100 Things Thunder Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die

100 Things Thunder Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die

100 Things Thunder Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die

100 Things Thunder Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die

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Overview

Most Oklahoma City Thunder fans have taken in a game or two at the Chesapeake Energy Arena and have cheered the team on through its string of dynamic playoff appearances. But only real fans watched the debut of a young Russell Westbrook or know the full story behind Kevin Durant's sudden "Mr. Unreliable" moniker. 100 Things Thunder Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die is the ultimate resource for true fans of the Oklahoma City Thunder. OKC sportswriter Darnell Mayberry has collected every essential piece of Thunder knowledge and trivia, as well as must-do activities, and ranks them all from 1 to 100, providing an entertaining and easy-to-follow checklist as you progress on your way to fan superstardom.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781633198968
Publisher: Triumph Books
Publication date: 11/15/2017
Series: 100 Things...Fans Should Know Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Darnell Mayberry is the senior assistant sports editor at The Oklahoman. He joined the newspaper in 2005 after a year at the Akron Beacon Journal and served as the paper's Thunder writer from 2008-2015. He covered the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets from 2005-07. Born in Dallas, Texas, Mayberry was raised in Langston, Oklahoma, and now lives in Oklahoma City. This is his first book. Kendrick Perkins currently plays for the New Orleans Pelicans and played for the Oklahoma City Thunder from 2011 to 2015. He won an NBA championship with the Boston Celtics in 2008.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Russell Westbrook

Prior to Game 5 of the Thunder-Mavs series in the opening round of the 2016 NBA Playoffs, Dallas owner Mark Cuban delivered some head- scratching comments about Russell Westbrook.

Cuban famously claimed the Thunder point guard wasn't a superstar.

Hours later, Westbrook closed out the series with a sensational 36-point, 12-rebound, nine-assist performance that sent Dallas home for the summer and made Cuban look silly. In the postgame press conference, a reporter asked Westbrook whether he was aware of Cuban's pregame comments and inquired about Westbrook's reaction to them. Before the reporter could finish the question, Kevin Durant, sitting to Westbrook's left atop the dais inside Chesapeake Energy Arena, extended his right arm in front of Westbrook's torso and preempted his teammate's answer.

"Hold up," Durant told Westbrook before responding for him. "He's a [sic] idiot. Don't listen to s — t. He's a [sic] idiot. All right? That's what we got to say about that. He's a [sic] idiot. Next question."

Cuban didn't just set fire to his credibility. The outspoken owner disparaged and disrespected one of the game's truly great players. More than that, he disregarded an inspirational rags-to-riches route rarely seen in NBA superstars. Cuban, a self-made man himself, failed to consider where Westbrook started and just how far he had come.

By the time Cuban delivered his comical claim, Westbrook already had helped captain the Thunder to the 2012 NBA Finals, scoring 43 points in Game 4 to become only the 10 player in NBA history to reach that mark and at only 23 years old, the second youngest to do so. He also had been named to five All-NBA teams, earned five All-Star Game selections, snagged two All-Star Game MVP Awards, recorded 37 triple doubles, notched one scoring title, and paced all players with a ridiculous record of durability.

Westbrook had done all that by 27.

"I'd take him," Mavs superstar Dirk Nowitzki said. "I'd definitely take him."

But when Westbrook arrived in Oklahoma City, he was far from a sure thing. Coming out of Leuzinger High School in Lawndale, California, a suburb of Los Angeles, Westbrook was overlooked by most major Division I teams. He entered high school standing 5'8" and weighing 140 pounds. He didn't start on the varsity until his junior year. He didn't receive his first recruiting letter until the summer before his senior year, when he shot up to 6'3" and could finally dunk. Most recruiting websites didn't have Westbrook ranked among their top 100 prospects. Rivals.com listed him as a three-star recruit.

