NBA Finals, Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder
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The OKC Thunder's depth has shined during the NBA Finals. Here's why so many players have been able to contribute.
For three hours, it was the loudest place on planet Earth. A concrete kettle that whistled louder than ever as the Thunder topped the Pacers in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
Jalen Williams scored a tough contested floater to close the third quarter and extend OKC's lead to 87-79. The Thunder needed the bucket after a 13-point outburst from T.J. McConnell allowed the Pacers to eat into OKC's 14-point halftime lead.
It was a full-on Jalen Williams takeover in Game 5 of the NBA Finals, as he poured in a playoff career-high 40 points in what amounted to the greatest game of his career so far.
Former Kansas shooting guard Johnny Furphy's fast-break and-one layup with 54 seconds left in Game 5 of the 2025 NBA Finals did not go unnoticed by social media users Monday night. The Indiana Pacers' slender 6-foot-9,
Trysta Krick examines the betting volatility of this year's NBA Finals matchup as Game 6 looms before Drew Dinsick shares why he's laying the points with the Thunder and targeting alternate spreads.
OKLAHOMA — Mayor David Holt signed an agreement to keep the Thunder in Oklahoma City through at least 2053. Mayor Holt said in 2022, the City started a two-year community conversation about what it means to be a big league city, which involved discussing the realities of what it takes for the OKC market to remain one.
The Oklahoma City Thunder will remain in the city through at least 2053 as part of a new lease, mayor David Holt announced. The long-term agreement ensures the franchise, which relocated from Seattle in 2008,