Russell Westbrook has triple-double vs. all teams except Thunder

ByROYCE YOUNG
October 29, 2017, 1:15 AM

— -- CHICAGO -- With 12 points, 13 rebounds and 13 assists against the Chicago Bulls?on Saturday night, Russell Westbrook?has only one team that he hasn't recorded a triple-double against, and he probably won't get to cross that one off.

The Oklahoma City Thunder?are now the only team Westbrook hasn't recorded a triple-double against, after he notched his third of the season and 82nd of his career in a 101-69 win over the Bulls.?

Already well-entrenched in the NBA record book for his triple-doubles, Westbrook added another mark: He is the only player in NBA history to record a triple-double against every team he has faced.

"He had one against us in practice," Carmelo Anthony said jokingly afterward.?

Westbrook said he didn't know he'd achieved the feat.

"Just get a win. That's all I did, that's all I worry about -- getting a win," he said. "Happy it could come against them."

New teammates Anthony and Paul George?have?been on the other side of Westbrook's stat-stuffing, but watching him produce on a nightly basis has left them impressed.

"It's special," George said. "Man, that's a special player. He's solidifying himself early as a Hall of Famer.

"It was crazy to see playing against him, and it's even crazier to see him doing it night in and night out being on his team. It's crazy. There's not a player that's been in this league that's been at his [effort] level."

Against the overmatched Bulls, the Thunder offense flowed from the opening tip, scoring 15 points in three minutes. Westbrook was at the heart of it. Playing alongside George and Anthony has been an adjustment for Westbrook, but he has settled in the past four games and is back to his usual stat-stuffing self.

After averaging a triple-double last season, Westbrook is averaging 22.6 points, 9.2 rebounds and 12.0 assists six games into this season.

"I try never -- being on the sidelines and working with him -- ever take it for granted because he's such a unique individual," coach Billy Donovan said. "And more than anything else with him, it's really his mentality that I have great respect for and an admiration that I love. He's an old-school, just bring it, he just has certain values in the way the game is supposed to [be] played from a competitive standpoint. He plays hurt. He plays tired. He plays sore. And his effort that he gives when he gets those triple-doubles, yeah, I don't look at it and say, 'Eh, it's just him being him.' I realize the amount of effort it takes and the commitment it takes on his part to go out there and do that, impact the game in so many different areas."

The trend continues from last season, when the Thunder went 33-9 in games in which Westbrook registered a triple-double. This season, they're 3-0 when he gets one and 0-3 when he doesn't. The sample size is obviously thin so early into the season, but Westbrook's rebounding appears to be a difference-maker. After downsizing the roster by adding Anthony and starting him at power forward, the Thunder, historically a dominant rebounding team, have struggled on the glass.

"He's the best guy I've ever seen doing that. He has an incredible knack for the ball, and then obviously his explosiveness and his speed and his quickness getting there in a hurry," Donovan said. "But he has great anticipation ability. He's the best loose-ball guy I've ever seen."