Creighton, Kent State, and San Diego showed the most interest early on. They were mid-major programs looking to land a diamond in the rough. Miami, Wake Forest, and Arizona State also showed interest. They were high-majors yet middle-of-the-road programs hoping to get lucky after the true big boys had gobbled up the top talent. Westbrook held out. He bet on himself. He averaged 25.1 points, 8.7 rebounds, and 2.3 assists while leading Leuzinger to a 25–4 record as a senior. Still, the big boys were nowhere to be found.

"I coached against Russell in summer league," said Scott Pera, a former Southern California high school coach and Arizona State assistant. "He was fast. Very unpolished. I hate to use the word reckless because I don't want to use it in a negative light, but that's how he was. He was athletic, fast, tough, but at times completely out of control. People [wondered] if all that could be reeled in and refined."

Years later, the world came to appreciate Westbrook's unbridled energy and his fondness for doing things his way. But Westbrook went against the grain from the start. He didn't play at a high school powerhouse, wasn't mentored by a prestigious prep coach, and didn't join an esteemed AAU team. Instead, he hung on to every morsel of tutelage he received from his father, Russell Westbrook Jr., a weekend warrior at inner city L.A. parks, and a select set of public school coaches. And it worked. A true basketball blue blood finally stepped up a month before Westbrook's graduation, and it sat in Westbrook's backyard. When it became clear Jordan Farmar would leave UCLA for the NBA, the Bruins had a late scholarship to offer. They handed it to Westbrook. After wearing No. 4 in high school, Westbrook had to select a new number because it was owned by Bruins standout Arron Afflalo. Westbrook chose No. 0. "You go with the zero when you've been through something and you are looking to get a new beginning," said Westbrook, whose best friend, Khelcey Barrs, collapsed and died during a pickup game when the two were high school sophomores. "It helps you get the swag back."

As a college freshman, Westbrook averaged only nine minutes. He backed up sophomore point guard Darren Collison, who had served as Farmar's backup the previous season. Westbrook didn't set his sights on the NBA until that summer, the window in which his UCLA coach, Ben Howland, said, "He really, really made huge strides." Westbrook worked out twice daily until the start of the season. He lifted weights. He went on long runs. He played pick-up. "I didn't take a break," Westbrook said. It paid off. He cracked UCLA's starting lineup as a sophomore following the departure of Afflalo to the NBA. Still, Westbrook played in the shadow of Collison and a prized recruit named Kevin Love. The Bruins relied on Westbrook primarily for defense and energy. He averaged 12.7 points, 3.9 rebounds, 4.3 assists, 1.6 steals, and helped UCLA journey to a second consecutive Final Four. At season's end, Westbrook was named to the All-Pac-10 Third Team and was honored as the Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year. "That was a turning point for me," Westbrook said.

Overlooked only two years earlier, Westbrook suddenly skyrocketed up draft boards. He was raw, but his athleticism and length alone had turned him into a projected first-round pick. But no one knew what Westbrook would become. No one had a clue. DraftExpress, the most respected scouting site for basketball's top prospects outside the NBA, listed Westbrook's best-case scenario as Leandro Barbosa. But most projections pegged Westbrook as a top 10 pick.

On May 20, 2008, six weeks before they would relocate to Oklahoma City, the Seattle SuperSonics entered the NBA Draft Lottery with the second-best odds to win the top pick. But they fell to the fourth spot after Chicago, with the ninth-worst record, improbably landed the No. 1 selection. Miami, owners of the worst record from the previous season, dropped to No. 2. Minnesota remained at three. It was a disappointing outcome. The consensus was the draft featured two franchise-changing players, Michael Beasley out of Kansas State, and Derrick Rose out of Memphis. With the fourth pick, the Sonics were widely projected to select from a group of prospects that included Stanford center Brook Lopez, Indiana guard Eric Gordon, Arizona guard Jerryd Bayless, USC guard O.J. Mayo, and Westbrook's UCLA teammate Love. Westbrook wasn't on the radar. But the team had eyed him all along.

"We agonized over that draft," said then Sonics coach P.J. Carlesimo. "For us, essentially, it came down to Brook Lopez or Russell Westbrook. ... We went back and forth, and we really liked both of them."

