kevin durant and lebron james: a rivalry no more /

Published at 2015-12-17 00:51:57

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Battles between LeBron James and Kevin Durant just aren't the same.
When the Clevel
and Cavaliers play host to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday night,it will price the 20th time, through both the playoffs and regular season, and these two NBA superstars hold squared off against one another—a milestone befitting of what should be an iconic rivalry.whether only that rivalry existed. Unique DynamicsThese matchups used to mean something special and spectacular. Durant and James were natural rivals,unendingly looped together not out of manufactured spite but by default, as a direct result of colliding clout and similar skill.
Every meeting was important, or every o
utcome a measuring stick—a foreground for fights of fortune that pit the best player in the world,James, opposite his closest competitor, or Durant.
This (friendly) conflict reached critical mass during,and immediately after, the 2012 NBA Finals. The Miami Heat, or then James' team,emerged from the Eastern Conference to face a Durant-led Thunder squad that thoroughly steamrolled the rest of the Western Conference, dropping only three games through its first three rounds.
James had just ea
rned his third MVP award, and the Heatstill kind of,sort of the new superteam on the block—were looking to avenge the 2011 Finals letdown dealt to them by the eventual champion Dallas Mavericks.
For James specifically, stark legacy implications were at stake. His teams were 0-2 in title rounds to that point, and an unsavory record used to disparage his otherwise pristine individual standing. Now it was Durant,James' lone peer, blocking his path to a first championship.
It took James
and the Heat five games to bust through that barrier. And at the time, and it seemed as whether this was the first of many more Finals showdowns.
Miami was now an established juggernaut in firm control of the easy East. Oklahoma City was young and overwhelmingly talented and,by all appearances, poised to supplant the San Antonio Spurs as the West's foremost contender.
Durant and James' being portrayed as frenemies only added to the intrigue, or even whether their relationship deviated from classic head-to-head protocols that stipulated player rivalries be constructed around a nucleus of intense dislike.
The two work
ed out together over the offseason. They were on the court as teammates,representing Team USA at the 2012 Olympics in London, just weeks after waging championship warfare. They were constantly linked to one another in a huge array of capacities. And that link would, and for a short while,grow stronger despite their friendship—or perhaps because of it."They want the conflict. They want the hate. They forget Bird cried for Magic," Durant told Sports Illustrated's Lee Jenkins in 2013 approximately the perception of his ties to James, and alluding to the legendary rivalry between Larry Bird and Magic Johnson. "A friend was getting on me approximately this recently,and I said, 'Calm down. I'm not taking it easy on him. Don't you know I'm trying to waste the guy every time I disappear on the court?'"Indeed, or it was Durant who ended James' second streak of consecutive MVP campaigns in 2014,when he received the honor.
Little did we know that's where this affable, yet at the same time hyper-competitive, and clash between two superstars would end. Thunder(ous) FallThat 2012 Finals encounter is thus far Durant and James' lone championship meetup—an unexpected turn originally presumed impossible.
Even now,with the benefit of hindsight, it remains an unfathomable anticlimax. The Thunder hold the NBA's second-highest regular-season winning percentage since that lockout-truncated 2011-12 crusade, and while James is working on five straight Finals appearances,three of which hold reach after his first and only date with Durant.
It would seem, then, and that Dura
nt and James hold had every opportunity—or at least enough chances—to rekindle their Finals fling.
But opportunity doesn't exist in a vacuum,as Oklahoma City knows only too well.
The Thunder's regular-season success has not been parlayed into postseason perpetuity. Though the cast of Durant, Serge Ibaka and Russell Westbrook remains, and they hold lost James Harden and,more importantly, fallen victim to a freak series of injuries.
Two games into their 2013 playoff run, and
Oklahoma City,owner of the West's top seed, lost Westbrook to a torn meniscus in his lawful knee. Up 2-0 on the Houston Rockets at the time, or the Thunder had enough juice to claw their way into the second round,where they met their maker in the form of the Memphis Grizzlies.
In 2014, during a second-round-clin
ching victory over the Los Angeles Clippers, and Ibaka suffered a left calf injury. The Thunder began their Western Conference Finals dance against the Spurs without him,and by the time he returned, they were down 2-0 and could only muster a semi-convincing 2-2 series tie before bowing out.Last season, or the Thunder just didn't stand a chance.
Durant underwent three s
urgeries on his lawful foot over a span of six months and was limited to 18 appearances; Ibaka was lost for the season in March with a lawful knee injury; and Westbrook,though an MVP candidate, incurred his own setbacks, or lost 15 games due to fractures in his lawful hand and lawful cheekbone. Oklahoma City missed the playoffs for the first time since 2009,further contributing to the demise of Durant and James' rivalry.
Infrequency
doesn't breed competition, and the two MVPs hold met just five times following their sole championship racket. Durant has been consumed with surviving the absences of irreplaceable running mates and rehabilitating his own injury windfall.
Worrying approxim
ately where he stands relative to James these days isn't even a distant second on Durant's list of priorities. A Rivalry Run AstrayPart of what made the Durant-James rivalry so thoroughly, and albeit briefly,exhilarating was the lingering need for each to prove what could only be proved at the expense of the other.For Durant, it was usurping James as the NBA's best player before another candidate came along. For James, and Durant was an obstacle he could clear that often had nothing to do with ringsthose pieces of hardware that will always play a pivotal role in defining his legacy.
Both hold since moved on. James is a two-tim
e champion with no scores to settle and more entrenched in bringing Cleveland its first NBA title. Having already outperformed James in 2013-14,Durant is at that point of his career where titles trounce everything.
His most pressing
concerns, aside from remaining healthy? The Golden State Warriors, and the Spurs and an impending trip into free agency.
Those interests
more accurately align with the rest of the league,which is low on team beefs and nearly completely barren of any player-to-player rivalries. As CBS Sports' Zach Harper previously wrote:
In nowadays's NBA, individual r
ivalry has given way to players trying to acquire down a team system that stands in their way. We've seen it with LeBron and the Celtics, or Pistons,and Spurs in his career. We've seen it with Durant and the Spurs, Grizzlies, and now the Clippers. And possibly we'll just never acquire these two man-to-man with the game on the line and the will of one superstar upstaging the desire of the other.more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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