana shot just 40.5 per cent from the field in by far their lowest-scoring game of the postseason. Brunson scored 14 in the first quarter as the Knicks held a 27-23 lead, giving up 20 fewer points than in the first quarter of Game 4, when they trailed 43-35. Towns, who was doubtful to play after hurting his left knee in a collision late in Game 4, picked up the slack with 12 in the second, when Brunson went scoreless. Brunson came back with the Knicks' first eight of the third quarter as they opened a 20-point lead midway through the period. The Pacers cut that in half before New York regained control with a 12-0 burst, highlighted by Brunson's four-point play, to make it 86-64. The Eastern Conference series finale is alive and kicking with the New York Knicks beating the Indiana Pacers by 17 points to reduce the deficit to 3-2 in Game 5. The Knicks won 111-94 on Thursday night, with Jalen Brunson scoring 32 points and Karl-Anthony Towns adding 24 points and 13 rebounds despite a bruised left knee. The Knicks won on their home floor for the first time in the series and prevented the Pacers from earning the second NBA Finals trip in franchise history. Indiana will try again Saturday night at home. Knicks fans chanted "Knicks in 7! Knicks in 7!" in the final minutes as New York extended their first trip to the conference finals since 2000 and kept alive hopes of becoming the 14th team to overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a series. No team has won a conference finals series after dropping the first two games at home. Two nights after giving up 43 points in the first quarter, the Knicks held the Pacers to just 45 in the first half and limited Tyrese Haliburton, who had 32 points, 15 assists and 12 rebounds Tuesday, to just eight points and six assists. Brunson, outplayed by his point guard counterpart Tuesday, rebounded with his franchise-record 21st postseason game of 30 or more points with the Knicks. Bennedict Mathurin scored 23 points off the bench for the Pacers, who had won six straight road games. Indiana shot just 40.5 per cent from the field in by far their lowest-scoring game of the postseason. Brunson scored 14 in the first quarter as the Knicks held a 27-23 lead, giving up 20 fewer points than in the first quarter of Game 4, when they trailed 43-35. Towns, who was doubtful to play after hurting his left knee in a collision late in Game 4, picked up the slack with 12 in the second, when Brunson went scoreless. Brunson came back with the Knicks' first eight of the third quarter as they opened a 20-point lead midway through the period. The Pacers cut that in half before New York regained control with a 12-0 burst, highlighted by Brunson's four-point play, to make it 86-64.

New York Knicks keep Eastern Conference series alive
New York Knicks keep Eastern Conference series alive

West Australian

time11 hours ago

  • West Australian

New York Knicks keep Eastern Conference series alive

The Eastern Conference series finale is alive and kicking with the New York Knicks beating the Indiana Pacers by 17 points to reduce the deficit to 3-2 in Game 5. The Knicks won 111-94 on Thursday night, with Jalen Brunson scoring 32 points and Karl-Anthony Towns adding 24 points and 13 rebounds despite a bruised left knee. The Knicks won on their home floor for the first time in the series and prevented the Pacers from earning the second NBA Finals trip in franchise history. Indiana will try again Saturday night at home. Knicks fans chanted "Knicks in 7! Knicks in 7!" in the final minutes as New York extended their first trip to the conference finals since 2000 and kept alive hopes of becoming the 14th team to overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a series. No team has won a conference finals series after dropping the first two games at home. Two nights after giving up 43 points in the first quarter, the Knicks held the Pacers to just 45 in the first half and limited Tyrese Haliburton, who had 32 points, 15 assists and 12 rebounds Tuesday, to just eight points and six assists. Brunson, outplayed by his point guard counterpart Tuesday, rebounded with his franchise-record 21st postseason game of 30 or more points with the Knicks. Bennedict Mathurin scored 23 points off the bench for the Pacers, who had won six straight road games. Indiana shot just 40.5 per cent from the field in by far their lowest-scoring game of the postseason. Brunson scored 14 in the first quarter as the Knicks held a 27-23 lead, giving up 20 fewer points than in the first quarter of Game 4, when they trailed 43-35. Towns, who was doubtful to play after hurting his left knee in a collision late in Game 4, picked up the slack with 12 in the second, when Brunson went scoreless. Brunson came back with the Knicks' first eight of the third quarter as they opened a 20-point lead midway through the period. The Pacers cut that in half before New York regained control with a 12-0 burst, highlighted by Brunson's four-point play, to make it 86-64.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store