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2010–11 Oklahoma City Thunder season

NBA professional basketball team season


NBA professional basketball team season

FieldValue
teamOklahoma City Thunder
end_year2011
DivisionWinyes
wins55
losses27
divisionNorthwest
division_place1
conf_place4
coachScott Brooks
gmSam Presti
ownersProfessional Basketball Club LLC
arenaOklahoma City Arena
playoffs[Western Conference Finals](2011-nba-playoffs-bracket)
(lost to [Mavericks](2010-11-dallas-mavericks-season) 1–4)
bbr_teamOKC
televisionFox Sports Oklahoma

(lost to Mavericks 1–4)

  • WWLS-AM
  • FM

The 2010–11 Oklahoma City Thunder season was the 3rd season of the franchise's existence in Oklahoma City as a member of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The franchise built on its prior success from the previous year, winning 55 regular-season games and reaching the Western Conference finals – in the process becoming the second-youngest team ever to do so.

In the playoffs, the Thunder defeated the Denver Nuggets in five games in the First Round, and the Memphis Grizzlies in seven games in the conference semi-finals, before losing to the eventual NBA champion Dallas Mavericks in five games in the conference finals.

Previous season

The Thunder finished the 2009–10 season 50–32 to finish in fourth place in the Northwest Division, eighth in the Western Conference and qualified for the playoffs. The Thunder made it to the playoffs for the first since the franchise moved to Oklahoma City but were defeated 4–2 against the Los Angeles Lakers.

Offseason

Draft picks

Main article: 2010 NBA draft

Oklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"RoundOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"PickOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="20%"PlayerOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="15%"PositionOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="15%"NationalityOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="20%"College/Club teamCole Aldrich, Tibor Pleiss, Latavious Williams, and Ryan Reid were later traded to the Thunder
118Eric BledsoeSGUnited StatesKentucky
121Craig BrackinsPFUnited StatesIowa State
126Quincy PondexterSFUnited StatesWashington
251Magnum RollePFBahamasLouisiana Tech

The Thunder had three first-round picks and one second-round pick entering the draft. The Thunder's 18th overall pick was originally acquired from the Miami Heat as a result of the Daequan Cook trade prior to the draft. The Thunder also acquired the 26th overall pick originally owned by the Phoenix Suns in the Kurt Thomas trade in 2007. In the second round, the Thunder acquired the 51st overall pick originally owned by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Etan Thomas trade. The Thunder traded their 2010 second-round pick in the Byron Mullens trade back in 2009.

On draft night, the Thunder made four trades to acquire a future first-round pick and draft rights to three players. The Thunder traded the draft rights to Eric Bledsoe, the eighteenth pick, to the Los Angeles Clippers in exchange for a future first-round pick. The Thunder traded cash considerations to the Atlanta Hawks for Tibor Pleiss, the thirty-first pick. The Thunder then traded a future second-round pick swap to the Miami Heat in exchange for draft rights to Latavious Williams, the forty-eighth pick. Finally, the Thunder traded Magnum Rolle, the fifty-first pick, to the Indiana Pacers in exchange for Ryan Reid, the fifty-seventh pick.

Two weeks later, the Thunder traded the draft rights to Craig Brackins, the twenty-first pick, and Quincy Pondexter, the twenty-sixth pick, to the New Orleans Hornets in exchange for the draft rights to Cole Aldrich, the eleventh pick, and Morris Peterson.

The Thunder ended 2010 NBA draft night and the conclusion of player acquisitions and transactions, with Kansas center Cole Aldrich, Brose Basket center Tibor Pleiss, Tulsa 66ers of the NBA D-League forward Latavious Williams, and Florida State forward Ryan Reid.

International participation

Durant after receiving the gold medal at the 2010 FIBA World Championship

In February 2010, the USA National Basketball Team named Thunder players Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook to the 27-man national team roster for 2010–12. From July 19–24, 2010, Durant, Westbrook and Jeff Green each attended tryout camp in Las Vegas for inclusion on the 12-man USA National Team roster at the 2010 FIBA World Championship, to take place from August 28 to September 12, 2010, in Turkey. In late July, Durant, Westbrook and Green were each named to the narrowed 15-man USA Team roster, which participated in additional workouts August 9–16 in New York City. On August 15, 2010, Westbrook and Durant were named to the narrowed 13-man roster, which competed from August 17–20 in Madrid, Spain. On August 24, 2010, the final 12-man roster was effectively determined when USA Basketball member Rajon Rondo withdrew from Team USA. This made Durant and Westbrook the only members of Team USA from the same NBA squad. In addition, Thunder athletic trainer Joe Sharpe also traveled as a team assistant. Thunder players participating on other FIBA teams included Nenad Krstić (who was suspended for Serbia's first three games following a chair-throwing incident in a tune-up match against Greece at the Acropolis Tournament on August 19), and Tibor Pleiß for Germany.

At the 2010 FIBA tournament, Team USA won the championship game against Turkey, and Serbia ended the tournament in fourth place. Germany did not advance to the elimination-round phase of the competition. Durant was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player, and was also a first-team All-Tournament selection. For his efforts, Durant was also awarded the 2010 Male Athlete of the Year award by USA Basketball.

Training

The Thunder attended the Orlando Pro Summer League from July 5–9, 2010, No Thunder starters were assigned to Orlando; Harden, Serge Ibaka and Eric Maynor were the most experienced players on the summer roster. The Thunder also signed forward Marcus Lewis and guard Cliff Hammonds as free agents on the summer roster. Both Durant and Daequan Cook attended the event and participated in informal workouts. Harden averaged 17.5 points over five games, good for fifth in the summer league standings. Maynor averaged 5.0 assists over three games, good for fourth.

Front office and coaching changes

Just before the end of the 2010 playoffs, the Thunder announced that the team had exercised extension rights on its contract with Coach Scott Brooks, keeping him under contract through the 2011–12 season. Under the contract, Brooks earns in excess of $1.5 million per season. Later, on July 22, 2010, the team announced signing its general manager Sam Presti to a multi-year deal, terms of which were not disclosed.

Assistant coaching and staff positions, however, changed over the summer. In late June, Thunder assistant coach Ron Adams took a similar position with the Chicago Bulls under their new head coach Tom Thibodeau. As of July, the Thunder had no immediate plans to directly replace Adams. On August 24, 2010, the Thunder added former international coach Maz Trakh as an assistant coach in charge of player development, in addition to confirming the retention of remaining assistant coaches Maurice Cheeks, Mark Bryant, Rex Kalamian, and Brian Keefe.

On July 19, 2010, Thunder Assistant general manager Rich Cho left to take the vacant general manager's position with the Portland Trail Blazers. The Thunder subsequently promoted Troy Weaver to vice president/assistant general manager, Rob Hennigan to assistant general manager/player personnel, Paul Rivers to director of minor league operations and basketball technology and Brandon Barnett to director of minor league scouting and manager of minor league operations. At the same time, the Thunder announced the additions of Michael Winger as Assistant general manager for Legal/Administration, and David Vanterpool as a scout.

Promotion and media news

In June 2010, Durant and teammate James Harden completed a week-long promotional tour of China sponsored by Nike. Durant was also unveiled as the featured athlete on the cover of EA Sports' video game NBA Elite 11.

