Jalen Williams out WCF 2026

The Oklahoma City Thunder will be without Jalen Williams for Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals against the San Antonio Spurs on Saturday, a brutal setback for a team trying to keep its championship defense alive. (per @ShamsCharania)

Williams has been ruled out with a hamstring injury, continuing what has been an injury-filled 2025-26 season for one of OKC’s most important players. The Thunder entered the year expecting Williams to build on a breakout 2025 campaign, one that included All-Star, All-NBA, All-Defensive and NBA champion honors. Instead, his season has been defined by stops, starts and repeated injury setbacks.

When healthy, Williams has remained one of the league’s best young two-way wings. In 33 regular-season games, he averaged 17.1 points, 4.6 rebounds and 5.5 assists while shooting 48.4 percent from the field. Oklahoma City went 25-8 when he played, a clear sign of how much his scoring, playmaking and defense still mattered to a 64-win Thunder team.

But availability has been the problem all season.

Williams missed the early part of the year after offseason wrist surgery to address torn ligaments. He did not make his season debut until late November, then dealt with multiple hamstring issues during the regular season. The injuries carried into the playoffs, where he suffered a Grade 1 left hamstring strain in the first round against Phoenix. That injury kept him out for six postseason games, including the entire series against the Lakers.

He returned for the Western Conference Finals and looked like himself in Game 1 against San Antonio, scoring 26 points in a double-overtime thriller. For a moment, it seemed like OKC had its No. 2 option back at the perfect time.

That optimism did not last.

Williams left Game 2 early with tightness, then missed Games 3 through 5. He tried to return in Game 6, but played only 10 minutes and was clearly limited. Now, with the Thunder’s season on the line, he will not be available for Game 7.

It is a huge loss for Oklahoma City on both ends of the floor.

Offensively, Williams is the Thunder’s top secondary creator behind Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. He gives OKC another player who can attack mismatches, get to the midrange, make plays for others and punish defenses that overload toward SGA. Without him, the Thunder lose a three-level scorer and one of their most reliable half-court options.

Defensively, his absence may hurt just as much. Williams’ size, strength and versatility allow OKC to switch across multiple positions and throw different looks at San Antonio’s top scorers. In a Game 7 setting, where every possession slows down and every matchup matters, losing that kind of defender is a major problem.

The Thunder have survived stretches without him because of their depth. Ajay Mitchell, Jared McCain, Isaiah Joe, Alex Caruso, and others have all taken on bigger roles throughout the postseason. That depth has kept OKC alive, but replacing Williams in a winner-take-all game is a different challenge.

His playoff numbers this year show how effective he was when he could get on the floor. In five postseason appearances, Williams averaged 14.4 points, 3.2 rebounds and 2.8 assists while shooting 51.8 percent from the field and 41.7 percent from three. The sample size was small, but the impact was obvious.

Now the Thunder will need to win Game 7 without one of the players they built their title hopes around.

For Williams, the injury is another frustrating chapter in a season that never fully got off the ground. He entered 2025-26 with top-20-player expectations after helping lead OKC to a championship. His talent has still flashed whenever he has been available, but the injuries have prevented him from finding any real rhythm.

For Oklahoma City, the message is simple: survive one more night.

SGA will have to carry an even heavier burden. Chet Holmgren will need to be more aggressive. The Thunder’s role players must hit shots, defend without fouling and make up for the playmaking Williams usually provides.

Game 7 against the Spurs was already going to be one of the biggest tests of OKC’s season. Without Jalen Williams, it becomes even tougher.

The Thunder still have enough talent to win. But losing their second-best player before the biggest game of the year is the kind of blow that can swing a series.

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