The Oklahoma City Thunder are proving this series is about far more than just Shai Gilgeous-Alexander versus Victor Wembanyama. Through three games of the Western Conference Finals, Oklahoma City’s bench has completely changed the direction of the series — and Game 3 may have been the defining example yet.
After falling behind 15-0 in the opening minutes Friday night, the Thunder looked completely overwhelmed in San Antonio. The crowd was rocking, the Spurs had all the momentum, and it felt like OKC might be on the verge of collapsing on the road. Then the Thunder reserves entered the game, and everything flipped.
Oklahoma City’s bench exploded for 76 points in the 123-108 win over the San Antonio Spurs, outscoring San Antonio’s reserves 76-23. It was not only the biggest difference in the game — it was one of the greatest bench performances in NBA playoff history. According to Reddit NBA discussions after the game, the 76 bench points tied for the fifth-most ever in a playoff game.
What makes this so scary for the rest of the league is that Oklahoma City is getting these performances while not even relying entirely on its stars. Gilgeous-Alexander still finished with 26 points and 12 assists, but this game belonged to the role players.
Rookie guard Jared McCain delivered 24 huge points off the bench, Jaylin Williams added 18, and the Thunder reserves completely changed the pace and energy of the game. The Spurs simply had no answer once OKC started rotating fresh bodies onto the floor every few minutes.
That depth advantage is becoming the defining factor of this series. The Spurs have arguably the most terrifying superstar in basketball with Wembanyama, who still dropped 26 points Friday night, but Oklahoma City can attack teams in waves. Even when one player struggles, another rotation piece steps up.
The Thunder bench has now become historically productive this series, and it is putting enormous pressure on San Antonio’s young core. Every game turns into a 48-minute marathon where Oklahoma City keeps throwing defenders, shooters, and energy guys at the Spurs until they eventually wear down.
That is championship-level depth.
And suddenly, after the Spurs stole Game 1 behind Wembanyama’s legendary 41-point masterpiece, momentum has completely shifted back toward Oklahoma City.
If the Thunder bench keeps producing like this, the series may stop being remembered as “Wemby vs SGA” and instead become remembered as the moment the NBA realized Oklahoma City might simply be too deep to beat.