On August 3, 2010, the Thunder announced a multi-year contract granting FOX Sports Southwest the exclusive rights to regional television broadcasts of Thunder games.

On August 26, 2010, the Thunder organization announced that it would exercise its right to re-open naming rights negotiations for the Ford Center, which effectively guarantees a name change for the facility in the near future.

Thunder players Durant, Krstić, and Thabo Sefolosha were featured on the October 19, 2010, cover of Sports Illustrated's 2010 NBA Preview edition, with an accompanying feature article by SI Correspondent Lee Jenkins.

Season synopsis

Preseason

The Thunder's pre-season training camp opened on September 28, 2010, with the temporary roster addition of guards Demond "Tweety" Carter, Jerome Dyson and Elijah Millsap, as well as center Longar Longar. Carter and Longar were subsequently waived and removed from the roster on October 15, 2010, after one pre-season appearance each. The Thunder's final two pre-season roster additions, Dyson and Millsap, were waived on October 20, 2010 – leaving the team roster at the required 15 members heading into the regular season.{{cite web |url=http://www.nba.com/thunder/news/release_waiver_101020.html

Regular season

The Thunder's playoff run in 2009–10 fueled early-season interest for 2010–11. The team's regular-season schedule, released on August 10, 2010, revealed fifteen nationally televised games, up from three in the previous year. The Thunder also ranked among the NBA's top five teams in new season ticket sales heading into the year. This was in addition to a 93% renewal rate for season tickets from the previous year, well above the NBA average of 80%.

The Thunder began their regular season at home against the Chicago Bulls with an Opening Night promotion that included outdoor entertainment, a new magazine publication, and a blue-attire theme. The Thunder won the opening game, 106 to 95.

The first two months of the season saw mixed, but generally positive results for the Thunder. Through December 10, 2010, the Thunder played a schedule which statistically ranked #5 in the NBA, and #3 in the Western Conference. Despite this, the team logged a .667 winning percentage over the period. Kevin Durant led the NBA in scoring over the period at 27.45 points per game, although he missed four games due to injury (the Thunder were 3–1 in those games). The early season was highlighted by strong performances by Russell Westbrook (who at 23.95 points per game improved his scoring average by almost 8 points per game compared to 2009–2010) and Serge Ibaka (who saw his playing time increase to over 27 minutes per game and was near the top of the league in blocks).

By the midway point in the season, the Thunder's cumulative team free-throw percentage stood at .83116, just slightly off the pace of the all-time NBA single-season record of .83186, set by the 1989–90 Boston Celtics. The team's three-point shooting, however, lagged behind other offensive categories; by early February, the team's cumulative three-point percentage was 32.8%, third-worst in the league. The Thunder's 27–14 record at the midpoint of the season was largely attributable to a potent offense (103.7 points per game, sixth in the NBA) making up for subpar defensive performance (102 opponents' points per game, 20th in the NBA). As of the All-Star break, the Thunder were rated #6 in the NBA's power ranking system, with a comparatively easy schedule over the remaining course of the season.

Through the first half of the season, the Thunder's rotation stayed relatively constant, with a starting five of:

  • PG: Russell Westbrook
  • SG: Thabo Sefolosha
  • SF: Kevin Durant
  • PF: Jeff Green
  • C: Nenad Krstić

Except for periodic injuries, the starting rotation did not change until after the trading deadline on February 24, 2011. In various combinations, the Thunder generally used a nine-man rotation through January 2011, providing reserves Ibaka, Maynor, Harden and Nick Collison with significant playing time. During four games when Durant was out of the lineup with injury, the Thunder often utilized a lineup which simultaneously featured Green at the small forward spot with Ibaka at power forward, a combination featured more often as the early season unfolded. Starting with the January 28, 2011, game against Washington, shooting guard Daequan Cook began receiving significant minutes in the rotation, allowing the Thunder to substitute an entirely new second string on multiple occasions. This combination sparked some notable Thunder streaks, including the February 5 game against Utah and the February 15 game against Sacramento.

The starting rotation changed significantly after the February 24, 2011, trading deadline. In two deals made on that date, the Thunder sent starters Jeff Green and Nenad Krstić to the Boston Celtics, and acquired eventual starter at center Kendrick Perkins, backup center Nazr Mohammed, and backup point guard Nate Robinson. Perkins was unable to start immediately after his acquisition due to a left knee sprain suffered on February 22. In games on February 25 and 27, the Thunder elevated Ibaka and Collison into the starting rotation at power forward and center, respectively.

The immediate post-trade lineup shuffle resulted in the team's only three-game losing streak of the season, from February 23–27. This stretch, however, did include some bright spots, including a competitive performance against the Lakers on February 27 in which Cole Aldrich registered his best performance of the year. On March 2, Mohammed replaced Collison as starting center.

The starting lineup changed again on March 14 with the insertion of Kendrick Perkins at starting center. This solidified the starting lineup for the stretch run of the regular season as:

  • PG: Russell Westbrook
  • SG: Thabo Sefolosha
  • SF: Kevin Durant
  • PF: Serge Ibaka
  • C: Kendrick Perkins

The most immediate beneficiary of the new lineup, however, was sixth man James Harden, who in the first 15 games after the All-Star break increased his scoring average from 10.3 to 17.7 points per game. The new lineup's first major test came in the March 16, 2011, game at Miami, which the Thunder won due to a shutdown defensive performance in the second half. Subsequently, the team was cited for lackluster play in a four-game stretch from March 18–25, but afterward put in an energetic performance against Portland at home on March 27, a win which clinched a playoff berth for the franchise for the second year in a row. The team subsequently clinched the Northwest Division championship with its April 6 victory against the Los Angeles Clippers.

The contributions of Cook and Harden in the second half of the season, combined with improved three-point shooting from Westbrook, allowed the team to bring its overall three-point shooting percentage to 34.7% by the end of the regular season, good for 19th in the league. Although the Thunder ended up leading the NBA in free-throw percentage at 82.3%, this number did not displace the 1989–90 Celtics record.

The Thunder were still in contention for a #2 overall playoff seed by the time of their last regular season game on April 13 against Milwaukee, the pre-game ceremonies for which featured the unveiling of a Northwest Division championship banner. However, the Thunder's overtime loss in that game, in which the starting rotation played limited minutes, guaranteed the overall #4 seed in the Western Conference and a first-round playoff matchup with the #5-seed Denver Nuggets. The Thunder ended the season with 55 wins, five more than the 2009–10 season. Overall during the regular season, they averaged 104.83 points per game (good for fifth in the league) while limiting opponents to 101.04 points per game (18th in the league).

Attendance at Thunder regular season games continued to be strong in 2010–11. Despite having one of the smaller arenas in the NBA, the Thunder drew an average of 18,148 spectators per contest, ranking 13th in the league. This translated into 99.7% of the overall capacity of the 18,203-seat Oklahoma City Arena, ranking 8th in the league.

Promotion and media news

In March 2011, the Thunder were named to Fast Company Magazine's list of the Ten Most Innovative Companies in Sports, ranked at #6.

In merchandising sales figures released by the NBA on April 13, 2011, the Thunder as a team generated the sixth-most jersey sales of all NBA teams; in addition, Kevin Durant's individual jersey ranked as the seventh-most popular in the NBA.

