OKLAHOMA CITY -- Before training camp, as nine new Oklahoma City Thunder players were getting to know one another while the organization itself was recalibrating to a post-Russell Westbrook world, coach Billy Donovan sat down with the three point guards on the roster and presented a bold plan.

They -- being Chris Paul, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Dennis Schroder -- are three of Donovan's five best players. And he needed to find a way to play them all as much as possible, which would probably include playing all three of them together.

Paul is listed at 6-foot-1. Schroder is a generous 6-1. And Gilgeous-Alexander is the giant of the group at 6-5. None of the three is listed at more than 180 pounds. They're all playmakers. They're all scorers. They all thrive with the ball in their hands.

"If we moved it, if we shared it and if we played together, it would be really hard to guard," Donovan told them. He saw it simplified: Two of the three would always being playing against defenders scrambling to close out on the perimeter.

"And you're all really good at that," he said. Editor's Picks Lowe: Ten NBA things I like and don't like, including the fun version of CP3

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Despite the positional and vertical challenges of it, Donovan wanted to try it. The counterlogic was obvious, and when Donovan floated the idea publicly at media day, it was met with heavy skepticism.

"I hoped it would work," Paul said, leaning on the word "hope" pretty heavily. "We all have different personalities -- you never know what different guys' goals are and whatnot -- but I was excited about it. The biggest thing was that Billy sat us all down. We met, us three and Billy, and talked about the possibilities of what it could be, and thankfully all of us are giving up a little bit here and there for the success of the team."

Now, Donovan's plan hasn't just been validated 56 games into the season, with a sparkling 34-22 record and fresh off the lineup's dismantling of the Denver Nuggets in crunch time for a 113-101 statement win on Friday. The strategy has redefined the Thunder's season -- and the possibility to hope for something more ahead.

Chris Paul is leading a phenomenal closing lineup in his first season with the Oklahoma City Thunder. Zach Beeker/NBAE via Getty Images

The Thunder are the league's undisputed clutch-time maestros, with a league-best plus-27.3 net rating in a league-high 38 games that feature a score within five points in the last five minutes of regulation. They are 25-13 in clutch-time games, with the best offense in the clutch at an absurd 123.5 points per 100 possessions. Paul leads the league in clutch scoring (128 points), Gilgeous-Alexander is 12th (79) and Schroder is 27th (62). When that trio is on the floor, OKC outscores opponents by 29.6 points per 100 possessions.

OKC's preferred closing group -- the three guards, plus center Steven Adams and power forward Danilo Gallinari -- is the best lineup in the NBA by net rating with a minimum 150 minutes (plus-30.2 per 100 in 159 minutes). And 52.8% of those minutes have come in the fourth quarter.

"They've all coexisted, they've all found a way to make each other better," Donovan said of the three guards. "I felt like it could work, but it wouldn't have worked if those guys didn't have the attitude and mentality they had towards it. Really it was them, the way they handled it."

Waiting for the end to come When the Thunder choose to use Chris Paul, Dennis Schroder, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Danilo Gallinari and Steven Adams together, it is usually at the end of games -- and they will beat you. OKC closers Minutes +/- Net Rating 1stQ 2 +6 120.0 2ndQ 45 +20 17.3 3rdQ 24 +17 25.0 4thQ 84 +61 32.1 OT 5 +12 104.5 > Friday: Outscored Nuggets 15-10 in 5 min., including 10-6 in 4 4th-quarter min.

Against the Nuggets, it was Paul's midrange mastery that took over. He snaked around screens, weaved through traffic, dribbled in, dribbled out and knocked down shots. It has become almost a formula the Thunder abide by: Get through the first three quarters, keep it close, release the point guard. It is orchestrated by Donovan playing different duo combinations throughout the game, setting up the final few minutes with the three guards finishing it.

If the Golden State Warriors had the death lineup, the Thunder have the endgame lineup.

"If you guys had mics on all of us, you'd get a chance to see we're all each other's biggest cheerleaders," Paul said. "I've seen teams where guys aren't necessarily rooting for each other. They want you to do bad so they can be in the game. But we're not like that in here, and it's refreshing and nice to see."

