The Oklahoma City Thunder are watching their championship roster fall apart piece by piece. Jalen Williams, the forward who was crucial to last season’s title run and just signed a max contract extension, re-injured his right hamstring Thursday after originally straining it on January 17. He missed 10 games recovering from that injury, returned Monday against the Lakers, and had an absolutely spectacular performance Wednesday against Phoenix 28 points on 11-of-12 shooting in just 20 minutes before exiting in the third quarter. Then Thursday happened, and he’s sidelined again. Now the Thunder are evaluating him after the All-Star break, which is basically code for “we’re not sure when we’ll see him again.”
This is the second major injury setback for Williams since the start of the season
He missed the first 19 games while recovering from wrist surgery. Then came back. Then the hamstring issue. Then came back again looking phenomenal. Then the hamstring flared up again. That’s the kind of cascading injury pattern that destroys a player’s rhythm and confidence. You can’t build momentum when your body keeps sabotaging your return attempts.
What makes this particularly frustrating is how well Williams was playing when he was actually on the court. His Wednesday performance against Phoenix wasn’t just good it was elite. Eleven of 12 shooting is absurd efficiency. Scoring 28 points in 20 minutes is the kind of production that changes games. He looked completely healthy. He looked like a max contract player who could carry weight in the playoffs. Then the injury bug struck again.
The broader Thunder problem is that this isn’t just Williams
Reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has been sidelined for extended stretches due to abdominal strains. Sixth man Ajay Mitchell has been dealing with his own injury issues. The championship core that won it all last season is basically operating at half capacity through the first part of this season. It’s hard to maintain an elite record when your best players keep getting hurt.
Williams’ season trajectory has been brutal from a consistency standpoint
Missed 19 games to start. Played some games. Missed 10 more for the hamstring. Returned and looked incredible. Injured again. That’s not a season that’s a series of false starts punctuated by flashes of brilliance. And he’s signing a max contract extension in the middle of this mess, which means the Thunder are committing long-term money to a player whose availability is becoming a legitimate concern.
The All-Star break reevaluation is basically the Thunder buying time
They need to know whether Williams will be healthy for the playoff push. They need to understand if this is a recurring issue or just bad luck. They need to figure out what their actual roster looks like when healthy. Right now, they’re operating on incomplete information with incomplete personnel.
At least the timing provides some opportunity for rest and recovery
Williams gets the All-Star break to let the hamstring fully heal instead of being pressured back into action. The Thunder get time to reassess their entire situation without the immediate pressure of games. But there’s also risk in this approach the longer he’s sidelined, the harder it is to get back into rhythm before the playoffs.
The real question is whether the Thunder can stay elite while their best players keep getting injured. They’re built to compete for a championship right now, but championships require healthy rosters down the stretch. Williams re-injuring his hamstring is a reminder that even the best-constructed rosters are vulnerable to the injury gods. Oklahoma City won the title last season with a healthy roster. This season is testing whether they can stay dangerous when key pieces keep getting sidelined. So far, the answer is looking complicated.

