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October 29, 2018

Kevin Durant: From Beloved NBA Superstar to “Snake”

When people say the name “Kevin Durant” these days, they don’t think kindly of him because he left his Oklahoma City Thunder for a Golden State Warriors team that won 73 out of 82 regular season games. For this reason, Durant is labeled a “snake” by many basketball fans. But how good was he with the Thunder before leaving them in 2016, and why do basketball fans now see him as a “villain” or a “snake”? Will he ever go back to the Thunder?

Durant is emotional after Game 5 loss to Miami in the 2012 NBA Finals as he embraces his mother | Courtesy of Reddit

The Seattle Supersonics drafted Kevin Durant out of the University of Texas with the second overall pick in the 2007 NBA Draft. Durant had a great rookie season, averaging more than twenty points per game in his first year, and he was named the Rookie of the Year. He spent only one year in Seattle, before the Sonics relocated to Oklahoma City and were renamed the Oklahoma City Thunder. Overall, KD spent nine years with the team that first drafted him. Russell Westbrook came to the team in 2008, and James Harden in 2009, and the three of them formed a dominating trio. Durant, Harden, and Westbrook made the playoffs as a trio in 2010, 2011, and 2012, including trips to the Western Conference Finals in 2011 and 2012. OKC won the Western Conference championship in 2012, and they faced a Miami Heat team that featured LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh in the 2012 NBA Finals. However, the series did not last very long, as the Thunder were defeated in five games, and the Heat won their second NBA title in franchise history. KD was pretty disappointed when they lost, so much so that he did not even congratulate the Heat players on the court.1 Kevin Durant was shook and emotional when going back to the locker room, knowing that it was his only chance to win a championship.

The summer of 2012 was interesting for Durant and the Thunder. Durant’s former teammate and big three member James Harden was traded to the Houston Rockets due to disagreements on a contract extension. In an interview that featured both Durant and Harden in the year 2015, KD said that people should stop making a big deal about the trade that sent his former teammate to the Rockets.2 Durant also participated in the 2012 Summer Olympic Games, representing Team USA. They were completely dominant, and they won the gold medal that year. He was a key player in the USA’s gold medal run, because he was one of the leading scorers on the team. KD is already known as a prolific scorer today.

KD is named the 2014 NBA MVP. He emotionally thanks his mother in his acceptance speech | Courtesy of ESPN

Durant was named the regular season MVP in the 2013-2014 NBA season. He was very emotional when he addressed his mother, paying her tribute for what he had done for him and his siblings while their father was away from the family. KD grew up in a rough Washington, DC area, so this meant he did not have the best childhood. This was why he turned to the game of basketball, so he could do something that would make him successful. He emotionally thanked his mother for “keeping us off the streets, putting clothes on our backs, and putting food on the table, and when we ate you didn’t eat to make sure we were being fed.” He called his mother “the real MVP” upon receiving the award.3

KD was diagnosed with a Jones fracture in his foot before the 2014-2015 season began, and he was ruled out for six to eight weeks, missing the first seventeen games of the year.4 This season was injury-plagued for Durant, and in February 2015, he sprained his left big toe.5 Then in February, Durant had a procedure in order to help him reduce pain and discomfort in the same foot that had surgery due to the Jones fracture. His 2015 season came to an end as he was shut down for the rest of the season to have foot surgery, and due to only playing 27 games in the season, the Thunder would miss the playoffs for the first time since 2009. This resulted in the firing of Scott Brooks, who was the head coach of the team for seven years. This injury-plagued season for Durant motivated him to be an even better player, hoping to be able to lead the Thunder to the playoffs again the next year.

The 2015-2016 season was better for Durant, since he was coming off of foot surgery from an injury he sustained the year prior. He and Russell Westbrook led the Warriors to the third seed in the Western Conference, and reached the conference finals for the third time as a duo. They faced the Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference Finals. OKC won Game 1 and stole home court advantage under the leadership of Durant and Westbrook. Despite losing Game 2, the Thunder won Games 3 and 4 to take a 3-1 series lead against the 73-9 Warriors. Throughout the next three games, the Thunder were only one win from the NBA Finals. The Thunder failed to win one more game, thus blowing a 3-1 lead, and fell to the Warriors in seven games. This Western Conference Finals loss took a toll on Kevin Durant, since it would affect his decision on where to sign going into the 2016 off-season. There was speculation that he could sign with the Warriors in the 2016 off-season. He participated in the 2016 Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro as a member of Team USA, winning the gold medal.6 However, what KD coveted was an NBA championship since he had only gotten one chance to win one many years ago, but blew it.

The OKC superstar announced that he intended to leave the Oklahoma City and that he was signing a two-year deal with the Golden State Warriors. Durant penned a letter on The Players’ Tribune called “My Next Chapter.” KD stated that he was mainly focusing on his growth as a player and searching for new opportunities. This was the reason why he was signing with the Warriors.7 Upon hearing these news, the basketball world went into fury. NBA fans and even analysts compared this move to Lebron’s decision to join the Miami Heat in 2010. People called KD a “snake” and called his move weak, since he joined a Golden State team that won 73 regular season games in the previous year. KD did not seem to care what other people thought of his move, because he was embracing all the hate he was receiving from many basketball fans. This move he made gave him an opportunity to possibly win an NBA championship.

