Alex Caruso, whom the Thunder acquired for Josh Giddey in an offseason trade with the Bulls, had nothing but good things to say about his former organization ahead of Saturday’s matchup in Chicago, writes Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times. Bulls head coach Billy Donovan lavished Caruso with praise following Oklahoma City’s 19-point victory.
“He’s great; I love him,” Donovan said. “I obviously had the chance to coach against him for four years when I was at Florida and he was at [Texas] A&M, and I give him a lot of credit because the way he played in college was totally different than the way he’s played in the NBA. I think it just speaks to his IQ, his willingness to do whatever a team needs him to do to impact winning, impact his teammates. He’s the same guy every day. You feel fortunate when you get to be around a guy like that every day.
“And to his credit, he figured things out. ‘OK, these are the things I need to do,’ and a lot of times those things are not sexy, so to speak. That’s what makes him so unique; he’s willing to do things that a lot of times other players won’t, whether they’re incapable or unwilling.”
A former undrafted free agent who has earned All-Defensive nods each of the past two seasons, Caruso is in the final year of his contract, which will pay him $9.9MM in 2024/25.
Here’s more on the Thunder, who improved to 2-0 after Saturday’s win:
- Giddey also had nothing but good things to say about the Thunder, per Rylan Stiles of Sports Illustrated. “When you play your former team, you obviously circle it on your calendar,” Giddey said before Saturday’s game. “But you’ll never, ever hear me say a bad word about that organization. Top to bottom, unbelievable people. I’m looking forward to seeing them all. I love that organization.” The sixth overall pick of the 2021 draft, Giddey will be a restricted free agent next summer after he did not sign a rookie scale extension before the ’24/25 season began.
- Big man Chet Holmgren had some insightful comments about the Thunder’s reunion with Giddey after the game, according to Joel Lorenzi of The Oklahoman. “I think you can get wrapped up in the business of what this is,” Holmgren said, “because it is a business, and it’s an extremely serious business. But you can’t lose sight of the relationships that you build with guys you know along the way. I don’t think anybody’s ever played with the same 15, 17 people their entire career. That’s how the league works. People and teams have to do what’s best for them business wise. And you can’t hold that against anybody. When you get to go out there and hoop against guys that you know and you really like, you enjoy it all the same.”
- Holmgren added muscle to his lean frame in the offseason and has dominated the paint in OKC’s two victories, Lorenzi adds. The former second overall pick is averaging 23.0 points, 15.0 rebounds, 2.5 assists, 1.5 steals and 3.0 blocks in the early going after an excellent rookie season in which he averaged 16.5 points, 7.9 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 2.3 blocks.