In the May/June 2011 issue of Dime Magazine, Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook were featured on the cover and named "The NBA's best duo since Shaq and Kobe."

Playoffs

First round

The opening series of the playoffs against the Denver Nuggets was given extra attention when Denver coach George Karl described the Thunder team as "cocky" in comments made before the series. Game 1 of the series featured promotions similar to the "Opening Night" of the regular season, including a "blue-out" T-shirt giveaway and a "Thunder Alley" entertainment venue outside the arena. The Thunder's eventual 107–103 victory was aided by a basket occurring with just over one minute left in the game by Kendrick Perkins, which the NBA later admitted should have resulted in an offensive goaltending call. After a relatively easy Game 2 at home, the Thunder earned a hard-fought 97–94 victory in Game 3 at Denver, behind the remarkable performance of Serge Ibaka, who logged a career-high 22 points along with 16 rebounds. Denver avoided elimination in a Game 4 contest in which the Thunder's Russell Westbrook was criticized for selfish play in a 12-for-30 shooting performance. The Thunder finished the series in Game 5 by winning a dramatic comeback at home, which featured Kevin Durant scoring 16 of his 41 points in the fourth quarter.

Conference semifinals

The second round of the playoffs matched the Thunder against the Memphis Grizzlies, who had upset the #1-seeded San Antonio Spurs in a six-game series. Memphis dominated Game 1 in Oklahoma City behind a combined 54-point, 23-rebound performance by Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph. The Thunder's front court was able to play more aggressive defense against the duo in Game 2, leading to a 111-102 Thunder victory to tie the series. The next two games of the series in Memphis developed similarly but ended in different results. In Game 3, the Thunder surrendered a 16-point lead late in the third quarter, with the Grizzlies eventually tying the game in regulation and winning the game in overtime. In Game 4, the Thunder allowed Memphis to come back from a 10-point deficit with 5:25 remaining; afterward, the Thunder were unable to convert last-second shots in regulation and each of the first two overtime periods, before eventually pulling out a 133–123 win in triple overtime. Fatigue from this contest appeared to effect the Grizzlies in Game 5, who were limited to just 36% shooting in a runaway 99-72 Thunder victory. Oklahoma City led by 19 points at the end of the third quarter, allowing the team to rest most of its starters for the final period. The rest did not benefit the Thunder in Game 6, however, in which Kevin Durant was limited to just 11 points; by contrast, Memphis' Zach Randolph scored 30 points en route to a 95-83 Memphis victory, forcing a decisive Game 7 in Oklahoma City. The Thunder were able to clinch the playoff series in Game 7, however, benefitting from a 39-point performance from Durant as well as a triple-double performance by Westbrook.

Conference finals

The Western Conference finals pitted the Thunder against the Dallas Mavericks, who had previously swept the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers in four games, allowing the Mavericks the advantage of eight days rest heading into the series. Game 1 of the conference finals saw the Thunder accumulate as much as a nine-point lead in the third quarter, but ultimately collapse under the pressure of a 48-point performance by Mavericks forward Dirk Nowitzki and timely three-point shooting by reserve guard J.J. Barea. Nowitzki's performance included an NBA-record for consecutive free throws in a game; he was a perfect 24-for-24 from the line. Oklahoma City evened the series in Game 2, where the Thunder bench scored 50 points and played much of the decisive fourth quarter. In Game 3, Dallas' defensive effort forced 14 turnovers by the Thunder, eventually opening up a 23-point Dallas lead before holding off a late Thunder charge in a 93–87 win. Game 4 unfolded positively for the Thunder through most of the contest, with the team enjoying a 15-point advantage with 4:49 remaining in the fourth quarter, having built on a large statistical lead in rebounds, assists, blocks, and points in the paint. However, the Thunder suffered from 25 turnovers in the contest, and their offense evaporated in the final five minutes, shooting 1-10 from the field, as Dallas went on a 17–2 run to tie the game in regulation, 101-101. The Mavericks eventually won the game in overtime, 112–105, sending the Thunder back to Dallas down 3–1 in the series. The Thunder season then came to an end on May 25, 2011, in a hard-fought loss at Dallas, 100–96.

Promotion and media news

The Thunder's 2011 playoff appearances generated several new records for television ratings of individual Thunder games within the OKC market. Prior to 2011, the highest-rated Thunder game had been Game 6 against the Lakers in the 2010 playoffs (generating a cumulative 21.4 rating in OKC households among two broadcasts). In 2011, Game 6 of the Memphis series generated a 22.5 share; Game 7 generated a 23.4 share; Game 5 generated a 24.0 share; and Game 1 of the Mavericks series generated a 24.8 share.

During the 2011 NBA Playoffs, Kevin Durant was featured in national television commercials for Gatorade's "G-Series" sports drink line, with one such commercial incorporating teammates Nate Robinson, Nick Collison, Cole Aldrich and Royal Ivey.

Recap

Despite a frustrating series against the Dallas Mavericks to end the season, community spirit surrounding the Thunder remained high after the season. An estimated 500 fans greeted the team's private charter flight as it arrived in Oklahoma City at 1:00 a.m. the night of the Thunder's final loss.

After the conclusion of the season, several Thunder players appeared at three different youth camps hosted by the team at various locations around the OKC area in June, until the NBA lockout prohibited players from appearing at Thunder camps after June 30. Kevin Durant hosted his own camp from June 29–30 in OKC, and from July 1–2 in Austin, Texas.

Roster

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Salaries

Oklahoma City Thunder}};" width="50%"PlayerOklahoma City Thunder}};" width="50%"2010–11 SalaryOklahoma City Thunder}};" width="50%"**TOTAL**Oklahoma City Thunder}};" width="50%" align="right"**$57,876,392**
Nick Collison$13,720,000
Nazr Mohammed$6,883,800
Kendrick Perkins$6,446,720
Kevin Durant$6,053,663
James Harden$4,304,520
Nate Robinson$4,200,000
Russell Westbrook$4,017,720
Thabo Sefolosha$3,000,000
Daequan Cook$2,169,856
Cole Aldrich$2,126,520
Eric Maynor$1,417,800
Byron Mullens$1,204,200
Serge Ibaka$1,204,200
Royal Ivey$1,069,509
Robert Vaden$57,884

Sources:

  • HoopsHype: OKC Salaries
  • HoopsWorld: OKC Salaries
  • ESPN: OKC Roster

Standings

Conference

Division

Game log

Preseason

|- | 1 | October 6 | @ Charlotte | | Jeff Green (25) | Serge Ibaka (11) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Cumberland County Crown Coliseum 7,491

1–0
2
October 8
@ Miami

| | Kevin Durant (21) | Jeff Green, James Harden (5) | Eric Maynor, Russell Westbrook (6) | Sprint Center 18,222

1–1
3
October 12
Memphis

| | James Harden (23) | Serge Ibaka (8) | Royal Ivey (6) | BOK Center 11,297

1–2
4
October 14
CSKA Moscow

| | Kevin Durant (20) | Serge Ibaka (6) | Kevin Durant (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 16,425

2–2
5
October 18
@ San Antonio

| | Kevin Durant (29) | Kevin Durant, Jeff Green (9) | Russell Westbrook (9) | AT&T Center 14,627

