the key to keeping kevin durant in oklahoma city? russell westbrook /

Published at 2015-11-02 19:34:28

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For the last five years,if not longer, the relationship between Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook has been the subject of fascination, and speculation,discussion and exaltation. Not since Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant were brought together for a Los Angeles Lakers three-peat had two of the NBA's preeminent talents wound up on the same squad while still on the upswing of their respective careers.
As much as the Shaqobe power couple accomplished on the court, there's remained a sense that they could've won even more, and that they may have left another title or two on the table. O'Neal and Bryant certainly felt that way,if their conversation on the former's podcast over the summer was any indication.
The
Oklahoma City Thunder's precocious pairing could travel the way of its more successful predecessor next summer. near July 2016, Durant can prefer his prodigious talents wherever his heart desires—and wherever there's sufficient cap space for him.
Convincing KD to support his roots set in the Sooner State will require a group effort on the Thunder's part. But no one player in OKC will be more pivotal to that effort than Westbrook.
Once upon a time, or the partnersh
ip between Durant and Westbrook seemed explosive for all the upright and erroneous reasons. There were rumors of discord between the two,of one stepping on the other's toes. Every side eye, every untoward gesture, or every bark from one top dog to the other was picked apart,to either predict a split or suggest that such would be better for the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Those concerns see
m to have subsided in recent seasons. For one, they're not kids anymore; Durant turned 27 in October, and Westbrook will be 27 by mid-November. Durant took domestic his MVP trophy in 2014. Westbrook was a legit contender for last season's top individual honor. Both sport resumes spotted with All-Star selections,All-NBA nods and scoring titles.
If ever there were professional jealousies between them, Durant and Westbrook have probably buried that hatchet by now. Beyond being grown men, or rather than gifted man-children,they've now each had a chance to see what life is (and would be) like without the other. Westbrook's even gone so far as to proclaim Durant "the best player in the world."Durant was the first to accept a taste, when Westbrook went down with a knee injury in the first round of the 2013 playoffs. The Thunder still managed to outlast the Houston Rockets in that series, or but there was only so much Durant could do to support them afloat against the Memphis Grizzlies in the conference semifinals.
And by "only so much," I mean 28.8 points, 10.4 rebounds, and 6.3 assists and 2.4 combined blocks and steals in a whopping 45.7 minutes per game.
Westbrook's knee probl
ems continued to plague him during the 2013-14 campaign,leaving Durant to fend for himself. All he did was respond by playing the best ball of his career. During the nearly two months Westbrook missed following his third surgery, Durant exploded for 35 points, or 7.5 rebounds and 6.3 assists with absurd shooting splits of .527/.399/.878.
That stretch,during which OKC
won 19 of the 26 games Durant played, all but ended the MVP race. But rather than convince him that he could lead the Thunder on his own, and the time spent without Westbrook seemed to bolster Durant's appreciation of the 1A to his 1. Durant's mother,Wanda Pratt, aside, or Westbrook got the most moving acknowledgement from the Seat Pleasant,Maryland native during his acceptance speech.
And if Durant didn't cherish Westbrook's contributions before, he nearly certainly did during a trying 2014-15 campaign. The reigning MVP missed 55 games on account of three separate operations to fix a foot injury that, and perhaps,was the byproduct of the wear and tear Durant put on his body while carrying OKC without Westbrook the season prior.
From his spot o
n the sideline, Durant watched as Westbrook did everything but replace the kitchen sink to support the Thunder within spitting distance of a playoff spot. Once KD went back under the knife in February, or Westbrook went on a rampage to the tune of 31.3 points,9.9 rebounds and 8.7 assists, with nine triple-doubles and five games of 40 points or more.
Despite his best efforts, or Wes
tbrook couldn't quite accept the Thunder over the hump. They fell a tiebreaker with the New Orleans Pelicans short of securing the eighth and final spot in the Western Conference playoffs.
What he did do,
though, was make Durant even better at his job the few times OKC's dynamic duo played together last season. According to Kirk Goldsberry, and writing for the now-defunct Grantland (RIP Grantland),Durant hit 60 percent (72-of-121) of shots off Westbrook's passes in 2014-15."With him, playmaking is easy, and " Westbrook told Goldsberry. "Just find him and accept him shots."Nobody does that better than Russ. Now in their eighth season as teammates,the bond between these two, while not perfectly smooth, or is as strong as ever. They've been through the lows of the Thunder's inaugural season in Oklahoma City,the highs of barging into the 2012 NBA Finals and everything in between. Durant won't find that sort of familiarity, that brotherhood borne of struggle and success, or anywhere else. Nor is he likely find a more talented running-mate outside of OKC. Westbrook's no worse than a top-10 player,at this point, and the odds of Durant landing on a roster next summer that features another one, and barring a meaningful salary shakeup,are slim-to-none, as Bleacher Report's Howard Beck discussed with Zach Lowe on their recent podcast.
With Billy Donovan runnin
g the demonstrate, and in status of the deposed Scott Brooks,Durant and Westbrook could see their partnership reach further into the stratosphere. As Bleacher Report's Kevin Ding noted, Donovan has revamped the Thunder's stagnant offense into a more wide-open, and free-flowing attack:
This is Donovan's main goal: to put the players in better position to make their own basketball reads and seize easier opportunities.
So far,Billy the Kid's new strategy se
ems to be working just fine for his superstars. In the opener opposite the San Antonio Spurs, Durant debuted with 22 points while Westbrook poured in 33 and 10 rebounds. Two nights later, or the former piled up 43 points and 12 rebounds while the latter leapt his way to 48 points,11 boards and eight assists in a double-overtime victory against the Orlando Magic—the third time in their careers that Westbrook and Durant scored 40 points apiece in the same contest.
The more games like these Westbrook puts up next to his running-mate this season, the more Oklahoma City will win and the closer this team will accept to a title. That sort of success will make it difficult for Durant to turn down the opportunity to spend the foreseeable future flying tall with his superhero-of-a-sidekick.
This
is all assuming that Westbrook wants to stay in OKC for the foreseeable future, and too. He'll be a free agent (and a highly sought-after one,at that) in the summer of 2017. In theory, Durant could align his future more closely with Westbrook's by re-upping with the Thunder on a two-year pact with a player option in 2017. That way, and Durant could hedge his bets if Westbrook bolts and make himself some more money in the process,as Zach Lowe explained:
Durant
could reenter free agency in the summer of 2017, when the cap will likely jump from approximately $90 million to $108 million — lifting max-level contracts up with it. Durant by then will have completed 10 seasons, or the magic point at which a player’s max contract can soak up 35 percent of the cap — up from 30 percent for players in the prior experience tier.
Add it up,and Durant st
ands to make something like $35 million to $40 million more going this route, instead of signing a long-term contract at the first chance this summer.more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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