OKLAHOMA CITY — Something didn’t feel right.Oklahoma City Thunder coach Mark Daigneault had just watched 58 minutes of absurdly good basketball: four quarters plus two overtimes in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals. His team lost, but he was level-headed about it, confident that things could and would turn as it got more exposure to the San Antonio Spurs.But one thing gnawed at him. Isaiah Hartenstein, a player who in his two seasons in Oklahoma City has embodied so much of what the Thunder are and what they strive to be, only played 12 minutes and 10 seconds.“It just didn’t feel good to me,” Daigneault said.Fixing that meant changing the strategy against Victor Wembanyama. It meant putting Hartenstein on him from the tip instead of using smaller defenders, as was primarily the case in Game 1.And it also meant going to his player and offering an explanation — even if none was needed.Because while Hartenstein wanted to be on the court Monday, he accepted it wasn’t what the team thought it needed. He didn’t pout that he was largely a footnote in an all-time great game, the kind competitors dream about. He didn’t have regrets as he watched his old team, the New York Knicks, create their own euphoria in the East finals.Nope. Steady as ever, Hartenstein moved on, ready to do what’s best.“He said, ‘I’ll do whatever the team needs me to do,’” Daigneault said.In more than 27 minutes during the Thunder’s 122-113 win on Wednesday, that meant holding and fighting and wrestling and shoving Wembanyama, knocking him back off the throne he grabbed in his dominant Game 1. Hartenstein still set huge screens, grabbed eight offensive rebounds and launched soft-touch push shots off the ceiling to avoid Wembanyama’s arms.