3–2
6
October 19
@ Denver

| | Jeff Green (29) | D. J. White (13) | Eric Maynor (6) | Pepsi Center 13,549

3–3
7
October 21
New Orleans

| | Kevin Durant (19) | Byron Mullens (9) | Kevin Durant (8) | Oklahoma City Arena 16,541

4–3

Regular season

|- | 1 | October 27 | Chicago | | Kevin Durant (30) | Russell Westbrook (10) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

1–0
2
October 29
@ Detroit

| | Kevin Durant (30) | Serge Ibaka (10) | Russell Westbrook (11) | The Palace of Auburn Hills 22,076

2–0
3
October 31
Utah

| | Kevin Durant (28) | Jeff Green (9) | Russell Westbrook (5) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

2–1
-
4
November 3
@ L.A. Clippers

| | Jeff Green (19) | Jeff Green, Nenad Krstić (9) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Staples Center 18,414

2–2
5
November 4
@ Portland

| | Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook (28) | Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook (11) | Russell Westbrook (5) | Rose Garden 20,611

3–2
6
November 7
Boston

| | Kevin Durant (34) | Serge Ibaka (11) | Russell Westbrook (10) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

3–3
7
November 10
Philadelphia

| | Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook (31) | Kevin Durant, Serge Ibaka (7) | Russell Westbrook (12) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

4–3
8
November 12
Portland

| | Russell Westbrook (36) | Serge Ibaka, Russell Westbrook (7) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

5–3
9
November 14
San Antonio

| | Kevin Durant (23) | Kevin Durant (7) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

5–4
10
November 15
@ Utah

| | Kevin Durant (30) | Serge Ibaka (11) | Russell Westbrook (7) | EnergySolutions Arena 19,911

6–4
11
November 17
Houston

| | Kevin Durant (24) | Serge Ibaka (8) | Russell Westbrook (12) | Oklahoma City Arena 17,509

7–4
12
November 19
@ Boston

| | Russell Westbrook (31) | Serge Ibaka, Thabo Sefolosha (7) | Russell Westbrook (6) | TD Garden 18,624

8–4
13
November 20
@ Milwaukee

| | James Harden (23) | James Harden (9) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Bradley Center 16,975

9–4
14
November 22
Minnesota

| | Kevin Durant (28) | Thabo Sefolosha (11) | Russell Westbrook (14) | Oklahoma City Arena 17,653

10–4
15
November 24
Dallas

| | Kevin Durant (32) | Kevin Durant (11) | Russell Westbrook (10) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

10–5
16
November 26
@ Indiana

| | Russell Westbrook (43) | Jeff Green (14) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Conseco Fieldhouse 17,155

11–5
17
November 28
@ Houston

| | Russell Westbrook (23) | Serge Ibaka (8) | Russell Westbrook (10) | Toyota Center 15,316

11–6
18
November 29
New Orleans

| | Kevin Durant (26) | Kevin Durant, Serge Ibaka (11) | Russell Westbrook (11) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

12–6
-
19
December 1
@ New Jersey

| | Russell Westbrook (38) | Russell Westbrook (15) | Russell Westbrook (9) | Prudential Center 13,108

13–6
20
December 3
@ Toronto

| | James Harden, Russell Westbrook (20) | Thabo Sefolosha (7) | Jeff Green, Russell Westbrook (7) | Air Canada Centre 16,774

13–7
21
December 5
Golden State

| | Kevin Durant (28) | Jeff Green, Serge Ibaka (8) | Russell Westbrook (13) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

14–7
22
December 6
@ Chicago

| | Kevin Durant (29) | Thabo Sefolosha (8) | Russell Westbrook (7) | United Center 21,184

14–8
23
December 8
@ Minnesota

| | Kevin Durant (30) | Kevin Durant (11) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Target Center 13,907

15–8
24
December 10
@ New Orleans

| | Russell Westbrook (29) | Serge Ibaka (9) | Russell Westbrook (10) | New Orleans Arena 14,428

16–8
25
December 12
Cleveland

| | Kevin Durant (25) | Nick Collison (8) | Russell Westbrook (11) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

17–8
26
December 15
Houston

| | Kevin Durant (32) | Thabo Sefolosha (9) | Jeff Green, Russell Westbrook (5) | Oklahoma City Arena 17,997

18–8
27
December 17
Sacramento

| | Kevin Durant (24) | Serge Ibaka (10) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

19–8
28
December 19
Phoenix

| | Kevin Durant (28) | Nick Collison (8) | Russell Westbrook (9) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

19–9
29
December 21
@ Charlotte

| | Kevin Durant (32) | Nick Collison (10) | Jeff Green (5) | Time Warner Cable Arena 16,876

20–9
30
December 22
@ New York

| | Kevin Durant (26) | Serge Ibaka, Thabo Sefolosha (8) | Russell Westbrook (5) | Madison Square Garden 19,763

20–10
31
December 25
Denver

| | Kevin Durant (44) | Nenad Krstić (8) | Jeff Green (6) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

21–10
32
December 27
Dallas

| | Kevin Durant (28) | Serge Ibaka (9) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

21–11
33
December 29
New Jersey

| | Kevin Durant (27) | Thabo Sefolosha (8) | Eric Maynor, Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

22–11
34
December 31
Atlanta

| | Kevin Durant (33) | Serge Ibaka, Russell Westbrook (10) | Russell Westbrook (10) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

23–11
-
35
January 1
@ San Antonio

| | Kevin Durant (16) | Serge Ibaka (13) | Thabo Sefolosha (3) | AT&T Center 18,581

23–12
36
January 4
@ Memphis

| | Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook (28) | Kevin Durant (9) | Russell Westbrook (7) | FedEx Forum 12,765

23–13
37
January 6
@ Dallas

| | Kevin Durant (28) | Jeff Green, Nenad Krstić (9) | Russell Westbrook (9) | American Airlines Center 20,282

24–13
38
January 8
Memphis

| | Kevin Durant (40) | Kevin Durant (8) | Russell Westbrook (11) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

25–13
39
January 12
@ Houston

| | Kevin Durant (30) | Thabo Sefolosha (13) | Russell Westbrook (13) | Toyota Center 16,158

26–13
40
January 13
Orlando

| | Kevin Durant (36) | Nenad Krstić (11) | Russell Westbrook (13) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

27–13
41
January 17
@ L.A. Lakers

| | Russell Westbrook (32) | Serge Ibaka (10) | Russell Westbrook (12) | Staples Center 18,997

27–14
42
January 19
@ Denver

| | Russell Westbrook (28) | Nick Collison, Serge Ibaka (9) | Russell Westbrook (10) | Pepsi Center 16,872

27–15
43
January 22
New York

| | Kevin Durant (30) | Serge Ibaka (15) | Russell Westbrook (5) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

28–15
44
January 24
@ New Orleans

| | Kevin Durant (22) | Serge Ibaka (10) | Russell Westbrook (10) | New Orleans Arena 17,233

28–16
45
January 26
@ Minnesota

| | Kevin Durant (47) | Kevin Durant (18) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Target Center 14,979

29–16
46
January 28
Washington

| | Kevin Durant (40) | Russell Westbrook (13) | Russell Westbrook (13) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

30–16
47
January 30
Miami

| | Kevin Durant (33) | Jeff Green (11) | Russell Westbrook (10) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

