Kevin Durant: ‘As comfortable as I’ve ever felt’ with Warriors
Kevin Durant didn’t take long to make himself at home with the Golden State Warriors.
“It’s been hectic. A lot of attention comes with being in this position,” Durant said of the free-agency process. “When I met these guys, I felt as comfortable as I’ve ever felt. It was organic. It was authentic. It was real. It was feelings I couldn’t ignore.
feel great. I feel excited about this opportunity.”
Durant, who announced his decision to leave the Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday, was introduced by the Warriors after his contract — a two-year, $54.3 million deal with a player option after the first year — was finalized Thursday.
He will be the highest-paid player on a roster that also boasts two-time reigning MVP Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green.
“I haven’t made the decision, but he might start,” coach Steve Kerr joked while sitting next to Durant. “It’s safe to say Kevin would fit into any style.
“To add another guy who is so talented … he’s not just a shooter, not just a defender. He’s a basketball player. The combination of all these guys together should be a lot of fun to watch.”
Golden State set an NBA regular-season record with 73 wins and led the league in scoring last season, but the Warriors fell just short of a repeat NBA title and lost to the Cleveland Cavaliers in seven games.
“We try to get better every day we wake up,” Warriors general manager Bob Myers said. “You never expect to get this much better. We love people that love to play basketball. We love high-character people. You can’t find a better embodiment of that than the guy sitting next to me. We all can dream. Most of the times the dreams don’t come true.”
The Warriors on Thursday said they sold more than 1,000 Durant jerseys on their website in less than two hours.
Durant, who is contractually committed to play just one season with the Warriors, said he is committed to the team.
“Yeah, I plan on being here,” Durant said. “I don’t want to go through that again, so I plan on being here. I’m committed. I’m looking forward to a new era of basketball for me personally, and it should be fun.”
Curry, Thompson, Green and Andre Iguodala all made the journey to The Hamptons to attend the Warriors’ pitch meeting to Durant.
“Those four coming to my meeting and talking to me about the culture and how they built it and how they want to sustain it, it was key,” Durant said. “I’ve seen a lot of guys with crazy egos. … [Curry is] the face of the NBA in a lot of people’s eyes, and [he] wanted to see if he really would embrace me as a player, as a person. And I had no doubts that he would. He showed that he was all-in on this. He flew away from his family to come to the meeting and be a part of the meeting, and that showed me how much he cared, how much he wanted me to be a part of it.”
Durant, 27, has spent all nine seasons of his career with the Thunder organization. He won the MVP in 2014, has been named first-team All-NBA five times and has made seven All-Star teams. He has appeared in four Western Conference finals and one NBA Finals, in which he lost in five games to the Miami Heat in 2012.
He averaged 28.2 points, 8.2 rebounds and 5.0 assists per game last season, and he scored at least 20 points in 67 straight games. In nine seasons, Durant has averaged 27.4 points, 7.0 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game.
Anthony Edwards confident ahead of Game 7: ‘We’re a great team’
DENVER — Anthony Edwards and Naz Reid squared off in a shooting competition after practice Saturday, a day ahead of the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Game 7 against the Denver Nuggets to determine the winner of their Western Conference semifinal series against the defending NBA champions.
The Wolves’ budding superstar and the league’s Sixth Man of the Year started in one corner and challenged one another to make five 3-pointers from seven spots around the perimeter, seeing who would be first to finish from the opposite corner. In the shoot-until-you-miss format, Edwards quickly caught fire and advanced to the final corner spot while Reid got stuck on spot No. 3, clanking away on the wing.
To allow Reid a chance to catch up, Edwards started shooting high-arcing shots, launching the ball almost to the ceiling of the Nuggets’ practice court. When Reid finally got his rhythm and made his way around the 3-point line, just two spots from the end corner, Edwards stopped messing around — he locked back into his regular shooting stroke and calmly ended the competition.
In a way, it mirrored what the Wolves are trying to do to Denver this series. Minnesota went up 2-0 to start, lost three in a row to fall down 3-2, then obliterated the Nuggets by 45 points in Game 6 on Thursday to set up Sunday’s clincher.
And Edwards is looking at the Nuggets with the same self-assuredness he had Saturday when he shot a smile at Reid before making the last corner 3 to win their shootout.
“I think we’re confident just because we’re a great team,” Edwards said. “We’re going against another great team and we feel like we’re the better team. That’s all the confidence that we need. The two previous games [that the Wolves won in Denver] don’t mean anything. They beat our ass on our home court, so that don’t mean anything. Right now it’s about who is going to play better tomorrow.”
Leave a Reply