From massive overhaul to blatant rebuild to sneaky good to party crashers, the Oklahoma City Thunder have fast-tracked themselves along that timeline in a mere three months.
No other NBA team has moved so far, so fast, in terms of the standings and, frankly, in terms of their own expectations.
The party being crashed Friday night is in Milwaukee (8 p.m. ET, ESPN), where the runaway Bucks — 50-8 and 110-30 since the start of 2018-19 — have been their own brand of modest profile relative to heavyweight real or alleged like the Lakers, Celtics, Clippers or Sixers.
But you could win a few bar bets asking stool neighbors to name the NBA team with the second-most victories and third-best winning percentage since Thanksgiving. OKC is 31-11 (.738) since then, ranking behind only Milwaukee (35-5, .875) in total wins and the Bucks and Lakers (29-10, .744) in win percentage.
Not bad for a bunch of players and coaches supposedly keeping seats warm for the 137 draft picks over the next 10 years GM Sam Presti has accumulated (OK, eight over the next seven years in addition to the Thunder’s own picks in that span. Presti also has four pick-swap options from 2021-25).
I didn’t really know what to expect coming in — and I don’t say that in terms of how good I thought we could be. I thought we could be a very, very good team.
Already, OKC has made many of the experts’ 2019-20 predictions look silly. It could lose its final 23 games and still prove ESPN wrong, which projected the Thunder to go 33-49 and finish 13th in the West.
CBSSports.com’s Brad Botkin at least considered OKC a playoff team, suggesting 46 victories. The New York Times’ Benjamin Hoffman made this his NBA “wild prediction” for 2019-20: “After trading away both Russell Westbrook and Paul George, will finish within five wins of last year’s total of 49. And it may not be five less.”
On NBA.com, it was more bright than dark: “As currently constituted, there’s enough talent and experience to snag a low playoff berth in the West.”