National Basketball Association
Oklahoma City 106, Detroit 88
When: 8:00 PM ET, Saturday, November 26, 2016
Where: Chesapeake Energy Arena, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Officials: #43 Dan Crawford, #10 Ron Garretson, #53 CJ Washington
Attendance: 18203

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Stan Van Gundy isn't one to mince words. The Detroit coach has no problem giving honest appraisals about almost any topic that is put to him.

But Van Gundy saves some of his most biting and frank comments about his team whenever they play below his expectations. That was the case Saturday when the Pistons traveled to Oklahoma City.

Behind Russell Westbrook's seventh triple-double of the season, the Thunder defeated the Pistons 106-88 at Chesapeake Energy Arena. Van Gundy didn't hold back on his assessment of his team's performance.

"Our defense was pathetic," Van Gundy said. "Pathetic. We didn't compete. It's mind-boggling with how different we are home and on the road. We didn't take care of any of the areas we were supposed to focus on. We made very little effort and Oklahoma City played a whole lot harder than us and deserved to win."

Westbrook posted 17 points, 15 assists and 13 rebounds to earn consecutive triple-doubles on back-to-back nights. It was also his 44th career triple-double, which ties him with Cleveland's LeBron James. However, it took Westbrook 395 fewer games.

Westbrook passed Fat Lever in all-time triple doubles to move into sixth place all-time. Amazingly, he's had 18 games in which he was either one assist or one rebound short of a triple double.

"He's a Hall of Fame player," Thunder coach Billy Donovan said of Westbrook. "I mean that's really what he is. He's a Hall of Fame player."

The Thunder had five players score in double figures. Anthony Morrow came off the Thunder bench to lead the charge. He poured in a season-high 21 points on 8-of-12 shooting. Steven Adams added 16 points and nine rebounds. Victor Oladipo scored 18 on only 10 shots as Oklahoma City improved to 10-8.

Tobias Harris led the Pistons with 21 points on 8-of-18 shooting. Ish Smith, who once played for the Thunder, posted 14 points and three assists. As a team, the Pistons collected only 11 assists, which was less than Westbrook by himself.

Detroit dropped to 8-10 overall. But what had the players and staff most perplexed is there 1-8 record on the road.

"For everybody, including myself, that goes out there on the floor, we have a job to do," Harris said. "It's all about team winning. It comes down to all of us being more focused, more drive to grind it out and get a win. That's what it comes down to. We've proven we can do it at home. So it's going to take that attitude at home to take it on the road and get a win."

It was the combination of Westbrook and Morrow who helped the Thunder get off to a fast start against the Pistons. While Westbrook attacked the basket and pulled down rebounds, Morrow finally started to find his shot. After shooting 40 percent on the season, Morrow came off the bench and hit three of his first five shots.

"I love coming into the game and getting a layup or a free throw or a floater," Morrow said. "It's something I usually want to do before taking a 28-foot, 3-pointer. Billy said he was going to use me on the some post-ups so I was just ready for it before the game."

But it was an entire team effort that allowed Oklahoma City to build its lead up to 18 points in the first half. Eight of the 10 players who touched the court scored.

However, the Pistons whittled away at the lead late in the second quarter. Harris, Marcus Morris and Aron Baynes led a charge to cut the deficit to 10 by halftime.

Oklahoma City didn't help itself by barely shooting over 50 percent from the free-throw line. This allowed the Pistons to get within four points in the third quarter.

But a late surge by Morrow pushed the Thunder advantage back to 77-68 heading into the fourth.

The Thunder didn't allow the game to get any closer. The players took turns scoring at will against the Detroit defense.

At one point, Westbrook shook Kentavious Caldwell-Pope on his way to a layup, and laughed as he ran back up court.

Oklahoma City outscored Detroit 29-20 in the fourth quarter to close out the game.

"They are good, but we just didn't do our jobs," Van Gundy said. "We didn't make them make the plays we even wanted them to make. We didn't do our jobs guys. Guys just did not do their jobs. We were bad, they were good. I thought it was actually worse than the final score indicated."

NOTES: During Oklahoma City's victory over Denver Friday, Thunder center Enes Kanter used the "pull the chair" maneuver on an unsuspecting Jusuf Nurkic. Kanter said he learned the trick when he was a 20-year old rookie playing against Kurt Thomas. "Now, when I see a physical guy out there trying to be really physical or strong, try to bang it inside or whatever, I do that to make them lose their balance," Kanter told The Oklahoman. "It's a pretty cool thing." ... Detroit coach Stan Van Gundy likes some of the toughness F John Leuer brings to the team. "I wasn't surprised. We knew what we were getting," Van Gundy said. "He's doing the things he's always done. He's just getting more minutes." ... Oklahoma City G Anthony Morrow saw his playing time increase over rookie Alex Abrines in recent games. "Alex is going to be an important ingredient," Thunder coach Billy Donovan said. "I'm just a big believer of keeping our roster engaged and doing things where we can utilize all of our players. But obviously when somebody is playing more minutes that somebody else, somebody is going to have to suffer."
Top Game Performances
 
Detroit   Oklahoma City
Tobias Harris 21 Scoring Anthony Morrow 21
Ish Smith 3 Assists Russell Westbrook 15
Andre Drummond 8 Rebounds Russell Westbrook 13
Aron Baynes 5 Free Throws Made Joffrey Lauvergne 4
Andre Drummond 3 Steals Steven Adams 1
Aron Baynes 1 Blocks Jerami Grant 1
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Points FG% 3PM-3PA FTM-FTA Assists Rebounds Blocks Steals Turnovers
Detroit 88 45.1 1-19 13-17 11 32 1 7 9
Oklahoma City 106 50.6 8-23 14-26 23 43 3 4 11
Upcoming Games
  • Oklahoma City will play their next game on the road against New York. The Thunder have a W/L % of .700 after a win and .375 after a loss.
  • Detroit will play their next game on the road against Charlotte. The Pistons have a W/L % of .500 after a win and .400 after a loss.