The Thunder’s Summer League roster has given Oklahoma City a strange little twist: the player the team recently moved on from is the one carrying the scoring load.
Payton Sandfort, the undrafted Iowa wing the Thunder signed to a two-way deal in March before waiving him, is still suiting up for the club in Summer League. And so far, he’s been one of the best offensive pieces on the floor for OKC.
Against Atlanta, Sandfort came off the bench and poured in 25 points, doing it on 60.0 percent shooting overall and 66.7 percent from three. That performance pushed him to the top of the Thunder’s scoring chart through three games, where he’s averaging 12.7 points per night.
That kind of production fits the flashes he showed during his rookie year. In four appearances with the varsity team, Sandfort played 15.8 minutes per game and averaged 8.8 points while hitting 41.2 percent from beyond the arc. He looked like a player with a real chance to become a useful offensive piece, even in a limited role.
Still, the path back to Oklahoma City looks narrow. The Thunder’s final two-way spot is expected to go to recently selected second-round guard Otega Oweh, which leaves Sandfort’s future with the organization in doubt. Even so, his Summer League run could help him earn a new opportunity elsewhere, or keep him in the mix with the OKC Blue for the 2026-27 season.
On the other side of the coin, lottery pick Aday Mara has had a rougher opening stretch. The Thunder took the big man 12 overall in last month’s draft, but his first few Summer League games have looked uneven.
In 22.7 minutes per game, Mara is averaging 10.0 points and 6.0 rebounds. He has shown the rim protection that made him attractive in the first place, blocking 3.0 shots per contest, but his 4.0 turnovers have taken some of the shine off that impact.
Mara was candid before joining the league that he might need time to become the player Oklahoma City drafted, and this start has reflected that. It’s not the kind of beginning the Thunder were hoping for, though there’s still time for him to settle in during the Vegas portion of the event.
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