Thunder Answer Back: SGA Drops 30 as OKC Evens Western Conference Finals Against Spurs

Oklahoma City Responds Like a True Contender in Game 2

The Oklahoma City Thunder looked nothing like a team ready to panic after dropping Game 1 to San Antonio. They came into Game 2 with urgency, physicality, and most importantly, their superstar playing like the MVP of the league.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander delivered another signature playoff performance with 30 points as OKC took down the Spurs 122-113 to even the Western Conference Finals at 1-1. And let’s be honest here, this game told us a lot about who the Thunder are when their backs hit the wall.

After Game 1, the conversation was all about Victor Wembanyama controlling the pace, San Antonio’s confidence, and whether OKC’s young core was starting to feel playoff pressure. Well, Game 2 flipped that narrative immediately.

SGA came out attacking from the opening quarter. Midrange pull-ups, drives through traffic, drawing contact, controlling tempo. This was not stat-padding basketball. This was a superstar understanding the moment and taking ownership of it. That’s what separates elite players from talented players in May basketball.

But OKC’s response was bigger than just Shai.

Chet Holmgren looked far more comfortable defensively against Wembanyama compared to Game 1. He challenged shots at the rim, stretched the floor offensively, and gave the Thunder much-needed balance on both ends. Jalen Williams also brought the energy OKC lacked in the opener, especially in transition where the Thunder finally started dictating pace instead of reacting to San Antonio’s length and half-court execution.

Now on the other side, the Spurs still showed why this series is far from over.

Wembanyama continued to impact the game in every area even when the Thunder threw double teams and physical defenders at him. San Antonio’s ball movement remained sharp, and Stephon Castle once again showed maturity beyond his years. But the difference in Game 2 was simple: OKC matched San Antonio’s intensity possession for possession.

That’s the adjustment championship-caliber teams make.

And let me say this loud for people in the back. This series is becoming exactly what the NBA wanted for the future of the league. SGA represents the current superstar entering his prime, while Wembanyama looks like the next global face of basketball. Every possession feels like a heavyweight exchange.

Now the series shifts to San Antonio tied 1-1, and suddenly Game 3 feels massive. The Spurs protected nothing in Oklahoma City. The Thunder proved they can answer adversity. And now we’re about to find out who can truly control this series when the pressure moves to Texas.