Durant, Nets look every bit a contender in 125-99 blowout of Warriors — ProBasketballTalk | NBC Sports

The Nets looked like the championship Warriors for a night with impressive ball movement and scoring.

Durant, Nets look every bit a contender in 125-99 blowout of Warriors — ProBasketballTalk | NBC Sports

Warriors’ Steph Curry says he looks forward to playing Nets’ Kevin Durant in season opener — Monterey Herald

When Stephen Curry sees Kevin Durant make his regular-season debut for the Brooklyn Nets Tuesday night, he doesn’t anticipate a rush of adrenaline because he will be playing his former Warriors teammate. “At the end of the day, it’s just another game,” Curry said Monday. “It’s our first regular-season game, so there’s (already) a lot…

Warriors’ Steph Curry says he looks forward to playing Nets’ Kevin Durant in season opener — Monterey Herald

Kevin Durant looks like Durant of old, which should scare the East, NBA — ProBasketballTalk | NBC Sports

Kevin Durant was the best player on the court Friday night in Boston.

Kevin Durant looks like Durant of old, which should scare the East, NBA — ProBasketballTalk | NBC Sports

How Kevin Durant may have helped Steve Nash get Nets’ coaching job — Times-Standard

Maybe Kevin Durant misses the Warriors culture more than we thought after he skipped town for the Brooklyn Nets last summer? It would partially explain why a piece of the Warriors’ winning ways is surprisingly joining him in New York. No one has to come out and say it, but it’s obvious the former Warriors…

How Kevin Durant may have helped Steve Nash get Nets’ coaching job — Times-Standard

Kevin Durant Has Theory About Why Kyrie Irving Receives So Much Criticism — NESN.com

Kevin Durant believes Kyrie Irving’s sharp tongue sometimes puts him at odds with the masses. The Brooklyn Nets superstar claimed Wednesday during his appearance on the ELITE Media Group’s “Play For Keeps” podcast his teammate has become a lightning rod for criticism because he tells it like it is, regardless of the consequences. Fans and…

Kevin Durant Has Theory About Why Kyrie Irving Receives So Much Criticism — NESN.com

Nets GM: Kevin Durant remains ‘loud voice’ in building for future — The Sports Daily

Kevin Durant may not be joining his Nets teammates in the “Orlando bubble,” for the NBA season restart, but that doesn’t necessarily mean (…)

Nets GM: Kevin Durant remains ‘loud voice’ in building for future — The Sports Daily

Kevin Durant may not be joining his Nets teammates in the “Orlando bubble,” for the NBA season restart, but that doesn’t necessarily mean he isn’t in constant communication with the team.

The Nets have a big decision ahead of them in regards to their head coaching position, with interim coach Jacque Vaughn having a difficult task ahead of him, considering the big-name guys currently out there on the market.

It’s been said that Durant and Kyrie Irving will have input on the team’s head coach going forward, which is a trend we’ve seen in the NBA, as it’s a superstar-driven league. That’s why it was no surprise that Nets general manager Sean Marks told SNY’s Ian Begley that KD continues to be a “loud voice” in the building.

“He continues to be a very loud voice in terms of where we’re going in the future and what we’re doing and I involve him like the other players and staff and how we’ll continue to build this team and how we move forward,” Marks said.

He continued:

“Look, I don’t want to speak for him but he seemed to be in good spirits,” Marks explained. “He’s obviously aware of everything that’s going on whether it’s pandemic and some of the issues going on in society. We’ve had great conversations about all of that.”

It’s still surprising that KD and Kyrie won’t be joining their team in Orlando, regardless. 

Kevin Durant ‘probably wouldn’t have played’ at Disney if he was fully healthy — Nets Wire

The Brooklyn Nets will be without Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and Nic Claxton when they resume the 2019-20 season at Disney World.

Kevin Durant ‘probably wouldn’t have played’ at Disney if he was fully healthy — Nets Wire

Kevin Durant recently ruled himself out for the remainder of the 2019-20 NBA season after having done so earlier in the year, before the league was forced to go on hiatus due to the novel coronavirus pandemic.

But it turns out the guard likely wouldn’t have played in Disney if he was at full strength.

During an interview on the “Dawg Talk” podcast, Durant explained why he wouldn’t have played:

I feel, me right now, I probably wouldn’t have played because the unknown going into that situation looks crazy right now, seeing so many new cases. It’s just so unpredictable. It’s easy for me to say right now because I’m injured, but I probably wouldn’t have went down there.

However, Durant is fine with some players deciding to go through with the resumption of the season. And he would’ve discussed his decision with others to hear the other side of the argument, too. But deep down, Durant does not think he would’ve elected to play.

If the guys feel safe enough to go play, that’s cool, I’m with them. If they don’t feel like they should go down there and play or don’t feel safe, I’m with them, too. I’m all about what the group wants. If it’s good for the betterment of the whole group, then I’m cool with it. I probably would have chilled.