30–17
-
48
February 2
New Orleans

| | Kevin Durant (43) | Serge Ibaka (12) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Oklahoma City Arena 17,849

31–17
49
February 4
@ Phoenix

| | Jeff Green (28) | Kevin Durant (11) | Russell Westbrook (11) | US Airways Center 16,274

32–17
50
February 5
@ Utah

| | Russell Westbrook (33) | Kevin Durant (12) | Russell Westbrook (10) | EnergySolutions Arena 19,711

33–17
51
February 8
Memphis

| | Kevin Durant (31) | Serge Ibaka (14) | Russell Westbrook (11) | Oklahoma City Arena 17,868

33–18
52
February 12
@ Sacramento

| | Kevin Durant (35) | Kevin Durant, Serge Ibaka (6) | Russell Westbrook (7) | ARCO Arena 14,987

34–18
53
February 13
@ Golden State

| | Kevin Durant (29) | Nick Collison (10) | Russell Westbrook (5) | Oracle Arena 19,596

34–19
54
February 15
Sacramento

| | Daequan Cook (20) | Serge Ibaka (9) | Russell Westbrook (11) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,087 | 35–19

- align="center"
55
February 22
L.A. Clippers

| | Jeff Green (22) | Serge Ibaka (10) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

36–19
56
February 23
@ San Antonio

| | Kevin Durant (30) | Serge Ibaka (15) | Russell Westbrook (7) | AT&T Center 18,581

36–20
57
February 25
@ Orlando

| | Kevin Durant (23) | Kevin Durant (16) | Eric Maynor (7) | Amway Center 19,011

36–21
58
February 27
L.A. Lakers

| | Russell Westbrook (22) | Serge Ibaka (13) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

36–22
-
59
March 2
Indiana

| | Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook (21) | Serge Ibaka (12) | Russell Westbrook (9) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

37–22
60
March 4
@ Atlanta

| | Kevin Durant (29) | Kevin Durant (8) | Russell Westbrook (9) | Philips Arena 17,916

38–22
61
March 6
Phoenix

| | Russell Westbrook (32) | Nick Collison, Thabo Sefolosha (9) | Russell Westbrook (11) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

39–22
62
March 7
@ Memphis

| | Russell Westbrook (27) | Kevin Durant, James Harden, Serge Ibaka (6) | Russell Westbrook (7) | FedExForum 13,903

39–23
63
March 9
@ Philadelphia

| | Kevin Durant (34) | Kevin Durant (16) | Russell Westbrook (12) | Wells Fargo Center 19,283

40–23
64
March 11
Detroit

| | Kevin Durant (24) | Kevin Durant (9) | Russell Westbrook (11) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

41–23
65
March 13
@ Cleveland

| | Russell Westbrook (20) | Serge Ibaka (14) | Eric Maynor (8) | Quicken Loans Arena 19,811

42–23
66
March 14
@ Washington

| | Kevin Durant (32) | Kendrick Perkins (9) | Russell Westbrook (12) | Verizon Center 17,921

43–23
67
March 16
@ Miami

| | Kevin Durant (29) | Serge Ibaka (12) | Kevin Durant (6) | American Airlines Arena 20,083

44–23
68
March 18
Charlotte

| | Kevin Durant (25) | Serge Ibaka (13) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

45–23
69
March 20
Toronto

| | James Harden (23) | Kendrick Perkins (12) | James Harden, Kendrick Perkins, Russell Westbrook (4) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

45–24
70
March 23
Utah

| | Russell Westbrook (31) | Serge Ibaka (13) | Russell Westbrook (5) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

46–24
71
March 25
Minnesota

| | Kevin Durant (23) | Serge Ibaka (10) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

47–24
72
March 27
Portland

| | Russell Westbrook (28) | Kendrick Perkins (10) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

48–24
73
March 29
Golden State

| | Kevin Durant (39) | Kendrick Perkins (13) | Russell Westbrook (9) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

49–24
74
March 30
@ Phoenix

| | Kevin Durant, James Harden (22) | Serge Ibaka (10) | Russell Westbrook (8) | US Airways Center 18,033

50–24
-
75
April 1
@ Portland

| | Kevin Durant (25) | Kevin Durant (11) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Rose Garden 20,709

50–25
76
April 2
@ L.A. Clippers

| | Kevin Durant (23) | Nazr Mohammed (10) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Staples Center 19,060

50–26
77
April 5
@ Denver

| | Kevin Durant (32) | Kendrick Perkins (14) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Pepsi Center 18,203

51–26
78
April 6
L.A. Clippers

| | Kevin Durant (29) | Kendrick Perkins (17) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

52–26
79
April 8
Denver

| | Kevin Durant (28) | Nick Collison (8) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

53–26
80
April 10
@ L.A. Lakers

| | Kevin Durant (31) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Staples Center 18,997

54–26
81
April 11
@ Sacramento

| | Kevin Durant (32) | Kevin Durant, Serge Ibaka (8) | Russell Westbrook (9) | Power Balance Pavilion 15,683

55–26
82
April 13
Milwaukee

| | Russell Westbrook (20) | Nazr Mohammed (10) | James Harden, Russell Westbrook (5) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

55–27

Playoffs

|- | 1 | April 17 | Denver | | Kevin Durant (41) | Kevin Durant (9) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

1–0
2
April 20
Denver

| | Kevin Durant (23) | Serge Ibaka (12) | Russell Westbrook (7) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

2–0
3
April 23
@ Denver

| | Kevin Durant (26) | Serge Ibaka (16) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Pepsi Center 19,958

3–0
4
April 25
@ Denver

| | Kevin Durant (31) | Serge Ibaka (14) | James Harden, Russell Westbrook (5) | Pepsi Center 19,155

3–1
5
April 27
Denver

| | Kevin Durant (41) | Kendrick Perkins (9) | Russell Westbrook (4) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203 | 4–1

|- | 1 | May 1 | Memphis | | Kevin Durant (33) | Kevin Durant, Serge Ibaka (11) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

0–1
2
May 3
Memphis

| | Kevin Durant (26) | Nick Collison (7) | Russell Westbrook (6) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

1–1
3
May 7
@ Memphis

| | Russell Westbrook (23) | Kendrick Perkins (13) | Russell Westbrook (12) | FedExForum 18,119

1–2
4
May 9
@ Memphis

| | Russell Westbrook (40) | Kevin Durant (13) | James Harden (7) | FedExForum 18,119

2–2
5
May 11
Memphis

| | Kevin Durant (19) | Nick Collison (10) | Eric Maynor (9) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

3–2
6
May 13
@ Memphis

| | Russell Westbrook (27) | Kevin Durant, Kendrick Perkins (7) | James Harden (5) | FedExForum 18,119

3–3
7
May 15
Memphis

| | Kevin Durant (39) | Nick Collison (12) | Russell Westbrook (14) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203 | 4–3

|- | 1 | May 17 | @ Dallas | | Kevin Durant (40) | Kevin Durant (8) | Kevin Durant (5) | American Airlines Center 20,911

0–1
2
May 19
@ Dallas

| | Kevin Durant (24) | Nick Collison, James Harden (7) | Kevin Durant, James Harden, Russell Westbrook (4) | American Airlines Center 21,051