Durant named the 2017 NBA Finals MVP after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers 4-1, which is the beginning of his prime with the Warriors | Courtesy of ESPN

The 2016-2017 season was Durant’s first season with the Golden State Warriors. In his first game, the Spurs defeated the Warriors in Oracle Arena by a score of 129-100, with KD scoring 27 points. The Warriors formed a “Fab Four,” which featured NBA All-Stars Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, Kevin Durant, and Draymond Green. On February 11, 2017, the Warriors traveled to OKC to play Russell Westbrook and the Thunder. Durant was greeted with heavy boos from the Thunder fans, since he was the reason why the Thunder had been one of the best NBA teams in recent years. He even got in a confrontation with former teammate and Wagner High School product Andre Roberson. After the regular season concluded, the Warriors earned the first seed in the Western Conference. The team went undefeated in the first three rounds of the 2017 playoffs, and faced the Cleveland Cavaliers for the third consecutive year. In Game 3 of the 2017 NBA Finals, Durant dribbled up the floor and pulled up from about thirty feet out and shot a three-pointer and it went in. This shot by KD is one of the most clutch shots in NBA Finals history, and the Warriors went up 3-0 in the series. The Warriors ended up winning in five games, giving Durant his first NBA championship. He was named the Finals MVP after leading the Warriors against the Cavs.8 He finally won his first NBA championship after ten years in the league, but it will not be his only championship.

Durant wins the Finals MVP after the Warriors defeated the Cavs in a 4-0 sweep in the 2018 NBA Finals | Courtesy of Fox News

Durant’s second season with the Warriors was in the 2017/2018 season. KD, Curry, Thompson, and Green were named All-Stars for the second consecutive year, which was the first time in NBA history that one team had four All-Stars in consecutive seasons. The Warriors did not clinch the first seed and they finished second behind the Houston Rockets. It was actually the first time in four seasons that the Warriors did not win at least 65 games; they went 58-24 last season. The Warriors eliminated the Rockets in seven games in the conference finals, which was a very tough series. They were down 3-2 in the Western Conference Finals, but Houston’s starting point guard Chris Paul got injured and that turned the series in the Warriors’ favor after that, winning the series 4-3. The 2018 Finals would be Durant’s third trip to the Finals, facing off the Cleveland Cavaliers for the fourth straight year. The Warriors won Game 1 due to a blunder by Cavs guard/forward JR Smith, who dribbled out the ball while the game was tied, and the clock expired as a result. In Game 3, KD dribbled up the ball just past half-court and launched a three-pointer, which was nothing but net and it went in. This moment was similar to Game 3 of the Finals the previous year as well. The Warriors went on to win the series 4-0, becoming the first and only team in NBA Finals history to sweep multiple times in the Finals. Durant was named the Finals MVP for the second straight year after once again leading the Warriors to victory against the Cavs.9

People believed that Durant’s move to the Warriors was weak. Despite people calling him a “snake,” there is no denying that Durant is one of the most prolific scorers in NBA history, as he has won four scoring titles in his career. In a 2017 interview, KD revealed that the reason he left OKC for the Warriors was to play with one of the greatest teams the league had ever seen, and that he wanted to play alongside NBA All-Stars Curry and Thompson.10 People may call Durant names like “snake” and “villain,” but he is a great basketball player. Off the court, he is a philanthropist, as he founded the Kevin Durant Charity Foundation. Durant is one of the best basketball players of the decade, and is for sure a future Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee. Perhaps one day, Kevin Durant may return to the Oklahoma City Thunder when his career is about to end.

  1. Steve Perrin, “For Thunder, NBA Finals Loss Is A Rite Of Passage,”  June 22, 2012, https://www.sbnation.com/nba/2012/6/22/3109691/oklahoma-city-thunder-miami-heat-nba-finals-2012.
  2. Darnell Mayberry and Anthony Slater, “Q&A: Kevin Durant Opens Up About the James Harden Trade, Free Agency and His Relationship with the Media,” February 18, 2015, https://newsok.com/article/5394491/qa-kevin-durant-opens-up-about-the-james-harden-trade-free-agency-and-his-relationship-with-the-media.
  3. Mark Stein and Tom Haberstoh, “Kevin Durant Wins First MVP Award,” May 8, 2014, http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/10890597/kevin-durant-oklahoma-city-wins-mvp-award-first.
  4. Royce Young,  “Kevin Durant Fractures Foot,” ESPN, October 13, 2014, http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/11688088/kevin-durant-oklahoma-city-thunder-fractured-foot.
  5. Jason Butt, “Report: Kevin Durant injury a sprain, not turf toe,” CBS Sports, February 3, 2015, https://www.cbssports.com/nba/news/report-kevin-durant-injury-a-sprain-not-turf-toe/.
  6. Kyle Neubeck, “Team USA Wins 2016 Olympic Basketball Gold Medal,” August 21, 2016, https://www.sbnation.com/nba/2016/8/21/12574002/team-usa-wins-2016-olympic-basketball-gold-medal.
  7. Kevin Durant, “My Next Chapter,” July 4, 2016, The Players’ Tribune,  https://www.theplayerstribune.com/en-us/articles/kevin-durant-nba-free-agency-announcement.
  8. Scott Cacciola, “Warriors Win NBA Title, Avenging Themselves Against the Cavaliers,” The New York Times, June 13, 2017, https://nytimes.com/2017/06/13/sports/golden-state-warriors-win-nba-finals-stephen-curry-lebron-james/.
  9. Jason Duaine Hahn, “Golden State Warriors Win NBA Finals — in What Might Be LeBron James’ Last Game as a Cavalier,” People, June 8, 2018, https://people.com/sports/golden-state-warriors-win-nba-finals-stephen-curry-lebron-james/.
  10. Tom Ziller, “This is Why Kevin Durant Left Russell Westbrook and the Thunder,” June 5, 2017, https://www.sbnation.com/2017/6/5/15739352/kevin-durant-russell-westbrook-golden-state-warriors-nba-finals-2017.