The team was in desperate need of a point guard and a center. Conventional basketball wisdom says quality big men are harder to come by than quality guards. So Carlesimo argued in favor of Lopez. He remembered General Manager Sam Presti circling back to Westbrook. "I remember Sam's words like it was yesterday," Carlesimo said. "He said, 'You know what scares me? I just think this kid can be so special that if we don't take him we're making a mistake.'"

After selecting Westbrook fourth overall, Presti received a heap of criticism. Many believed he blew it. Westbrook's selection was regarded as a reach. Lopez, Love, Bayless, and Gordon all remained on the board. But Presti praised Westbrook's athleticism and competitiveness. He complimented his work ethic and his ability to blend with the group. More than anything, Presti talked defense. Presti said, "He's got a real focus on the defensive end, and that's not an easy thing to find. He enjoys digging in and doing the little things that really contribute to winning."

"We felt that he was the best perimeter defender in the draft," Presti said. "The ability to contain penetration out front is something we think is important in today's NBA, and we feel like Russell's got the potential to be one of the best at that."

Westbrook was that in college. When Afflalo left Westwood, it was Westbrook who announced to the Bruins coaching staff he wanted to step in as the team's defensive ace. "I want to be Arron," he told his coaches. "I want to guard the best guy every week." Westbrook then went out and did it. He held Mayo, USC's freshman sensation, to a season-low four points and hampered him into a season-high 10 turnovers. He held Bayless, Arizona's stud scorer, to 13 points on 4-for-9 shooting. He hounded the nation's second-leading scorer, a wiry scoring prodigy named Stephen Curry, to 15 points on 6-for-19 shooting. The Bruins won each game by at least 10 points.

But a funny thing happened upon his NBA arrival. Westbrook didn't become a defender. He became a superstar. He averaged 15.3 points, 4.9 rebounds, and 5.3 assists as a rookie, becoming only the 10 rookie in NBA history to compile averages of at least 15 points, 4.5 rebounds, and five assists. By his third season, Westbrook was an All-Star who averaged 21.9 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 8.2 assists.

"I wish I could tell you that in June 2008 we could have forecasted that this guy was going to be a First-Team All-NBA, Hall of Fame–level player," Presti said. "The truth of the matter is we couldn't have done that. ... We felt like this player was going to get the most out of whatever attributes that they had because of what was inside the jersey, and we didn't realize quite how deep the reservoir of potential was probably. But we felt like he was going to drain it of whatever was there because of how he is wired."

Westbrook had his share of flaws. He led the league in total turnovers in two of his first three seasons, shot a high volume at relatively low percentages, flashed his defensive tenacity only on occasion, and at times lost his cool and played out of control. But Good Russ far outweighed Bad Russ. His endless energy, competitive fire, and will to win were traits he seemed to inherit like a torch being passed from the game's all-time greats. He got it from Kobe Bryant, who received it from Michael Jordan, who inherited it from Isiah Thomas, who accepted it after it was shared by Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. And after years of picking him apart, much of the basketball world arrived at some variation of the same conclusion.

Let Westbrook be Westbrook.

CHAPTER 2

Mr. Triple Double

They said he couldn't do it. They said it couldn't be done.

Other records were made to be broken. This one was deemed untouchable. This one was held by one man, who set it 55 years earlier, when the pace of the NBA game was far more conducive to stuffing a stat sheet.

Russell Westbrook didn't care what anyone said. He went out and did it.

In 2016–17, Westbrook joined Oscar Robertson as the only players in NBA history to average a triple double for an entire season.

In achieving a feat few thought they would ever witness, Westbrook made it look easy. He set the single-season record for most triple doubles with 42, one more than Robertson tallied in 1961–62. He became the first player to record five straight 30-point triple doubles, posted five 40-point triple doubles, and a record three 50-point triple doubles. His 57- point triple double at Orlando on March 29, 2017, marked the most points ever scored in a triple double.

