The Oklahoma City Thunder have few roster decisions to make after a breakthrough season. Here are contract and salary cap details for every player.
Generational wealth and not much by way of accomplishment on the basketball court basically has defined his seven seasons since Gordon Hayward left the Utah Jazz. At 34, Hayward has been banished to the end of the bench for the Oklahoma City Thunder. In the second-round series that OKC lost to the Dallas Mavericks, he played a total of 15 minutes spread over three of the six games. Mirroring his career away from the Jazz, the playoff run did not go as he and probably the Thunder preferred.
Falling to Luka Doncic, Kyrie Irving and the revamped Dallas Mavericks in a hard-fought Western Conference Semifinals is still an extremely encouraging sign of the Oklahoma City Thunder's present and future despite knee-jerk disappointment. It wasn't even two weeks ago that Oklahoma City absolutely dominated the shorthanded New Orleans Pelicans, earning a first-round sweep to become the youngest team ever to win a playoff series. The better side indeed won in the second round, but the Thunder nevertheless came within a last-second, controversial shooting foul on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of forcing a winner-take-all Game 7 back in Brick City.
No | Player | P |
---|---|---|
15 | C | |
13 | SF | |
5 | SG | |
14 | SG | |
3 | SG | |
2 | SG | |
33 | SF | |
7 | PF | |
11 | SG | |
18 | SF | |
50 | C | |
30 | C | |
22 | SG | |
12 | SG | |
21 | SG | |
8 | SG | |
6 | PF | |
34 | PF |