Lakers vs. Thunder Game 1 Highlights: OKC Takes Control in a 108-90 Win
Game 1 between the Los Angeles Lakers and Oklahoma City Thunder had an early feeling of intrigue, then gradually turned into a statement from the top seed.
The Thunder beat the Lakers 108-90, opening the series with a performance that was balanced, fast, physical, and disciplined. Chet Holmgren led the way with 24 points, 12 rebounds, and 3 blocks. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander added 18 points and 6 assists, even with Los Angeles throwing aggressive coverages at him all night. Ajay Mitchell chipped in 18 points, and Oklahoma City’s depth kept showing up in the biggest stretches.
For the Lakers, LeBron James was excellent early and productive throughout, finishing with 27 points and 6 assists. Rui Hachimura added 18 points. But the broader story was clear: the Thunder won the math, the energy game, the paint battle, and eventually the rhythm of the night.
Here is how OKC took Game 1.
LeBron came out attacking, and the Lakers had the right tone early
Los Angeles opened with urgency, and that started with LeBron. He attacked the rim immediately, got downhill, finished through contact, and put pressure on Oklahoma City’s interior defense from the opening possessions.
That aggression mattered because the Lakers did not begin this game looking passive or overwhelmed. LeBron scored quickly, Rui found a couple of early opportunities, and the Lakers were active enough defensively to make OKC work.
Austin Reaves showed patience in the half court, and Deandre Ayton made his presence felt around the glass and inside. There was also a clear effort to mix in different defenders on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, with Marcus Smart taking on a major share of that assignment. The Lakers wanted to make SGA see bodies, feel contact, and give the ball up.
For a while, that approach kept the game within reach.
Oklahoma City settled in by trusting its spacing and ball movement
Once the Thunder got past the first punch, their offense began to look like itself.
That meant:
Drive-and-kick sequences when the Lakers sent help toward SGA
Quick swing passes to create open threes
Big-to-big action involving Isaiah Hartenstein and Holmgren
Secondary creators stepping into open lanes and making decisive plays
One of the themes of the night was Oklahoma City’s ability to stay composed when the initial action got crowded. When SGA drew extra attention, the Thunder did not force the next read. They made the simple pass, then the next one, and eventually the Lakers were scrambling.
Luguentz Dort hit from deep. Jalen Williams knocked down a three. Holmgren found offense both inside and outside. Ajay Mitchell gave them another ball handler who could get into the paint and finish possessions. Even when the Lakers disrupted the first look, the Thunder kept flowing into the second and third options.
Chet Holmgren changed the game at both ends
Holmgren’s stat line was strong, but his impact went beyond the numbers.
Offensively, he stretched the floor, finished in transition, and punished the Lakers whenever their rotations were a step late. Defensively, he was a major reason Los Angeles could never fully settle in around the basket.
He blocked shots at the rim, challenged drives without fouling, and erased second-effort chances. There were multiple moments where a Laker appeared to have created a clean look inside, only for Holmgren to close the space instantly.
That combination is what makes him so difficult in this matchup. He is not just a shot blocker parked near the paint. He can recover, rotate, contest, and then run the floor on the other end. The Thunder turned several of those defensive wins into transition opportunities, and that is where the game started to tilt.
The Lakers had success defending SGA, but it came with a cost
One of the most interesting parts of Game 1 was how committed the Lakers were to getting the ball out of Gilgeous-Alexander’s hands.
Marcus Smart set the tone there. He picked up full court, fought over actions, bodied SGA on drives, and generally made life uncomfortable. The Lakers also mixed in help from LeBron and others, showing doubles and crowding the lane whenever Shai threatened to get to his spots.
In one sense, the plan worked. Gilgeous-Alexander finished with 18 points, and this was his first game below 20 points since May 24, 2025.
But the downside of that strategy also showed up repeatedly. Once SGA gave it up, Oklahoma City had room to attack behind the play. Holmgren got clean looks. Caruso extended possessions. Mitchell took advantage of tilted defenses. Dort and others found catch-and-shoot chances.
That is the challenge with the Thunder. Slowing the star is only half the problem. Their support structure is good enough to beat you if your rotations lose shape.
OKC’s second unit and role players won important minutes
This was not just a stars game. Oklahoma City’s depth was a real separator.
The Thunder got 34 bench points, and several reserves made meaningful plays:
Ajay Mitchell attacked off the dribble and scored efficiently enough to keep pressure on the defense
Isaiah Joe gave the floor instant shooting gravity
Alex Caruso brought his usual disruptive defense and hustle
Jaylin Williams and other supporting pieces fit into the flow without hijacking it
Mitchell in particular had a strong night. He got into the lane, made decisions quickly, and looked comfortable in high-leverage possessions. For a Lakers defense already bending toward SGA, another guard who could create paint touches was a problem.
