OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA – MAY 18: Jalen Williams #8 of the Oklahoma City Thunder reacts after slam dunking against the Denver Nuggets during the second quarter in Game Seven of the Western Conference Second Round NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center on May 18, 2025 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Joshua Gateley/Getty Images)
Getty Images
It’s official: Oklahoma City Thunder star Jalen Williams is back.
After missing the Thunder’s first 19 games while recovering from offseason wrist surgery, the All-NBA wing is set to make his season debut Friday night against the Phoenix Suns in Oklahoma City’s fourth and final NBA Cup group-stage game. For a team already off to a historic 18-1 start, adding a player of Williams’ caliber at this point in the season feels almost unfair.
Williams broke out as a full-blown superstar during the Thunder’s NBA Championship run last season, cementing his arrival with a legendary 40-point performance in Game 5 of the NBA Finals. It was the type of moment that validated every bit of hype that had followed him since his rookie year. What made it even more remarkable was what came out afterward.
Williams had been playing through a significant right wrist injury for the final stretch of the regular season and the entire postseason. He needed injections just to suit up, and he had to alter his shooting form to manage the pain, essentially reworking his mechanics on the fly while playing the highest stakes basketball of his life.
Given that context, the Thunder’s cautious approach with his return makes total sense. Even with Williams sidelined, Oklahoma City has looked like the best team in the NBA through the first quarter of the season. The Thunder is posting a historic net rating and point differential,, and has developed an identity as one of the most complete two-way teams in basketball. When a team is performing at this level, there’s no reason to rush a star back sooner than necessary.
And that’s why fans should expect a measured ramp-up. A minutes restriction or lighter workload is realistic over the first few games. Integrating a player who is this important, this dynamic and this involved in the offense can naturally create an adjustment period. Even with someone as plug-and-play as Williams, who can score at all three levels, facilitate, defend and complement any lineup, chemistry doesn’t instantly snap back to perfection on day one. The Thunder will want him healthy long term, not just explosive in the moment.
Still, his return is massive. There have been several moments this season when Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has had to shoulder an enormous offensive burden without his top running mate. Gilgeous-Alexander has been playing at an MVP level again, but the Thunder’s offense always reaches a different gear when Williams is on the floor. His presence demands defensive attention, bends matchups and gives Oklahoma City a second elite option who can generate his own shot without disrupting the flow of the offense.
Defensively, he changes things too. Williams’ versatility allows the Thunder to toggle between different lineup combinations without sacrificing physicality or spacing. His strength, length, and instincts make him one of the most impactful wing defenders in the league, and his ability to guard multiple positions gives Mark Daigneault even more flexibility with the rotations as he gets another NBA All-Defensive Team member to leverage.
And the fascinating wrinkle to all of this is the fact that Williams spent the entire offseason developing his left hand. Because he couldn’t use his right wrist for months, he worked almost exclusively with his off hand. For a player who was already one of the more polished finishers and most ambidextrous scorers in the league, that forced development could actually unlock parts of his game that didn’t exist a year ago. There’s a very real chance he comes back not only healthy, but better.
So while it may take a few games for everything to fully click, the Thunder just added an All-NBA wing to a team that already looked like a juggernaut. Huge news for Oklahoma City as Jalen Williams officially rejoins the lineup Friday night.