Bennett Stirtz gave Oklahoma City Thunder fans the kind of Summer League glimpse they’d been waiting for, even if the result stayed ugly.
The Thunder dropped a 96-84 decision to the Los Angeles Lakers in Las Vegas, leaving them winless in Summer League and still searching for offense. But while the team’s scoring problems lingered, Stirtz finally looked like the player they traded up for.
He finished with 18 points on 7-of-14 shooting, adding two assists, one steal and one block. He went 3-of-8 from beyond the arc and made his lone free throw.
Stirtz set the tone early by scoring Oklahoma City’s first basket on a driving layup, and from there the ball started to feel like it belonged in his hands. The more the Thunder let him run the offense, the more comfortable he looked. Working off Christoph Tilly’s screen, he operated like the pick-and-roll creator he was expected to be, getting to the top of the key and knocking down pull-up jumpers.
His best work came after halftime. Stirtz scored 13 of his points in the second half, and the shot chart finally started to reflect the kind of microwave scoring that had been missing. He buried a pair of deep 3s, hit a contested corner try, and showed he could score in more than one way - whether that meant attacking the rim or pulling up in traffic in the paint.
For Oklahoma City, it was a rough night overall. For Stirtz, it was the first real sign of life. After a quiet stretch in Utah that raised some uncomfortable questions about whether he could score at the NBA level the way he did at Iowa, he answered with a much-needed burst.
"I just gotta trust it more often. I'm not used to catch-and-shoot 3s.
I had some open ones and I passed them up. I gotta just let the ball fly.
Trust my shot," Stirtz said. "Trusted it later in the game, so that was good.
I just got to continue to stack it and be better."
In Other News...
Thunder Fans Have Every Reason To Worry About Ajay Mitchell Again
Ajay Mitchells summer has already been defined by the same issue that has followed him through much of his young Thunder career: availability. The point guard is coming off a right calf strain sustained in the Conference Finals, and even with the offseason giving him time to recover, his injury history keeps the conversation from being simple. Over his first two seasons, Mitchell has been on the floor for just 57.4 percent of Oklahoma Citys games, which is enough to make any promising role player feel a little less stable in the long view.
For the Thunder, the concern is not just about whether Mitchell can help when healthy, but whether they can count on that health holding up over time. Oklahoma City has built its roster with an eye toward flexibility and continuity, and Mitchells situation adds another layer to the front offices thinking as future payday decisions come into view. The talent is still there, but so is the question that tends to linger with players who keep missing stretches: how much risk is too much for a team trying to stay ahead of its own timeline? [Read more 🡒]
Ajay Mitchell Is Suddenly In A Serious Thunder All-Star Debate
Ajay Mitchell has gone from promising depth piece to one of the more intriguing names on the Thunder roster heading into his third NBA season. After a solid rookie year, he took a real step forward last season, averaging 13.6 points, 3.3 rebounds and 3.6 assists in 57 games while finishing fifth in Sixth Man of the Year voting. He also looked comfortable on a bigger stage in the playoffs, which only added to the sense that Oklahoma City may have something more than a standard rotation guard on its hands.
The question now is how much runway he gets to keep building that case. Mitchells value has been obvious when the Thunder have leaned on him, and his best stretches have come when he has been asked to do more than simply fit in around the edges. If the opportunity expands again, the conversation around him could shift quickly from breakout reserve to something far more ambitious, which is why his next step feels like one of the more interesting subplots on a roster already full of them. [Read more 🡒]
