The NBA has launched an investigation into the Oklahoma City Thunder for having 10 players sidelined due to injuries during their nationally televised game against the San Antonio Spurs on February 4, 2026. The Thunder, who lost 116-108, dressed only eight players for the matchup, raising questions under the league's player participation policy. Despite the scrutiny, sources suggest the absences stem from legitimate injuries rather than rest management.
The Oklahoma City Thunder faced the San Antonio Spurs in their final regular-season matchup on February 4, 2026, a game broadcast nationally on ESPN. Oklahoma City entered with a league-leading 40-13 record but struggled without key contributors, ultimately falling 116-108 despite strong performances from available players like Kenrich Williams, who scored 25 points.
Ten Thunder players were ruled out: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (abdominal strain), Chet Holmgren (low back spasms), Alex Caruso (right adductor strain), Jalen Williams (right hamstring strain), Luguentz Dort (right patellofemoral joint inflammation), Isaiah Hartenstein (right eye corneal abrasion), Ajay Mitchell (abdominal strain), Nikola Topić (surgical recovery), Ousmane Dieng (not with team), and Thomas Sorber (right ACL surgical recovery). Among these, Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams, and Holmgren qualify as "star players" under NBA rules, which require such players to be available for nationally televised games since the 2023-24 season.
According to The Athletic's Dan Woike, the league is probing whether the absences violated participation policies aimed at preserving game integrity. The policy defines star players as those named to All-Star or All-NBA teams in the past three seasons and limits resting more than one per game on national TV. Violations could result in fines starting at $100,000, escalating to $250,000 for a second offense and $1 million thereafter.
However, reports indicate the injuries are genuine. Gilgeous-Alexander, the reigning MVP, is sidelined through the All-Star break. Williams has missed 10 games with his hamstring issue since January 17, while others like Hartenstein and Mitchell sustained injuries in a back-to-back set the previous night against the Orlando Magic. The Thunder faced a similar investigation last year against the Portland Trail Blazers, but no fine was issued.
League sources suggest discipline is unlikely, given the injury context and the team's season-long issues. The Spurs, holding the NBA's second-best record at 36-16, benefited from the absences in a competitive Western Conference race.