
Oklahoma City evened the Western Conference finals with a 122-113 win on May 20, but the bigger story might be Jalen Williams leaving with left hamstring tightness late in the first quarter.
He finished with four points, one rebound and two steals in seven minutes, and his absence put the Thunder right back into a familiar issue.
Williams isn’t just another option for Oklahoma City. He’s the player who helps them stay organised when Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is off the ball or off the floor.
He gives them another downhill creator, another switchable defender and another body who can keep the game from turning into pure Shai dependence. The Thunder survived Game 2 without him, but surviving one night is not the same as carrying that setup through the rest of this series.

Williams picks up the same injury again
It wasn’t just a minor knock picked up during play. This was the same left hamstring issue that had already sidelined Williams for six games earlier in the playoffs. He missed Games 3 and 4 against Phoenix in the first round and sat out all four games of Oklahoma City’s sweep over the Lakers.
Even if Williams returns soon, it raises questions about how much Oklahoma City can rely on him from one possession to the next.
He’s not just a shooter parked in the corner. Williams takes on secondary actions, manages late-clock situations, and helps balance defensive matchups around Gilgeous-Alexander. Hamstring injuries don’t just keep players off the floor—they impact explosiveness, quick changes of direction, and overall defensive impact, all areas where Williams makes a difference.
Head coach Mark Daigneault said Williams would be evaluated further and didn’t offer any timeline for his return, leaving his availability for Game 3 in San Antonio uncertain.
Thunder adapts with Williams sidelined
Oklahoma City didn’t waste any time responding on Wednesday. Alex Caruso chipped in 17 points, Cason Wallace added 12 while hitting four threes, and the Thunder bench outscored San Antonio’s reserves 57-25. Wallace joined the starting group after halftime, helping the Thunder play at a faster pace.
That setup can hold up in short bursts because Oklahoma City has enough defenders and quick thinkers to keep things steady.
Caruso is capable of steadying possessions. Wallace keeps the ball moving and can hit open shots. Jared McCain and Ajay Mitchell bring scoring energy in limited roles.
But none of them quite match what Williams brings—a blend of playmaking, size and two-way presence that all fits into one spot in the rotation.
Williams’ injury changes the series calculations
San Antonio entered the series already dealing with De’Aaron Fox’s ankle issue, which kept him out for a second straight game. That meant more offensive responsibility fell on Victor Wembanyama, Dylan Harper and Stephon Castle.
If Oklahoma City now has to manage Williams the same way San Antonio is handling Fox, this matchup shifts from a star-driven contest to one focused on depth and health.
The Thunder can still operate with a single primary creator. It just means streamlining their actions even further and relying more heavily on role players who are better in supporting roles than as initiators.
That becomes clear when Shai gives up the ball, when a possession stalls late in the shot clock or when OKC needs more size defensively on the wing.
Shai’s job gets tougher without Williams
Gilgeous-Alexander handled Game 2 well, finishing with 30 points and nine assists. But the issue is not whether he can dominate one night. He can.
But it’s different over the course of a series when San Antonio ramps up their focus on him and starts forcing others to step up.
Williams usually gives Oklahoma City that next answer. Without him, the Thunder need Wallace, Caruso, McCain and Mitchell to share the job, which can work for pace and spacing but does not fully replace a 6-foot-5 wing who can create and defend across matchups.
Game 3 could be a real turning point
The story coming out of Game 2 was that Oklahoma City responded well. But the bigger question is what version of the Thunder we’ll see when they get to San Antonio.
If Williams is limited or out again, it puts more pressure on the rest of the roster built around Gilgeous-Alexander.
There’s still no clear timeline for his return. Until there’s an update, Oklahoma City has to prepare as if they’ll be without him again.
They managed well in Game 2, but now they need to show it can hold up on the road against a team that’s already taken one game in their building.
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