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Jalen Williams’ hamstring issue turns OKC’s depth into the Game 3 swing factor

Jalen Williams’ hamstring issue turns OKC’s depth into the Game 3 swing factor
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Oklahoma City has the depth to weather a Jalen Williams injury, but that does not mean the Thunder can replace what he brings.

Williams was ruled out of the second half of Game 2 with left hamstring tightness, the same leg that already cost him six playoff games earlier in the spring. He played just seven minutes, finishing with four points and two steals before Oklahoma City had to finish the night without him.

The Thunder still beat the San Antonio Spurs 122-113, tying the Western Conference finals at 1-1. But the bigger question now travels with the series to San Antonio.

Williams is considered day-to-day and has been listed as questionable for Game 3. That gives Oklahoma City hope, but it does not erase the concern.

Williams does too much for OKC to treat this like a normal rotation change

Williams is a second creator next to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, a wing scorer who can punish mismatches without hijacking possessions and a defender with enough size and strength to handle multiple assignments.

If he is limited in Game 3, Oklahoma City can still function. It just has to function differently.

OKC has replacements, but not the same player

NBA.com’s series preview highlighted Oklahoma City’s unusual depth, and Game 2 showed exactly why that matters.

The Thunder bench outscored San Antonio’s reserves 57-25. Alex Caruso gave Oklahoma City 17 points, Cason Wallace stepped into the second-half lineup after Williams exited, and the Thunder still had enough guard depth to keep pressure on the Spurs.

But depth is not the same thing as duplication.

Ajay Mitchell brings pace. Wallace brings defense and steadiness. Caruso brings disruption and playoff calm. None of them fully replicates Williams’ mix of size, shot creation and connective play.

The Thunder need the offense to stay layered

Game 3 is already being framed around mounting fatigue and injury pressure. That is where Williams’ status matters most.

Oklahoma City can survive by asking Gilgeous-Alexander to carry more of the offense. He already answered Game 2 with 30 points and nine assists after the Spurs took the opener.

But that is a thinner version of the Thunder than the one that has controlled most of this postseason.

San Antonio will test the weak spots immediately

If Williams is out or compromised, the Spurs can load more attention toward Gilgeous-Alexander and dare the rest of the Thunder to create efficiently enough to hold the series edge.

Oklahoma City’s depth has been a luxury all season. Game 3 may reveal whether it can still feel like one when Williams’ unique role is missing.

The Thunder have enough answers to survive. They just may not have one player who answers the same questions Williams does.

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