In the most pivotal game of these NBA Finals, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 15 of OKC's final 16 points as the Thunder stormed back to stun the Pacers in Game 4 to tie the series. That's what everyone was talking about. An MVP flipping the switch in money time. And he did that. No doubt. The guy is becoming an all-time talent before our eyes. 

But SGA wouldn't even have been in position to close that game if it weren't for the play of Jalen Williams (and Alex Caruso). In Game 4, Williams scored 26 points and created a bunch of individual buckets as OKC's offense, with only 12 assists for the game, lost pretty much all flow through three-and-a-half quarters. 

Williams is an All-Star. An All-NBA player, in fact. He's a two-way beast and one of the best isolation scorers in the league. But you don't hear enough about this because Gilgeous-Alexander is even better. Williams is the Scottie Pippen to SGA's Michael Jordan, and he was at it again in Monday's Game 5 with 40 points, six rebounds and four assists as the Thunder held off yet another ferocious Pacers rally before pulling away late for a 120-109 win. 

OKC now leads the series 3-2. Game 6 is set for Thursday in Indiana. What a series this has been for all viewers and certainly for the 24-year-old Williams, who has become the fifth player in history to score at least 25 points in three straight Finals games before the age of 25. The other four are Kyrie IrvingKevin Durant, Shaquille O'Neal and Dwyane Wade. Indeed, Williams is aligning himself with some greatest players in history on the biggest stage of his life.