1–1
3
May 21
Dallas

| | Russell Westbrook (30) | Kevin Durant (12) | Kevin Durant (5) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

1–2
4
May 23
Dallas

| | Kevin Durant (29) | Kevin Durant (15) | Russell Westbrook (8) | Oklahoma City Arena 18,203

1–3
5
May 25
@ Dallas

| | Russell Westbrook (31) | Nick Collison (12) | James Harden (6) | American Airlines Center 21,092

1–4

Player statistics

Regular season

Oklahoma City Thunder}}"PlayerOklahoma City Thunder}}"GPOklahoma City Thunder}}"GSOklahoma City Thunder}}"MPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"FG%Oklahoma City Thunder}}"3P%Oklahoma City Thunder}}"FT%Oklahoma City Thunder}}"RPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"APGOklahoma City Thunder}}"SPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"BPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"PPG
Cole Aldrich1807.9.533.0.5001.9.2.28.391.0
Nick Collison71221.5.566.0.7534.51.0.59.444.6
Daequan Cook43013.9.436.422.8001.7.55.33.025.6
**Kevin Durant**7878Oklahoma City Thunder}};"38.9.462.350.8806.82.71.130.97Oklahoma City Thunder}};"27.7
Jeff Green*494937.0.437.304.8185.61.8.8.415.2
James HardenOklahoma City Thunder}};"82526.7.436.349.8433.12.11.12.2912.2
**Serge Ibaka**Oklahoma City Thunder}};"824427.0.543.0.7507.60.3.38Oklahoma City Thunder}};"2.419.9
Royal Ivey2506.2.421Oklahoma City Thunder}};".438Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.0.6.3.24.041.6
Nenad Krstić*474721.7.498.0.8034.4.4.4.47.6
Eric MaynorOklahoma City Thunder}};"82014.6.402.385.7291.52.9.4.14.2
Nazr Mohammed*24717.9Oklahoma City Thunder}};".573.0.6254.80.3.7.46.9
Byron Mullens1306.5.321.0.5001.8.0.2.21.9
**Kendrick Perkins***171725.2.493.000.531Oklahoma City Thunder}};"7.9.9.4.95.1
Morris Peterson*405.8.400.000.0.8.3.0.01.0
Nate Robinson*407.5.267.250.750.31.5.0.03.3
**Thabo Sefolosha**797925.9.471.275.7474.41.41.2.55.1
**Russell Westbrook**Oklahoma City Thunder}};"82Oklahoma City Thunder}};"8234.7.442.330.8424.6Oklahoma City Thunder}};"8.2Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.9.421.9
D.J. White*2309.5.462.0.5002.3.2.3.32.8

: Led team

***** – Stats with Thunder (partial season)

Sources: OKC Thunder 2010–11 Statistics

Playoffs

Oklahoma City Thunder}}"PlayerOklahoma City Thunder}}"GPOklahoma City Thunder}}"GSOklahoma City Thunder}}"MPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"FG%Oklahoma City Thunder}}"3P%Oklahoma City Thunder}}"FT%Oklahoma City Thunder}}"RPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"APGOklahoma City Thunder}}"SPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"BPGOklahoma City Thunder}}"PPG
Nick CollisonOklahoma City Thunder}};"17024.3.632.0.7835.8.9.88.886.7
Daequan CookOklahoma City Thunder}};"17011.5.393.348Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.0001.6.1.18.03.8
**Kevin Durant**Oklahoma City Thunder}};"17Oklahoma City Thunder}};"17Oklahoma City Thunder}};"42.5.449.339.838Oklahoma City Thunder}};"8.22.8.941.12Oklahoma City Thunder}};"28.6
James HardenOklahoma City Thunder}};"17031.6.475.303.8255.43.61.24.7613.0
**Serge Ibaka**Oklahoma City Thunder}};"17Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1728.8.462.0.8257.30.2.24Oklahoma City Thunder}};"3.069.8
Royal Ivey203.0Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.000Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.000.0.5.5.0.03.0
Eric MaynorOklahoma City Thunder}};"17012.9.377.36.7891.32.2.53.04.8
Nazr Mohammed14010.6.412.0.4002.3.0.29.432.3
**Kendrick Perkins**Oklahoma City Thunder}};"17Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1728.2.453.0.5766.1.8.24.764.5
Nate Robinson304.0.286.333Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.000.0.3.0.02.7
**Thabo Sefolosha**Oklahoma City Thunder}};"17Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1720.2.463.154Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.0003.1.7.94.294.6
**Russell Westbrook**Oklahoma City Thunder}};"17Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1737.5.394.292.8525.4Oklahoma City Thunder}};"6.4Oklahoma City Thunder}};"1.41.3523.8

: Led team

Source: OKC Thunder 2011 Playoff Statistics

Awards, records and milestones

Awards

Weekly

  • Russell Westbrook was named Western Conference Player of the Week for November 15–21.{{cite web |url=http://www.nba.com/2010/news/11/22/players-of-week-stoudemire-westbrook/index.html |title=Stoudemire, Westbrook nab Player of the Week honors
  • Westbrook was named Western Conference Player of the Week for November 29 to December 5.
  • Westbrook was named Western Conference Player of the Week for January 10–16.
  • Kevin Durant was named Western Conference Player of the Week for January 31 to February 6.
  • Westbrook was named Western Conference Player of the Week for February 28 to March 6.
  • Durant was named Western Conference Player of the Week for April 4 to April 10.

Monthly

All-Star

  • Thunder players Kevin Durant, Jeff Green, Thabo Sefolosha, and Russell Westbrook were designated for placement on the NBA ballot for the 2011 All-Star Game, to be played at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on February 20, 2011.
  • On February 27, 2011, Durant was named as a starter to the Western Conference All-Star team, having received 1,736,728 total votes – the most of any forward, and second only to Kobe Bryant in overall voting among Western Conference players. It was Durant's second All-Star appearance overall, and first as a starter. During the game Durant scored 34 points, second-most to Kobe Bryant's 37-point effort. Durant was also named as one of six participants in the All-Star weekend's Three-Point Shooting Contest held the night before the All-Star Game, although he did not advance out of the preliminary round.
  • Russell Westbrook was selected as an All-Star team reserve by a vote of the Western Conference coaches. It was his first All-Star appearance. Westbrook scored 12 points in the game. Westbrook advanced to the finals of the competition, placing second to Stephen Curry.
  • Forward Serge Ibaka was named as a first-time participant for the 2011 All-Star Slam Dunk Contest. Durant was assigned as Ibaka's official coach for the competition. Although Ibaka did not advance out of the preliminary round, he made an impression with his two efforts – a running dunk from the free-throw line and a dunk in which he simultaneously grabbed a "Rumble" mascot doll off the rim with his teeth. Ibaka was also named to the Sopohomore Team roster in the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge, in which he registered 14 points and two blocked shots.
  • Guard James Harden was also named to the Sophomore Team roster in the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge, as the replacement for Tyreke Evans (unable to compete due to plantar fasciitis). Harden lead the Sophomore team with 30 points, and also recorded two assists.

