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The NBA Has an Oklahoma City Thunder Problem… The NBA has seen dominant teams before, but every so often, a story arrives that doesn’t quite fit the patterns of history. A story that refuses to follow logic, tradition, or expectation. A story that doesn’t wait to be understood because it’s too busy rewriting the rules in real time. And this season, that story is unfolding in Oklahoma City. A franchise that was supposed to be young, talented, promising, even exciting—but not this. Not a machine. Not a superpower. Not the team nobody in the league can solve. Yet somehow, the Thunder have opened the season with a stunning 12–1 record, without their second-best player, without multiple elite defenders, and while enduring the toughest opening stretch in the entire NBA. It isn’t normal. It isn’t accidental. It isn’t even surprising to those paying close attention. Because the scariest part of all is that the Thunder look like they’ve planned for this moment. Their rise doesn’t feel like a fluke—it feels like something that’s been quietly brewing, gathering momentum, and now erupting with a force nobody can ignore. And the spark behind it all is a player who might genuinely be the best basketball player alive right now. There is something unusual—almost unfair—about the way Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is moving through games this season, like someone who found a hidden setting the rest of the league isn’t allowed to see. Watching him, you get the sense that basketball has slowed down for him to such an extreme degree that the court looks like a puzzle he’s already solved before the other team even begins to assemble it. His scoring bursts don’t feel like runs; they feel like inevitabilities. Entire games swing in a handful of possessions the moment he decides he’s had enough. The Lakers saw it up close when a calm evening suddenly turned into a lesson in superstar momentum control, as Shai flipped an entire game in moments. He is scoring over thirty points per game while barely playing in fourth quarters, finishing opponents early and taking a seat like a boxer who’s already knocked his opponent out before the final bell. Even among superstars, this level of efficiency and ease is absurd. Thirty-two and a half points per night on sixty-four percent true shooting in only thirty-four minutes a game is something the league simply has not seen from a guard. It’s the kind of efficiency that belongs to a big man dunking everything, not a perimeter scorer breaking teams apart with slow, methodical precision.