The Oklahoma City Thunder won the 2025 NBA Championship, and even after the confetti and parade, the team’s front office was already back in the war room. On Wednesday after the championship parade, Thunder officials were gathered there for the 2025 NBA Draft, a reminder that the champions are not just chasing the moment in front of them.
The Thunder are projected to have a sustained run of success on the hardwood, and their draft age gives them another layer of leverage. Oklahoma City owns two first-round picks in the 2026 NBA Draft, projected at No. 15 and No. 16, along with a second-round selection projected at No. 38. That kind of future capital matters for a club trying to stay near the top while the league around it keeps changing.
The timing adds to the significance. The NBA regular season is coming to a close this week, and after Sunday's finale, 20 teams will move into the postseason while 10 teams turn to offseason answers. Four more teams will join them by the following Saturday, leaving the Thunder in a very different position from the clubs still trying to salvage next spring. Oklahoma City is not waiting for permission to think ahead; it already won the championship and is planning as if the next window is open too.
Read Also: Jaylin Williams says Thunder prank on rookie Thomas Sorber was a fun thing to do
That is the tension inside the Thunder’s story. A year ago, on Sunday, June 22, 2025, they celebrated a Game 7 win over the Indiana Pacers. Now they are holding a title and future picks at the same time, with a roster and a front office built to treat contention as the baseline. The challenge is not whether Oklahoma City can matter again. It is how long it can keep doing it while the rest of the league spends the spring looking for answers.






