Blazers Rally to Snap Thunder’s Undefeated | Analysis by Brian Moineau

A comeback for the ages: Blazers end Thunder’s last unbeaten run

An electric night at the Moda Center turned into a reminder that no lead is truly safe in the modern NBA. On Wednesday, the Portland Trail Blazers erased a 22-point first-quarter deficit to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 121–119 — and in the process handed the defending champions their first loss of the season. What looked like a runaway game for OKC early became a pulse-pounding finish, and the league’s last unbeaten tag came tumbling down.

Why this game mattered

  • The Thunder entered the night as the NBA’s final undefeated team, riding an 8–0 start.
  • Portland’s comeback was dramatic — down by 22 in the first quarter and never leading until late in the fourth.
  • The win snapped Portland’s long losing stretch to Oklahoma City and injected life into a Blazers squad looking to reestablish itself.

Game snapshot

  • Final score: Portland Trail Blazers 121, Oklahoma City Thunder 119.
  • Key performers:
    • Deni Avdija: 26 points, 10 rebounds, 9 assists (nearly a triple-double).
    • Jrue Holiday: 22 points, clutch free throws down the stretch.
    • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander: 35 points, 9 rebounds for Oklahoma City.
  • Turning point: A decisive 9–0 run by Portland late in the fourth quarter flipped momentum and gave the Blazers their first lead with about six minutes remaining.
  • Closing drama: With 0.6 seconds left and trailing by three, Isaiah Joe was fouled on what replay showed to be a three-point attempt; his toe was on the arc, so he shot two free throws, making one and intentionally missing the second. OKC’s last-second tip-in did not connect.

The comeback in context

Comebacks like this are more than just a single-game thrill — they tell you about identity. Portland’s rally showcased:

  • Veteran leadership: Jrue Holiday’s late-game poise (and free-throw composure) was textbook.
  • Balanced attack: Avdija’s near-triple-double hinted at how Portland can create mismatches without relying on a single superstar.
  • Tactical adjustments: After a brutal opening quarter (41–21 in OKC’s favor), Portland tightened rotations, leaned into 3-point shooting and stretched OKC’s defense by mixing lineups.

For Oklahoma City, the result is a harsh reminder that depth, availability and game management matter. OKC was missing several contributors, and while Shai was spectacular (35 points), basketball is a team product — and Portland out-executed them when it mattered.

What this says about both teams

  • Portland: This win can be a turning point. Overcoming a 22-point deficit requires belief and execution; if the Blazers can bottle that resilience, they’ll be dangerous in stretches this season. For a young roster still finding its identity, veteran calm and role-player contributions are enormous positives.
  • Oklahoma City: The Thunder remain talented and dangerous — the early-season buzz was earned. But this loss highlights potential vulnerability when rotations are thin and key role players are absent. It’s also a reminder that hot starts can be fragile and that game management in the fourth quarter remains crucial.

Moments that will linger

  • Avdija’s late surge and efficiency from the line (he finished 15-of-16 at the stripe in the game) — impact beyond the box score.
  • Holiday’s late-game shotmaking and free throws that ultimately sealed the win.
  • The razor-thin ending where a toe on the arc and an intentional miss determined whether the Thunder would force overtime.

Takeaways worth remembering

  • Upsets and comeback wins can reshape a team’s narrative quickly; momentum swings matter in a long season.
  • Star scoring (Shai’s 35) is vital, but basketball still rewards depth and situational execution.
  • The Thunder’s loss is not a collapse so much as a cautionary note about availability and closing out games; for Portland, it’s evidence they can compete with top teams when everything clicks.

My take

There’s a special electricity when a team erases a massive deficit and wins in dramatic fashion — it glue-s everything: coaching decisions, veteran steadiness, role players stepping up. Portland’s victory wasn’t a fluke; it was a full-team effort with timely shooting and defensive stops. For Oklahoma City, this game will sting, but the core is still elite. Expect both teams to take lessons from this one — Portland for confidence, Oklahoma City for course correction.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.