That depth mattered most in the swing stretches. The Lakers would string together a few positive possessions, then Oklahoma City’s bench would answer with a burst of pace, a made three, a deflection, or a second-chance bucket. The Thunder rarely let the game drift back into neutral.
LeBron kept the Lakers alive, but the offense around him stalled
If Los Angeles had any hope of stealing Game 1, it was because LeBron gave them a real offensive engine.
He scored in transition, posted smaller defenders, found cutters, and created quality looks when the Thunder loaded up. At 27 points on 12-of-17 shooting, he was efficient and forceful. He also added 6 assists and continued to look like the most dependable initiator on the floor for the Lakers.
Rui Hachimura helped with timely threes and cuts, and there were useful moments from Smart and Luke Kennard as supplementary creators or shooters.
But the biggest issue for the Lakers was that they never got enough from Austin Reaves. He struggled badly, finishing 1-for-11, and the offense suffered because of it.
That matters even more in a series without Luka Doncic. The margin for error gets much smaller when LeBron has to carry so much of the shot creation burden and Reaves is not generating efficient offense beside him.
The Thunder clearly understood that. They stayed active against Reaves, brought rim help at the right moments, and trusted their perimeter defenders to hold up long enough for Holmgren to clean up mistakes.
The turning point came when OKC’s speed started overwhelming LA’s structure
The game did not break open all at once. It happened in layers.
First, the Thunder started winning the race down the floor. Then they began cashing in on second chances. Then the Lakers’ turnovers started becoming easy points.
By the numbers, Oklahoma City owned several of the most important areas:
48 points in the paint
21 second-chance points
34 bench points
20 points off turnovers
44 rebounds to the Lakers’ 40
13-of-30 from three, good for 43.3%
The Lakers, meanwhile, committed 17 turnovers, and those mistakes kept feeding the Thunder’s transition game. Live-ball turnovers were especially damaging because OKC turns those into immediate pressure at the rim or open threes.
That is where their quickness showed up most. They closed space fast defensively, and once possession changed, they were gone.
Los Angeles had moments, but never sustained enough clean offense
To the Lakers’ credit, they did make a few runs.
There was a stretch where Smart’s defense, Kennard’s shooting, and LeBron’s downhill play shrank the margin. A steal-and-dunk from LeBron gave Los Angeles life. Hachimura hit from outside. Kennard knocked down a three to tighten things. Smart made veteran plays and competed hard against SGA.
But each time the Lakers threatened to make it a one-possession game, Oklahoma City answered.
Sometimes it was Holmgren sealing a possession at the rim. Sometimes it was Mitchell carving up a rotating defense. Sometimes it was a corner three, or a loose ball that found its way back to the Thunder, or a broken play that still ended in points because OKC simply got to it first.
The Lakers had stretches of solid defensive discipline, especially against SGA. What they could not do was pair that with enough efficient offense for long enough.
The Thunder won the possession battle
Playoff games often come down to stars, but they also come down to possessions, and Oklahoma City dominated that side of the equation.
The Thunder blocked 7 shots, grabbed offensive rebounds that turned into extra points, and forced mistakes without losing their own offensive identity. Even with 7 turnovers, which is unusual for how careful they usually are, they still felt more organized than the Lakers over the course of the night.
Los Angeles had 26 assists, which suggests the ball moved at times, but the overall shot quality was too inconsistent. The Lakers finished at 41.7% from the field and 33.3% from three, and their bench produced only 15 points.
Meanwhile, OKC shot 49.4% from the field and turned enough of the hustle categories in its favor to keep building separation.
What stood out most from Game 1
A few takeaways defined this opener:
LeBron was ready, and the Lakers needed every bit of his production
Holmgren was the most impactful two-way player in the game
The Lakers’ plan on SGA was respectable, but OKC’s counters were better
Reaves has to be much better for Los Angeles to seriously challenge in this series
Oklahoma City’s depth, speed, and rim protection gave it control once the game settled
Final score and what it means for Game 2
The final was Thunder 108, Lakers 90, and the result felt earned from every angle.
Oklahoma City did not rely on a huge scoring night from Gilgeous-Alexander. In some ways, that makes the opener even more impressive. The Thunder got a relatively modest total from their MVP candidate by his standards, and still won by 18 because the rest of the machine worked.
For the Lakers, there are some encouraging pieces to carry forward. LeBron looked strong. Hachimura contributed. The defensive pressure on SGA had stretches of real effectiveness. But to make this a series, they need cleaner possession basketball, more creation from Reaves, and better answers for Holmgren around the rim.
Game 1 belonged to Oklahoma City, which improved to 5-0 in the postseason after sweeping Phoenix and now taking the opener against Los Angeles. Game 2 is set for Thursday night, and the Lakers already know the formula they are trying to disrupt.
The problem is that in Game 1, the Thunder showed just how many ways they can win.
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