
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder opened their second-round series with a win over the Los Angeles Lakers, but one of the loudest postgame conversations centered on how the Thunder star got to his spots.
A clip from BrickCenter accusing Gilgeous-Alexander of “flopping on EVERY PLAY” went viral after Game 1, pulling millions of views and drawing broader attention as the conversation spilled into ESPN’s “The Pat McAfee Show.” BrickCenter’s post had 5 million and the clip was later cited in coverage of NBA fans accusing the Thunder guard of repeated flopping.
That does not change the scoreboard. Oklahoma City beat Los Angeles 108-90 on May 5 to take a 1-0 series lead, improving to 5-0 in the playoffs. But it does add a familiar layer to the series: Gilgeous-Alexander’s ability to create contact, sell contact and force defenders into uncomfortable decisions.
BrickCenter’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Clip Goes Viral With Flopping Claims
BrickCenter’s post showed a sequence of plays from the first quarter of Thunder-Lakers Game 1 and framed Gilgeous-Alexander as exaggerating contact. The caption was blunt: “SGA is flopping on EVERY PLAY.”
The clip hit a nerve because Gilgeous-Alexander’s game is already one of the NBA’s most debated styles. His supporters see an elite scorer with rare balance, footwork and patience. His critics see a foul-hunter who forces officials into constant whistles.
Both sides are watching the same thing: SGA lives in the paint and changes speeds better than almost anyone in the league.
That is where the Lakers’ problem starts. Defenders cannot simply play him soft, because he will rise into midrange jumpers or get downhill. They also cannot reach or overreact, because he is strong enough to absorb contact and skilled enough to make small bumps look costly. Whether fans call that craft or foul-baiting usually depends on which team they support.
The Game 1 box score did not show one of Gilgeous-Alexander’s huge free-throw nights. He attempted only three free throws against the Lakers, making two, while finishing with 18 points, six assists, two rebounds, two blocks and seven turnovers in 35 minutes.
That matters because the viral conversation was less about a massive free-throw disparity and more about optics. The complaint was not simply that SGA got calls. It was that his movement, falls and reactions looked like a pattern fans have been waiting to criticize on a larger stage.
SGA Led the Thunder to a Win Over the Lakers in Game 1, but his 20-Point Streak Ended
Gilgeous-Alexander did not have to carry Oklahoma City in Game 1. That may be the most important part of the Thunder’s win.
Chet Holmgren led the Thunder with 24 points and 12 rebounds, while Gilgeous-Alexander and Ajay Mitchell each added 18 points in the 108-90 victory. Oklahoma City shot nearly 50% from the field and made 13 of 30 shots from 3-point range.
The Thunder also got key separation from their depth. Reuters noted Oklahoma City won the bench scoring battle 34-15, with Jared McCain contributing back-to-back 3-pointers early in the fourth quarter as the Thunder pushed the game out of reach.
That is the bigger issue for the Lakers than any single whistle. Los Angeles held Gilgeous-Alexander to 18 points, forced seven turnovers and still lost by 18.
LeBron James scored 27 points, but the Lakers committed 17 turnovers and produced their lowest playoff point total since 2021. Los Angeles also dealt with Jarred Vanderbilt’s finger injury during the loss.
For the Lakers, the Game 2 question is not only whether they can defend SGA without fouling. It is whether they can do that while also matching Oklahoma City’s depth, spacing and defensive pressure.
The Thunder did not need an MVP-level scoring night from Gilgeous-Alexander to control Game 1. That is exactly why Oklahoma City looks so dangerous.
SGA Is an MVP Finalist and Favorite to Win a Second MVP
The flopping claims are landing at an awkward time for Gilgeous-Alexander’s public case, because he is not just another star guard in the playoffs.
The NBA named Gilgeous-Alexander, Nikola Jokić and Victor Wembanyama as the three finalists for the 2025-26 Kia NBA Most Valuable Player award. The league has already announced Gilgeous-Alexander as the 2025-26 Kia Clutch Player of the Year.
ESPN’s MVP finalist breakdown listed Gilgeous-Alexander’s regular-season numbers at 31.1 points, 4.3 rebounds and 6.6 assists per game across 68 games. ESPN’s Tim Bontemps also had Gilgeous-Alexander at the top of his ballot, writing that SGA “should become the 16th multiple-time MVP in league history.”
His playoff production has backed up the regular-season résumé. Through five postseason games, Gilgeous-Alexander is averaging 30.6 points, 7.6 assists and 3.4 rebounds while shooting 54.8% from the field, according to StatMuse.
That is the tension around SGA right now. His résumé is overwhelming, his team keeps winning, and his statistical profile looks like that of a superstar in full control. But his foul-drawing style also gives opponents and fans a specific point of attack.
For Oklahoma City, that criticism may not matter unless it starts influencing the way games are officiated. If officials allow more physicality in Game 2, the Lakers may feel they can crowd Gilgeous-Alexander more aggressively. If the whistle stays tight, Los Angeles risks putting the Thunder in the bonus and letting SGA dictate pace.
Either way, the viral clip is now part of the series conversation.
Gilgeous-Alexander is chasing another MVP, Oklahoma City is chasing another deep playoff run, and the Lakers are chasing a way to make this matchup uncomfortable. The next test is whether the noise around SGA’s whistle becomes a distraction — or just another complaint that fades behind another Thunder win.
SGA Hit With Brutal Flopping Claims After Thunder-Lakers Game 1