Maxx Arizmendi

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Recent Comments

96 comments

  • Pamela Callahan

    Basketball is one of the few sports I enjoy watching, and the Golden State Warriors are a force to be reckoned with. I think Kevin Durant was justified in moving to a different team. I can see why OKC fans would be disappointed, but I think that in the end, it should be the player’s decision on where they want to be and how they want their career to progress.

  • Enrique Segovia

    I do not consider Kevin Durant as a snake; this is because even though he left a team to go to a better one, it is human nature to seek for better opportunities. There is no reason to judge Kevin Durant for what he did. I would have done the same thing, as I am accustomed to search for the best opportunities possible for me. Kevin Durant maybe switched teams to get more money and have more chances at winning the NBA championship, which sincerely, is the best action to take in his situation.

  • Mariana Valadez

    I am only involved with basketball because of my dad. Ever since I was little, I would watch the NBA with him. I am familiar with Kevin Durant. I believe it was a good decision for him to move to the warriors. Since he did that, he has won multiple championships and MVP. This article was very well written and fun to read.

  • Adrian Cook

    Personally, I feel like Kevin Durant going to the Warriors was the best thing for him. Everyone knows that in sports, the only thing a player wants is a championship. Of course that’s when players start changing teams because they feel they have the best chance to win somewhere else. After this move, KD has now won two finals MVP and two NBA championships and has now entered ranks as one of the best basketball players in the league. You can call him whatever name you want but this ultimately his job and he’s going to do what it takes to earn his money.

  • Caden Floyd

    Anytime a big name in sports leaves a team it always causes a lot of drama, and even more so if they end up doing great and winning a couple Finals MVP awards. Kevin Durant is one of the best players in the league and everyone knows that. I don’t think anyone should hate him or label him a snake because in the end the game is really a job and you want to do whatever you can do to be the best and earn the most money from your job.

  • Daniela Duran

    This article was amazing! It was well written and super interesting! I am really into basketball, and I am TOTALLY a golden state fan! I don’t think that Durant’s decision was a bad one, and although it may look as though he betrayed his team, we must recognize that every athlete must try to do what is best for his career, and this was certainly the best decision KD could take. It would have been nice, though, and perhaps more inspirational if he had stayed with the Thunders, until they won a final! But regardless, one must not deny the incredible talent that he has, and he certainly deserves all the recognition he has won. Even if you think it wasn’t the best decision, there is no reason for disregarding his great talent. Fantastic article!

  • Sienna Guerra

    Kevin Durant is such a good basketball player and he really is talented. This trade from the Thunder to the Golden State Warriors was the most shocking thing lat season! Because of this, it is so saddening the hateful comments and negativity he got for it yet nobody really knows how much of a good move this was for him because of the teammates such as Steph Curry and Klay Thompson make it such a good and powerful team because of his addition to the team.

  • Luis Magana

    I am a big sports fan and I grew up watching Kevin Durant play with my father. I couldn’t believe that this off season trade he joined the warriors but I personally like the warriors. He should of fought and trained harder to beat the warriors the next upcoming game instead of going to easy route and joining the team with the NBA championship title. He is critiqued for it but a person should take advantage of the opportunities that are given to him and do whats best for him.

  • Robert Ruiz

    This was an interesting article and read it merely because the title called KD a snake. To first give some criticism a bit, i thought the essay was well written and fun to read. On KD decision to leave the Golden State, i think who cares. Honestly, when someone because a professional athlete at the world class level Durant is, it only makes sense to leave and expand his career, whether it be more money, better teammates, or organization issues, it doesn’t really matter. When i look back at it now, yeah, i called him a snake too, but when he has already won two NBA championships and 2 Finals MVP awards, you cannot argue that.

  • Lyzette Flores

    I believe Kevin Durant is a great person but what he did to the Oklahoma Thunder was something that the team will grudge on forever. Even though he left his team to better off his career, he joined one of the best teams in the NBA. He knew that by joining he would get a championship which makes him selfish. He only cared about himself, leaving thousands of fans feeling betrayed. Even if he decides to return to OKC, it will not be the same.

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