Westbrook averaged a league-leading 31.6 points, 10.7 rebounds, and 10.4 assists. He posted those eye-popping numbers despite playing only 34.6 minutes a night, just the fourth highest of his career. He appeared in 81-of-82 games, sitting out Game 81 only because he got the night off for rest after the Thunder were locked into their playoff position. It was a season that immortalized the Thunder point guard, turning him into a living legend who would forever be part of NBA lore, a player people would tell their kids and grandkids they had the privilege to see play.

"It's an amazing accomplishment," Denver Nuggets coach Mike Malone said. "When you look at it from a historical perspective, the fact that it's never been done before, 42 triple doubles, and only the second guy to ever average that for a season, speaks to his desire, his passion, his toughness. To do that every single night for 82 games is remarkable. You tip your cap to him."

In a season in which Kevin Durant shifted the league's balance of power with his stunning decision to join Golden State, and LeBron James still loomed large as the game's undisputed best player, Westbrook stole the show. He was the story of the season, commanding the country's attention and turning the Thunder into must-see TV from late October through mid- April.

As his assault on the record books snaked through the NBA circuit, Westbrook transformed once hostile opposing fans who loved to hate him into spellbound spectators simply appreciative of witnessing history. He received raucous "M-V-P" chants at Brooklyn as he stood at the free throw line only 92 seconds into a game on March 14, 2017. He treated that night's crowd to a 25-point, 12-rebound, 19-assist performance. Fans at Orlando showered him with the same boisterous chants two weeks later. That was the night he erupted for 57 points, 13 rebounds, and 11 assists while captaining the largest comeback in Thunder history, a 21-point second-half deficit. With the Thunder trailing by 14 with 6:18 remaining, Westbrook detonated for 19 points, including a clutch game-tying three-pointer from 31' out with 7.1 seconds remaining to cap a 23–9 run and force overtime. The Thunder went on to win by eight.

His historic triple double quest later electrified crowds in Memphis, Phoenix, and Denver, his final three road games of the year. Against the Nuggets inside the Pepsi Center on April 9, 2017, Westbrook made his final case for why he deserved the league's Most Valuable Player Award. He produced his record third 50-point triple double while leading yet another come-from-behind win. After the Thunder trailed by 14 inside the final 51/2 minutes, Westbrook scored the team's final 15 points, including a miraculous game-winning three from 36' as time expired. It was Westbrook's first game-winning buzzer beater, and it eliminated the Nuggets from playoff contention. That was also the night Westbrook passed Robertson with his 42 triple double, a 50-point, 16-rebound, 10-assist effort that elicited a standing ovation from Nuggets fans.

"He's on the list of guys," said ESPN SportsCenter host Scott Van Pelt, "for when they play, it would take an act of God for them not to be on the show."

Westbrook was that dazzling, that dominant.

On June 26, 2017, he was named the league's Most Valuable Player, garnering 69 of 101 first-place votes.

"He's a Hall of Fame player," said Thunder coach Billy Donovan. "That's really what he is. He's a Hall of Fame player.... It's one of those things as a coach, you feel very, very blessed and fortunate to be able to work with someone like that every single day, just because he takes it so serious and he cares so much about the team and winning."

The basketball world waited with great anticipation to see what Westbrook would do in the absence of Durant; people wondered of he could average a triple double. Robertson, who averaged 30.8 points, 12.5 rebounds, and 11.4 assists in his historic season, was among the few to give Westbrook a vote of confidence. "Why do [people] think he wouldn't do it?" Robertson asked. "It's not impossible. I think he has all the tools to do it."

And when Westbrook did it, Robertson traveled to Oklahoma City to honor Westbrook during an on-court pregame ceremony at the Thunder's regular season finale. "I just felt I had to be here," Robertson told the crowd. "What he has done has been historic in nature. He's played with passion and pride. It's outstanding what he's done and the way he did it. You people should be really proud of him."

