Are the OKC Thunder a stepping stone to brighter opportunities?

By Taylor Odenat / Roar Rookie

The Oklahoma City Thunder are excellent at drafting, training players and assisting in the progression of their skills and talents. Kevin Durant was drafted second by OKC in the 2007 NBA Draft, and is arguably a top-three player in the game.

Russell Westbrook was drafted fourth in 2008 NBA Draft, and is a top-five player at his position. However, it’s the careers and improved numbers that certain players have been able to put together after their departure from Oklahoma City that has surprised the masses.

James Harden, Reggie Jackson and now Jeremy Lamb all share a common similarity. Beside the fact that they are all shooting guards that previously played for the Thunder, the comparisons go beyond that.

Harden was traded from the Thunder to the Houston Rockets in the offseason leading up to the 2012-2013 year for Kevin Martin, Jeremy Lamb and a few draft picks.

Since then, James Harden has been the undoubted star of the Rockets and has taken the squad to heights as far as the Western Conference Finals.

Back in Oklahoma City, Harden was a mere sixth man, although he was rather successful in that role, winning the Sixth Man of the Year Award in 2011. He was being underused in Oklahoma City.

During his tenure, the team elected to start the defensive-minded guard Thabo Sefolosha in lieu of starting Harden; deciding to bring offensive energy off the bench. In retrospect, the line-up was rather rewarding as the Thunder battled to the promise land and reached the 2012 NBA Finals.

Be that as it may, Harden had the potential to be much more than just a sixth man playing behind an ageing Sefolosha. His trade from OKC was the best case scenario for his career, the Rockets were a team who needed a star and Harden was a player who needed to head his own team.

With the addition of Dwight Howard a season later, the Rockets now are a significantly better team that they once were because of Harden.

Next up in line to receive the good fortune of leaving the Thunder was Boston College attendee Reggie Jackson. Similar to Harden, Jackson served as an offensive punch off the bench.

Once Harden was traded away, he needed to be that strong presence behind Westbrook at the point. Jackson did thrive in that role, but desired much more from his basketball career.

Tensions would eventually brew in the OKC locker room as Jackson saw himself to be a starter in this league. Westbrook started ahead of him, and although Reggie is a superb player he was not starting ahead of the league’s most athletic point guard.

Jackson eventually requested a trade, believing that his talents weren’t being used to the fullest. Players in the Thunder locker room didn’t take kindly to his attitude and leaders such as Kevin Durant made it known verbally through statements such as “we felt like everybody wanted to be here except for one guy.”

Jackson inevitably got his wish and was soon traded in a three-team deal to the Detroit Pistons, who were in dire need of a point guard following the season-ending injury to Brandon Jennings.

From that point onward, Reggie Jackson proved that he actually was worth more than the role OKC gave him, identical to Harden a season prior. He finished the 2014-2015 season averaging career-best numbers in points, minutes, rebounds, and assists.

While he may not be able to maintain any friendship or even business relationships with the men on OKC’s roster, his trade was the best thing that could have happened for him and Detroit.

Jackson left a situation where he was unable to climb a ladder or progress to instead lead a up-and-coming Pistons team with hope for the future.

The most recent sixth man to leave the Thunder to experience greener pastures is Jeremy Lamb of the Charlotte Hornets. Lamb was traded to the Hornets for Luke Ridnour and a second round pick leading up to this season in an effort to clear cap space.

He never really complained about his role, but he is in a more advancing situation with Charlotte. Nicholas Batum, who starts over Lamb, isn’t a superstar so there is possibility of earning a starting spot down the road over the ageing forward.

Additionally, the Hornets seem to have immense faith in Lamb seeing as they granted him a three-year, $US21m contract extension. In 22 games, the Hornets are already utilising Lamb more than OKC did, giving him 24mpg as opposed to the 14mpg that he averaged playing for the Thunder.

Lamb may not make as much consistent noise for his team as Harden and Jackson do, but leaving Oklahoma City is definitely putting his career in an uphill direction.

Will Kevin Durant be the next to leave Oklahoma City? Granted, his reason for leaving or getting traded wouldn’t be for lack of minutes or insignificant role.

His reasons would lean towards Oklahoma City not going beyond the Western Conference Finals since the 2013-2014 season or him having to share the spotlight with guard Russell Westbrook.

Keeping in mind the examples of Harden, Jackson, and Lamb, Durant will have to decide if he will sign an extension and continue to attempt to bring the Thunder a championship or if he will leave a gain new opportunities in a new city.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2016-01-18T20:07:01+00:00

Taylor Odenat

Roar Rookie


I understand your point, but what happened with Jackson and Harden doesn't happen with every team and every bench player that leaves or gets traded and receives more minutes. It's not guaranteed that they'll improve, I was just making statements about the apparent pattern with this particular team being the Oklahoma City Thunder. Kevin Durant and Westbrook have different cases since they aren't bench players, but i believe that if one of them leaves OKC they'll have a better chance at winning a championship whereas with the Harden, Jackson, and Lamb, them leaving would have signified more playing time and better opportunity.

2016-01-17T21:34:06+00:00

Steele

Guest


That's a simplistic way of looking at things. Harden and Jackson were bench players at OKC, so of course their stats improved when getting more minutes at teams stacked with less star power. Not to mention they are older now and more experienced. How can you say KD and Durant would do the same? If KD goes to Golden State next year as some have suggested, then his role would prob be slightly dimished. However if he were to go to the Lakers he'd prob post bigger numbers. And if he goes, then Westbrook will prob score huge points again at OKC. Basically it depends on the roster mate.

AUTHOR

2016-01-17T06:13:19+00:00

Taylor Odenat

Roar Rookie


My point wasn't that OKC could have kept all of them under their salary cap, it was just to state that once these players left Oklahoma City they have statistically become better players and have futures for better careers. I predict the trend will continue if either Durant or Westbrook leave the team.

2016-01-17T02:23:38+00:00

Steele

Guest


Harden and Jackson have both turned out to be great, especially Harden. But I'm not sure what your point is? No way do you fit them all under the cap, and how many truly terrific guards do any one teams roster have in the league? Durant's last full season reaped an MVP and Westbrook is better than a top five player in his position. His versatility is unmatched. When Durant got injured he went on to win a scoring title and is prob only trailing Curry this year in MVP voting. It is incredible the amount of talent they keep recruiting though. As a fan I do feel they lack depth but it's not in the offensive positions.

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