Season

  • At the close of the regular season, forward Kevin Durant clinched his second-consecutive NBA scoring title, averaging 27.7 points per game. In the process, he surpassed Bob McAdoo as the youngest NBA player to earn two scoring titles.
  • On April 20, 2011, Kevin Durant was given the Magic Johnson Award by the Professional Basketball Writers Association, recognizing the combination of Durant's on-court performance and openness with the media during the course of the regular season.
  • Kevin Durant received recognition on the All-NBA First Team at the end of the year. Russell Westbrook received recognition on the All-NBA Second Team.

Records

Milestones

  • The Thunder's January 22, 2011, win over the New York Knicks was Scott Brooks' 100th win as an NBA head coach, all with the Thunder.
  • During the March 11, 2011, game against Detroit, Russell Westbrook scored the 4,000th point of his NBA career, becoming one of only five players in NBA history to log 4,000 points, 1,500 assists and 1,000 rebounds in their first three years.
  • The March 18, 2011, game against Charlotte was Kevin Durant's 300th game in the NBA. Among active players, Durant rates third in points scored during the first 300 games, with 7,760 total points.

Injuries and surgeries

  • Center Nenad Krstić underwent surgery on September 21, 2010, to repair a fracture to his right middle finger, suffered in the final game of the FIBA World Championships in Istanbul, Turkey, against Lithuania. His recovery allowed him to see playing time in the Thunder's regular-season debut on October 27, 2010, and subsequent games. Back spasms forced him to sit out games on November 26 and 28, and again from December 10 through December 22. After the January 26 game against Minnesota, Krstić developed a sore right foot which was subsequently aggravated in the February 2 game against New Orleans. Neither condition forced him to miss a start, however.
  • Center Nenad Krstić underwent surgery on September 21, 2010, to repair a fracture to his right middle finger, suffered in the final game of the FIBA World Championships in Istanbul, Turkey, against Lithuania. His recovery allowed him to see playing time in the Thunder's regular-season debut on October 27, 2010, and subsequent games. Back spasms forced him to sit out games on November 26 and 28, and again from December 10 through December 22. After the January 26 game against Minnesota, Krstić developed a sore right foot which was subsequently aggravated in the February 2 game against New Orleans. Neither condition forced him to miss a start, however.
  • Forward Jeff Green suffered a sprained left ankle in practice on November 6, 2010, forcing his placement on the inactive list for games from November 7 through November 12. After aggravating the injury against the San Antonio Spurs on November 14, Green was withheld from action in games from November 15 through November 20.
  • Kevin Durant suffered a left ankle sprain in the game against Houston on November 17, limiting his action in that game and forcing him to sit out subsequent games against Boston on November 19 and Milwaukee on November 20. Durant subsequently sprained his left knee in the fourth quarter of the November 29 game against New Orleans, forcing him onto the inactive list for games on December 1 and 3.
  • Rookie Cole Aldrich was sidelined with a left rib contusion for games on December 10 and 12.
  • Guard Eric Maynor suffered a sprained right foot on January 1, 2011, but did not miss subsequent game action.
  • Guard Thabo Sefolosha suffered a sprained knee after the Thunder's game on January 26, and missed subsequent games through February 2.
  • Center Kendrick Perkins suffered a left knee sprain in the final game prior to being traded to the Thunder on February 24, 2011. While separate from the ligament injury to his right knee which kept Perkins out much of the 2010–11 season, the sprain kept Perkins out of the lineup until March 14.
  • Point guard Nate Robinson underwent arthroscopic surgery on his right knee on March 4, 2011, after experiencing discomfort following practice on February 28. He is expected to miss 4–6 weeks, which would place his return near the end of the regular season. Robinson was placed back on the active roster for the March 29 game against Golden State, but did not play.
  • Forward Serge Ibaka sprained his left ankle in Game 2 of the Memphis Grizzlies playoff series, and re-aggravated the same injury in Game 3. This forced him to miss practice time on May 5, and limited his minutes in subsequent games.

Transactions

Main article: List of 2010–11 NBA season transactions

Overview

**Players Added****Players Lost**

Trades

February 24, 2011To **Oklahoma City Thunder**Nazr MohammedTo **Charlotte Bobcats**Morris Peterson
D.J. White

Free agency

Re-signed

Oklahoma City Thunder}}" width="5%"DateOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"PlayerOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"Contract
July 8, 2010Kevin DurantMulti-Year Extension
November 23, 2010Nick CollisonMulti-Year Extension
March 1, 2011Kendrick PerkinsMulti-Year Extension

Additions

Oklahoma City Thunder}}" width="5%"DateOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"PlayerOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"ContractOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"Former team
July 21, 2010Royal IveyStandardMilwaukee Bucks
April 9, 2011Robert VadenStandardTulsa 66ers (D-League)

Subtractions

Oklahoma City Thunder}}" width="5%"DateOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"PlayerOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"Reason leftOklahoma City Thunder}}" width="10%"New team
July 1, 2010Kevin OllieRetirement*N/A*
July 1, 2010Mustafa ShakurFree agentTulsa 66ers (D-League)
July 30, 2010Kyle WeaverFree agentIowa Energy (D-League)
September 2, 2010Etan Thomas{{cite webtitle=Hawks sign Etan Thomaswebsite=nba.comaccess-date=November 8, 2022date=September 2, 2010}}Free agent

