The Oklahoma City Thunder spent years building up to this moment. On Sunday night, it finally became a reality. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 29 points and added 12 assists. His performance helped the Thunder pull away in the second half to beat the Indiana Pacers, 103-91, in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, securing the franchiseβs first championship since relocating from Seattle in 2008.

The win capped a season that saw Oklahoma City finish with 84 total victories β tying the 1996β97 Chicago Bulls for the third-most in NBA history β and confirmed the Thunder as a rising force built through patience, development, and culture. Gilgeous-Alexander, the leagueβs Most Valuable Player, was named Finals MVP to complete a historic individual campaign.
βIt doesnβt feel real,β Gilgeous-Alexander said. βSo many hours. So many moments. So many emotions. So many nights of disbelief. So many nights of belief. Itβs crazy to know that weβre all here, but this group worked for it. This group put in the hours, and we deserve this.β
Thunder Take Control in Second Half
The Thunder entered Game 7 facing a Pacers team that had pushed them to the brink with timely shooting and fast-paced offense throughout the series. Indiana led 48β47 at halftime despite losing All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton early in the first quarter to an Achilles injury. But the game shifted quickly after the break.
Oklahoma City outscored Indiana, 34β20, in the third quarter and never trailed again. The Thunder’s defense ramped up their intensity, capitalizing on Indianaβs lack of a primary ball handler and generating transition opportunities that broke the game open. Gilgeous-Alexander controlled the tempo, Jalen Williams added 20 points and four assists, and Chet Holmgren delivered a standout performance with 18 points, eight rebounds, and five blocks β the most ever in a Finals Game 7.
βWhen you have an extra guard out there who can climb up into the ball and cover ground, it lets us turn up the heat,β Holmgren said. βItβs all about tradeoffs. We gave up a little size, but we made it tough for them to run anything.β
Despite some offensive struggles against the Pacers at times, Holmgren was a vital figure throughout the season for Oklahoma City, anchoring their interior defense and serving as an effective interior play finisher with further upside.
βThere were a lot of nights where I was out there on will power and anti-inflammatories,β Holmgren said. βIβm just so happy I didnβt quit and we made it.β
Culture Over Everything
What separated this Thunder team wasnβt just youth or talent; it was cohesion. Head coach Mark Daigneault, who guided the team from the lottery to the top of the league in five years, was consistently praised by players for his poise and emotional leadership throughout the postseason.
βThey behave like champions. They compete like champions,β Daigneault said. βThey root for each otherβs success, which is rare in professional sports. Iβve said it many times and now Iβm going to say it one more time: they are an uncommon team β and now theyβre champions.β
The bond within the locker room was evident. Isaiah Hartenstein, a veteran who joined the team in free agency last summer, credited Daigneault for fostering a genuine support system.
βHe really cares about us as people, not just players,β Hartenstein said. βWhen we bring our kids around, heβs the first one to play with them. If youβve got problems off the court, heβs the first to listen.β
The postgame celebration reflected their youth and inexperience with this stage. Players fumbled with goggles, bottles sprayed prematurely, and laughter echoed through the locker room as the reality of a title sunk in.
βNone of us knew how to pop champagne,β Hartenstein said, laughing. βWe were asking AC [Alex Caruso] for a tutorial. It wasnβt in sync, but we figured it out.β
For Luguentz Dort β who went undrafted in 2019 and became a mainstay in Oklahoma Cityβs rotation through effort and defense β the moment was personal.
βI was born in Canada, but my parents immigrated from Haiti,β Dort said. βHaiti has been through a lot. Iβm happy to be a Haitian here at the biggest stage, being a champion now.β
Williams, who added 20 points in the clincher, said the emotions hit hard when the buzzer sounded.
βI looked up, and my mom was crying in the stands,” he said. “That made me tear up a little bit. It kind of just hit me β everything we worked for. All the sacrifices, all the hours. To share it with your family? Thatβs what itβs all about.β
Insane shot from Bob Mills SkyNews 9 as OKC celebrates the Thunder winning the NBA Finals. pic.twitter.com/swCtVdbeAq
β Cody Nagel (@CodyNagel247) June 23, 2025
A Banner for Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City now joins the list of NBA champions, not just with a title, but with a foundation that appears built to last. The Thunder became the seventh different franchise to win a championship in the last seven seasons, a run of parity unlike any in league history.
But this title felt more like a start than a culmination.
The franchise’s only other championship came in 1979 as the Seattle SuperSonics. There is no banner for that title in Oklahoma. This fall, for the first time, one will hang β earned by a new era of Thunder basketball.
General manager Sam Prestiβs long-term vision, built through the draft and internal development, was validated in full. Gilgeous-Alexander, acquired in the 2019 Paul George trade, has blossomed into a superstar in his sixth season with the Thunder. Holmgren and Williams stepped up as co-starsβthe rest of the roster filled in around them with discipline and purpose.
Gilgeous-Alexander recalled the message Presti shared with the team after Holmgrenβs injury in 2022.
βHe came into the room and said, βOur destiny is what we make it,ββ Gilgeous-Alexander said. βThat stuck with me. We can do whatever we want to do.β
Now, theyβve done it β and Oklahoma City finally has a championship to call its own.
βThis is a huge moment for everybody here β the city, the fans, Clay [Bennett], Sam [Presti], Coach Mark, all the players, the staff,β Holmgren said. βIβm just so happy we get to share it together.”