According to ESPN Stats & Information research, the point guard trio has played 90 minutes together in clutch time and 373 minutes total -- 47.7% of the time in the fourth quarter; 42.1% of the time in the last five minutes and/or overtime; and 24.1% of the time in the clutch.

"It's not like I'm trying to hold it to the fourth," Donovan said. "I just don't want it to be at the expense where we're trying to play that way and the other portions of the game we're not as good. There's a balance you have to find."

The Nuggets themselves are no clutch-time slouches, either. They're 23-12 in clutch-time games, the second-most wins in the league behind Oklahoma City. They found their way to the top tier of the Western Conference with a ground-and-pound approach, playing close games and winning behind timely stops and execution.

The Thunder wound up outscoring the Nuggets 35-24 in the fourth quarter. Denver's sloppy finish on Friday was uncharacteristic but also possibly evidence of the rhythm the Nuggets are trying to rediscover. The past two months have included games in which the first priority was to field a playable rotation and the second was to try to win with whatever was cobbled together. Friday's starting lineup of Jamal Murray, Gary Harris, Will Barton, Paul Millsap and All-Star Nikola Jokic returned in Oklahoma City intact for the first time since Jan. 6 because of injuries to everyone except Jokic.

The Nuggets weathered the storm behind the pendulous brilliance of Jokic, who took on a more vocal leadership role during the past couple of months. In the face of the recent attrition, Denver entered Friday's game still No. 2 in the West. It might look as if moving is a chore and that he is tucking the ball into bed rather than shooting it, but Jokic is a ruthless tactician.

"If you want to sleep on the Nuggets, if you want to sleep on Nikola, keep on sleepin'," Nuggets coach Michael Malone said of his perception at the lack of appreciation for Jokic's season. "We're not concerned about any of that stuff. We know who we have. We have an MVP candidate; we have the best center in the NBA. And we're gonna continue to play through and rely on him to lead this team on and off the court." ESPN Daily podcast Monday through Friday, host Pablo Torre brings you an inside look at the most interesting stories at ESPN, as told by the top reporters and insiders on the planet. Listen

Jokic was his typical fantastic self, scoring 11 of Denver's first 13 points and finishing with a game-high 32 points on 12-of-15 shooting. He is averaging 20.8 points, 10.2 rebounds and 6.9 assists; but since Jan. 7, the production has cranked to 24.3 points, 10.9 rebounds and 7.8 assists.

"He's not going to bed at night wondering why no one's not talking about him," Malone said. "He doesn't care. He's reading his book on horses, we're winning games and he's happy. If he's happy, I'm happy."

Jokic and Malone weren't very happy after Friday's game. OKC carved the typically stout Denver defense, and if this was a preview of a possible postseason matchup, it had to give Malone some pause. Those final five minutes are when the Nuggets often do their best work, and in this case, the Thunder outscored them 18-9 in the last 5:31 of the game. With Schroder battling through a tweaked ankle, the three-guard lineup was deployed a little later than usual, but it was on the front end of putting the wraps on another win.

The prevailing theme from the Thunder is unselfishness, but it's also about connectivity. The Thunder have had reps in crunch time, and it's obvious to everyone that Paul is good in close games. He produces winning possessions, consistently locating the best possible shot more often than not. But he doesn't monopolize. On Friday, he had his moments, but he also leaned on Gallinari, he gave the ball to Schroder to let him work a mismatch and he had Gilgeous-Alexander bring it up to initiate the offense. The plan is to let whomever is cooking serve the meal and, if needed, help clean the table afterward.

"We just want to win," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "And whatever it is in that situation, we're willing to do. We have guys that are unselfish, and that's why it works."

The Houston Rockets have the NBA's attention with their radical small-ball swerve, but the Thunder have been at their gamble since day one. It was borne out of necessity rather than strategy -- like most trendsetting moves -- but they committed to it and have leaned in. It's their not-so-secret weapon and what keeps them as the frisky, dangerous, nobody-wants-to-play-them wild card in the Western Conference playoff bracket.