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  72. (April 18, 2011). "NBA: Kendrick Perkins goaltended". [[ESPN]].
  73. Rohde, John. (April 24, 2011). "No one in Thunder locker room surprised by Serge Ibaka's playoff performance". The Oklahoman.
  74. Mayberry, Darnell. (April 16, 2011). "Nuggets hold off Thunder in Game 4 to avoid sweep". The Oklahoman.
  75. Mayberry, Darnell. (April 27, 2011). "Kevin Durant scores 41 as Thunder closes out series with win over Nuggets". The Oklahoman.
  76. Latzke, Jeff. (May 2, 2011). "Grizzlies dominate paint vs Thunder's front line". The Oklahoman.
  77. Mayberry, Darnell. (May 3, 2011). "Thunder pushes back this time". The Oklahoman.
  78. Falgoust, J. Michael. (May 7, 2011). "Grizzlies rally from 16 down to top Thunder in OT, take 2-1 lead". USA Today.
  79. Falgoust, J. Michael. (May 10, 2011). "Thunder win triple-OT thriller to even series with Grizzlies 2-2". USA Today.
  80. (May 11, 2011). "Durant, Thunder win big, push Grizzlies to brink of elimination". USA Today.
  81. Latzke, Jeff. (May 14, 2011). "Game 6 no nightmare for Durant, who dreams of Game 7". USA Today.
  82. Falgoust, J. Michael. (May 15, 2011). "Durant, Thunder storm past Grizzlies to reach West finals". USA Today.
  83. Falgoust, J. Michael. (May 18, 2011). "Dirk Nowitzki's historic Game 1 leads Mavericks past Thunder". USA Today.
  84. Falgouse, J. Michael. (May 19, 2011). "Durant, Harden lead Thunder past Mavericks to tie series". USA Today.
  85. Falgoust, J. Michael. (May 21, 2011). "Mavericks avoid collapse, hold off Thunder for Game 3 victory". USA Today.
  86. Falgoust, J. Michael. (May 24, 2011). "Mavericks rally, stun Thunder in OT to take 3-1 lead in West finals". USA Today.
  87. Sherman, Mike. (May 24, 2011). "How the Thunder made a 15-point lead disappear". The Oklahoman.
  88. (May 25, 2011). "Mavericks dump Thunder in five to return to NBA Finals". USA Today.
  89. Bracht, Mel. (May 18, 2011). "OKC Thunder sets another TV ratings record". The Oklahoman.
  90. Mayberry, Darnell. (May 19, 2011). "Thunder Rumblings: Durant Gets Teammates In Gatorade Spot". The Oklahoman.
  91. Rohde, John. (May 26, 2011). "Thunder notebook: Despite loss, fans greet Thunder at airport". The Oklahoman.
  92. "Thunder Youth Basketball".
  93. "Kevin Durant Basketball Camp". www.kevindurant35.com.
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  100. (December 6, 2010). "Stoudemire, Westbrook win Player of the Week honors". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  101. (January 18, 2011). "Bulls' Rose, Thunder's Westbrook named Players of the Week". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  102. (February 7, 2011). "Heat's James, Thunder's Durant named Players of Week". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  103. (March 7, 2011). "Celtics' Pierce, Thunder's Westbrook win weekly NBA honors". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  104. (April 11, 2011). "Carmelo Anthony, Kevin Durant named Players of Week". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  105. (January 3, 2011). "Miami's James and Wade, Thunder's Durant Players of Month". Turner Sports Interactive, Inc.
  106. (April 16, 2011). "James, Durant named Kia Players of the Month for April". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  107. (November 18, 2010). "Ballot for 2011 NBA All-Star Game unveiled". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  108. Mayberry, Darnell. (January 27, 2011). "Oklahoma City Thunder's Kevin Durant named NBA All-Star starter". The Oklahoman.
  109. Mahoney, Brian. (February 21, 2011). "East All-Stars 143, West All-Stars 148". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  110. (February 8, 2011). "Allen, Pierce, Durant headline Three-Point Contest Field". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  111. (February 20, 2011). "Heat's Jones outlasts duo of Celtics to win 3-Point Contest". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  112. Garcia, Art. (February 3, 2011). "Clippers' Griffin ends All-Star drought for rookies". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  113. Rohde, John. (February 17, 2011). "Thunder notebook: Russell Westbrook voted into Skills Challenge". The Oklahoman.
  114. (February 20, 2011). "Stephen Curry takes the 2011 Taco Bell Skills Challenge". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  115. (January 6, 2011). "Griffin, Ibaka, Jennings and McGee set for Sprite Slam Dunk". NBA Media Ventures.
  116. Mayberry, Darnell. (January 21, 2011). "Thunder notebook: Serge Ibaka, Kevin Durant prepping for dunk contest". The Oklahoman.
  117. (February 20, 2011). "Griffin edges McGee to win 2011 Sprite Slam Dunk Contest". NBA Media Ventures.
  118. (February 1, 2011). "Griffin, Evans headline selections for 2011 Rookie Challenge". NBA.com.
  119. (February 18, 2011). "2011 Rookie/Sophomore Game Box Score". NBA Media Ventures.
  120. (February 17, 2011). "Thunder's Harden replaces Kings' Evans in Rookie Challenge". NBA.com.
  121. (April 20, 2011). "Sloan, OKC's Durant, Pacers' media staff honored by PBWA". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  122. (May 12, 2011). "LeBron James, Derrick Rose highlight 2010–11 All-NBA squad". NBA.com.
  123. Rohde, John. (January 22, 2011). "Thunder notebook: OKC remains among NBA elite". The Oklahoman.
  124. Rohde, John. (March 11, 2011). "Thunder notebook: Russell Westbrook joins elite company". The Oklahoman.
  125. Rohde, John. (March 21, 2011). "Thunder notebook: OKC remains NBA's third-youngest team". The Oklahoman.
  126. (September 21, 2010). "Krstic Undergoes Successful Surgery". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  127. Mayberry, Darnell. (November 27, 2010). "Thunder notebook: Jeff Green questionable, Nenad Krstić probable Sunday". The Oklahoman.
  128. Mayberry, Darnell. (December 10, 2010). "Thunder notebook: Russell Westbrook outduels Chris Paul". The Oklahoman.
  129. Rohde, John. (December 21, 2010). "Thunder Notebook: Nenad Krstić update". The Oklahoman.
  130. Rohde, John. (January 27, 2011). "Thunder notebook: Washington 0-21 on the road". The Oklahoman.
  131. Rohde, John. (February 3, 2011). "Thunder notebook: Thabo Sefolosha, Nenad Krstić recovering". The Oklahoman.
  132. (November 7, 2010). "Ankle injury keeps Thunder's Green out vs. Celtics". USA Today.
  133. Rohde, John. (November 12, 2010). "OKC Thunder's Jeff Green to miss third straight game". The Oklahoman.
  134. Mayberry, Darnell. (November 16, 2010). "Thunder ends Utah's five-game winning streak". The Oklahoman.
  135. Mayberry, Darnell. (November 19, 2010). "Kevin Durant ruled out for Thunder's Friday game against Boston Celtics". The Oklahoman.
  136. Mayberry, Darnell. (November 20, 2010). "Thunder's Kevin Durant out against Milwaukee Bucks". The Oklahoman.
  137. Rohde, John. (December 1, 2010). "Thunder notes: Kevin Durant misses third start of season". The Oklahoman.
  138. Rohde, John. (December 3, 2010). "Thunder notebook: Kevin Durant misses fourth game of season". The Oklahoman.
  139. (January 3, 2011). "Thunder's Maynor day to day with sprained right foot". NBA Media Ventures, LLC.
  140. Rohde, John. (January 28, 2011). "OKC Thunder's Thabo Sefolosha out tonight vs. Washington Wizards". The Oklahoman.
  141. Mayberry, Darnell. (February 26, 2011). "Thunder's Kendrick Perkins to miss 2-3 weeks with knee injury". The Oklahoman.
  142. Rohde, John. (March 4, 2011). "OKC Thunder guard Nate Robinson has arthroscopic surgery on knee". The Oklahoman.
  143. Rohde, John. (May 7, 2011). "Thunder notebook: Serge Ibaka playing through soreness". The Oklahoman.
  144. (June 24, 2010). "Thunder Acquires Pleiss, Williams, Reid andFuture First Round Pick in 2010 NBA Draft".
  145. (June 24, 2010). "Thunder Acquires Pleiss, Williams, Reid andFuture First Round Pick in 2010 NBA Draft".
  146. (June 24, 2010). "Thunder Acquires Pleiss, Williams, Reid andFuture First Round Pick in 2010 NBA Draft".
  147. (June 24, 2010). "Thunder Acquires Pleiss, Williams, Reid andFuture First Round Pick in 2010 NBA Draft".
  148. (February 24, 2011). "Thunder Acquires Perkins and Robinson".
  149. (February 24, 2011). "Thunder Acquires 12-Year Veteran Nazr Mohammed".
  150. (July 8, 2010). "Thunder Signs Durant to Multi-Year Extension".
  151. (November 23, 2010). "Thunder Extends Collison's Contract".
  152. (March 1, 2011). "Thunder, Perkins Agree to Contract Extension".
  153. (July 21, 2010). "Thunder Signs Free Agent Royal Ivey".
  154. (April 9, 2011). "Thunder Signs Robert Vaden".
  155. (July 30, 2010). "Thunder Waives Kyle Weaver".
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