Westbrook averaged a triple double through his first four games, but most expected those numbers to dip as the season wore on. By early December, more and more were echoing Robertson's early thinking. After his average dipped below a triple double in Game No. 5 — where it remained for only 14 games — Westbrook again secured a triple double average on November 28, in a road game at New York. It was the Thunder's 19 game of the season. Westbrook scored 27 points with 17 rebounds and 14 assists in a nine-point win. The performance pushed Westbrook's averages to 30.9 points, 10.3 rebounds, and 11.3 assists. He was turning skeptics into believers. "Westbrook can do it," LeBron said a week later. "He's capable of doing it, he's showing it. He's like the Energizer Bunny, man. He doesn't get tired. When you have that passion for the game as well, it's very doable."

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "100 Things Thunder Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die"
by .
Copyright © 2017 Darnell Mayberry.
Excerpted by permission of Triumph Books LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Kendrick Perkins,
1. Russell Westbrook,
2. Mr. Triple Double,
3. Kevin Durant,
4. July 4, 2016,
5. August 4, 2016,
6. The Breakup,
7. Now I Do What I Want,
8. James Harden,
9. The Harden Trade,
10. Serge Ibaka,
11. The Serge Ibaka Trade,
12. The 2012 NBA Finals — Game 1,
13. The 2012 NBA Finals — Game 2,
14. The Photo,
15. The 2016 West Finals — Game 6,
16. M-V-P,
17. The Iron Man,
18. Patrick Beverley,
19. Clay Bennett,
20. Big League City,
21. Sam Presti,
22. Scott Brooks,
23. Bye-bye, Scott Brooks,
24. Hello, Billy Donovan,
25. What Is a Jones Fracture?,
26. Welcome to the 50-40-90 Club,
27. Sixth Man of the Year,
28. A Star Is Born,
29. The New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets,
30. Air Congo,
31. Air Congo Gets Grounded,
32. The Name Game,
33. Stand Until the Thunder's First Basket,
34. Gasol, Folks,
35. Michael F — — g Jordan,
36. The Ovation,
37. Community,
38. Sustained Success,
39. Russell Westbrook's Turning Point,
40. The Closer,
41. Slim Reaper,
42. Perfection,
43. Marathons with Memphis,
44. Nick Collison,
45. The Most Miserable Season Ever,
46. 30 Points, 30 Shots,
47. Kendrick Perkins,
48. Visit Thunder Alley,
49. No More Watch Parties,
50. Meet a Super Fan,
51. Meet the Thunder at the Airport,
52. Russell Westbrook at All-Star Weekend,
53. Kevin Durant at All-Star Weekend,
54. Serge Ibaka's Slam Dunk Contest,
55. The Curious Case of James Harden,
56. See a Halfcourt Shot,
57. Kid Clutch,
58. The Craziest Game of Kevin Durant's Career,
59. Thabo Sefolosha,
60. What Is a Zygomatic Arch?,
61. Jeff Green,
62. Eric Maynor,
63. Eric Maynor Goes Down,
64. Derek Fisher,
65. Reggie Jackson,
66. Andre Roberson,
67. The Invocation,
68. The Ghost of LeBron James,
69. Injuries Galore,
70. Steven Adams,
71. Killer Collapse,
72. Tulsa,
73. The Shot,
74. Sonics History,
75. Seattle Acrimony,
76. "Little Brother",
77. Attend a Mavs Road Game,
78. "Where He Gonna Go?",
79. Tyson Chandler,
80. Mayor Mick Cornett,
81. Mr. Unreliable,
82. Enes Kanter,
83. Sunset Jerseys,
84. Kevin Martin,
85. Meet Rumble the Bison,
86. Victor Oladipo,
87. The OKC National Memorial,
88. Trade Exceptions Galore,
89. Dion Waiters,
90. Loud City,
91. Nenad Krstic,
92. The Broadcasters,
93. P.J. Carlesimo,
94. The Skirvin,
95. The Ray Allen & Rashard Lewis Trades,
96. "Thunderstruck",
97. Cole Aldrich,
98. Kyle Singler,
99. Nate Robinson,
100. The Others,

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