The Oklahoma City Thunder looked like a different team on Sunday night, and not in a good way. San Antonio dominated from start to finish, handing Oklahoma City an 103-82 loss in Game 4 of the 2026 Western Conference Finals to level the series at 2-2.
The Thunder were short-handed without Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell, both sidelined with injuries, and it showed. The offense never got going. Oklahoma City shot a miserable 6-for-33 from three-point range and turned the ball over 17 times, gifting the San Antonio Spurs 27 points off turnovers alone.
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Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had a rough night too. He finished with 19 points on 6-for-15 shooting, never really finding a groove in a game Oklahoma City needed to steal on the road.
Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) exchanges words with center Chet Holmgren (7) on the benchDaniel Dunn-Imagn Images
After the loss, SGA wasn’t pointing fingers or making excuses. He kept it straightforward.
“Whether you win or lose, you want to learn lessons from the game,” Gilgeous-Alexander said via beat reporter Michael Martin. “When you lose, a lot of the lessons are a little bit louder, and that’s just how we view it. You want to learn through the wins, but sometimes you lose, and you gotta get better. In a series, that’s what it’s about, getting better and being better when you’re done with a series than you were when you started the series, and give yourself a chance, that’s what we focus on.”
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It’s a mature, league MVP way to look at a rough night, and it’s the kind of response you’d expect from someone who’s been through playoff battles before.
Thunder’s Bench and Turnover Problems Took Center Stage
Oklahoma City’s second unit had been a strength earlier in the series but went cold in Game 4, and once those bench points dried up, San Antonio pulled away without much resistance. The turnover issue made things worse. The Thunder usually force that kind of chaos on opponents, not the other way around.
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Gilgeous-Alexander and this group have weathered tough stretches before, and the series is still tied, so there’s no reason for alarm just yet.
But Game 4 exposed some real problems that won’t fix themselves. The sloppy possessions, the bench going quiet and the defensive breakdowns all happened in the same night, and that’s a combination Oklahoma City can’t afford to repeat.
With the series now at 2-2, how the Thunder respond in Game 5 will say a lot about where this team really is.
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Related: Lakers’ Legend Sends Strong Message After Spurs’ Dominant Game 4 Win Over Thunder
This story was originally published by Athlon Sports on May 25, 2026, where it first appeared in the NBA section. Add Athlon Sports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.