The broken record skipped some more Sunday night at the Moda Center.
There was another sidelined starter.
There was another “clutch-time” test.
And there was another loss for the Portland Trail Blazers.
The shorthanded Portland Trail Blazers pushed the Oklahoma City Thunder for three-and-a-half quarters, but didn’t have enough down the stretch to avoid the inevitable, falling 123-115 before 17,597.
Deni Avdija recorded his fourth-career triple-double, Toumani Camara had one of his best all-around games of the season and the Blazers matched the best team in the NBA blow-for-blow most of the night. But in the end, MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander awoke from a slumber when it mattered most, Ajay Mitchell hit enough timely shots and the Thunder slithered away from the Moda Center with another win, extending their NBA-best record to 20-1.
“We knew that we had to take the fight to them today and bring a total team effort,” Blazers forward Kris Murray said. “And I thought we did that for 42 out of 48 minutes. That’s kind of been the story of the year.”
And the latest chapter included another notable absence. Donovan Clingan, the Blazers’ leading rebounder and their only player averaging a double-double (10.2 points and 10.0 rebounds), was stuck at home with an illness, leaving the team without yet another important piece. The starting center is the 10th Blazers player to miss time this season due to injury or illness, which has forced the team to play without its starting backcourt and all three of its point guards at various times this month.
The latest setback forced interim coach Tiago Splitter to try a new wrinkle, leaning on a starting lineup that did not feature a traditional center: Avdija, Sidy Cissoko, Murray, Camara and Jerami Grant.
“Jerami and I were trying to figure out which one of us was playing center today,” Murray said, joking.
The unconventional lineup worked for most of the game as the teams battled shaky long-range shooting, a see-saw matchup that featured 15 lead changes and 22 ties, and herky-jerky action littered with fouls (52) and free throws (69).
The Blazers’ defense bottled up Gilgeous-Alexander most of the night, thanks in large part to the tenacity of Camara, but the reigning NBA MVP finally broke free in the fourth quarter, right about the time the Thunder found a little mojo.
They first started to pull away at the beginning of the final period, when they opened with an 8-0 run to transform a two-point deficit into a 93-87 lead. The Blazers (8-12) coughed up three turnovers and Chet Holmgren delivered an impressive block on a Shaedon Sharpe dunk attempt during the mini burst, which seemed to ignite Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder.
All of a sudden, after hitting just 4 of 11 shots over the first three quarters, Gilgeous-Alexander was swishing tough fadeaways, draining contested pull-up jumpers and working his way to the free throw line. He made 4 of 5 field goals in the deciding period, during which he scored 10 of his team-high 26 points. Mitchell was equally clutch, producing 11 points, two rebounds and two assists in the fourth.
The Blazers held their own until the final minutes, however, using the dominance of Avdija, a couple big shots from Murray and a barrage of free throws to keep things close. When Murray swished a three with 2:58 left, the Blazers trailed just 107-105 and Moda Center was buzzing.
But Holmgren answered with a layup, Sharpe was whistled for an offensive foul in the backcourt and Gilgeous-Alexander nailed a 14-foot baseline jumper. He added two more clutch midrange jumpers over Camara during the final 1:23 to ice the win.
Camara, who defended the NBA’s second-leading scorer admirably most of the night, said he tried lean on his physicality, avoid falling for Gilgeous-Alexander’s patented pump fakes and keep him away from his “spots.” But it wasn’t enough.
“He’s very … slippery,” Camara said. “He is a very, very, very smart basketball player. So you’ve got to give him credit.”
And even in defeat, it was hard not to give the Blazers a little credit, too. Avdija finished with 31 points, a season-high 19 rebounds and 10 assists, producing his second triple-double in 10 days. Camara recorded 19 points, eight rebounds and four assists, while making five three-pointers. And Murray added 13 points, six rebounds and two assists in his second start of the season.
After becoming the only team to defeat the Thunder earlier this month, the Blazers gave them another test Sunday, a feat few teams have been able to boast. Oklahoma City’s average margin of victory this season is 15.5 points per game.
“I hate to call this a moral victory, but I think we competed,” Splitter said. “I’m proud of the way they competed. … We had a chance to win the game. This is a great team and it’s hard to play against them. We tried everything we had. We (tried) different matchups. Going small. Going big. Zone. Trap. But at the end of the day, you’ve still got to make shots and they were able to make more than us.”
And at the end of the day, it added up to yet another loss for the Blazers in a game featuring “clutch-time” minutes, when the score is within five points in the final five minutes. Portland has played in 12 such games this season, going 5-7.
No one in the home locker room was using injuries as an excuse. But one can’t help but wonder what this gritty young team’s record might be if injuries hadn’t left the rotation depleted, if that record hadn’t skipped one more time on Sunday.
“I think we have a lot of key players missing and it’s very noticeable,” Avdija said. “But I’m so proud of the guys that (have) come in and filled those roles … because we’re in these games, we’re winning some games, we’ve given a fight to the champions of the NBA. You can’t take it for granted. We’re definitely missing the key guys and I hope they’re going to recover and come back soon. But I’m just going to say I’m proud … I can’t have no complaints.”