Nah, I probably would have chilled. Obviously, I would have talked to my teammates and consulted with my guys and actually really went over it for the last month and a half, but me, my gut would have told me ‘nah,’ I probably wouldn’t want to go down there, especially after three months off.

Kevin Durant Confirms He Won’t Make 2019-20 Nets Debut, ‘My Season Is Over’ — NESN.com

Even though the NBA reportedly will return four-plus months after it was put on hold due to the COVID-19 outbreak, it will won’t be enough time for Kevin Durant to make his Brooklyn Nets debut. Durant ruptured his Achilles last year and was expected to miss the 2019-20 season. But with the hiatus, many thought…

Kevin Durant Confirms He Won’t Make 2019-20 Nets Debut, ‘My Season Is Over’ — NESN.com

MLS Rumors: Kevin Durant Buys Ownership Stake In This Soccer Team — NESN.com

Kevin Durant is checking into the beautiful game. The NBA superstar has bought a small ownership stake in the Philadelphia Union, The Sports Business Journal’s Mark J. Burns reported Thursday, citing a source. Durant will own between one percent and five percent of the Major League Soccer club, although it’s nuclear whether the minority stake…

MLS Rumors: Kevin Durant Buys Ownership Stake In This Soccer Team — NESN.com

Kevin Durant gone from the Warriors, far from forgotten — Times-Standard

Hey Kevin Durant, the night man from the Hotel California would like a word with you: You can check out of the Golden State any time you like, but you can never leave. It’s going on 11 months since Durant forced his passage from the Warriors to the Brooklyn Nets and it seems he has…

Kevin Durant gone from the Warriors, far from forgotten — Times-Standard

Hey Kevin Durant, the night man from the Hotel California would like a word with you:

You can check out of the Golden State any time you like, but you can never leave.

It’s going on 11 months since Durant forced his passage from the Warriors to the Brooklyn Nets and it seems he has never left. During that time he has rehabilitated his torn Achilles tendon. He has (presumably) bonded with his new besties. He has mused about representing the United States in the 2020 Olympics in Japan (when that was still a thing). He revealed that before the 2015-16 season he intended to bolt the Oklahoma City Thunder to join the Warriors because his game was growing and “I didn’t play with a lot of skill guys.”

What Durant has not done in the interim: play in an official game, disengage from former teammate Draymond Green, and shaken the dust off his Warriors’ tenure.

Give you an example: Recently the San Francisco Chronicle excerpted a new book, “The Victory Machine: The Making and Unmaking of the Warriors Dynasty,” authored by Ethan Strauss, who has covered the team for ESPN, and most recently, The Athletic.

The excerpts, to say the least, feed into the narrative that Durant is sensitive and thin-skinned.

From the book:

“KD … accused me of trying to ‘rile up Steph’s fans. He expressed that this was a constant theme in the Bay. All of us local (reporters) just wanted to kiss Steph’s ass at (Durant’s) expense. This was KD’s consistent lament. He would frequently squabble in direct-message conversations with the Warriors fans on Twitter, frequently accusing them of favoring Steph at his expense. In one such exchange that foreshadowed things to come, he was asked by the WarriorsWorld account whether two-time MVP Steph Curry or Kyrie Irving was the better player. ‘I gotta really sit down and analyze it,’ (Durant) said.”

In fairness, Durant was in the spotlight his entire time with the Warriors, and was a target for fans and NBA players who believed he “broke the NBA” when he joined up with the dynastic Warriors. He didn’t ask for that. But he seemed incapable of ignoring the noise.

The Chron’s post included an exchange between Durant and Connor Letourneau, the newspaper’s Warriors beat reporter who had appeared on a podcast of which Durant was made aware. Again, the encounter fed into the KD scouting report — seemingly seeking validation.

“I’m just standing in the locker room near the door, on my phone and he is walking out of the locker room and he stops and he looks at me and he just goes, ‘Have I been good to you?,’” Letourneau told Strauss. “I’m like, ‘What do you mean have you been good to me?’ And he just keeps repeating himself over and over, ‘Have I been good to you? Have I been good to you?’ He’s kind of creeping towards me, and I have no idea what he’s upset about at this point. I have no idea what’s going on.”

Finally, over the weekend Warriors GM Bob Myers who has been watching “The Last Dance,” the story of the Michael Jordan Bulls, couldn’t help but see parallels between the Bulls and the the Warriors — starting with two great teams trying to mesh strong personalities, and navigate the grind of high-stakes competition.

“The second (NBA title) with Kevin it felt like, ‘Well, we just did what we were supposed to do, and great job,” Myers told ESPN’s Nick Friedell. “It wasn’t joy. I’m sure a lot of people felt differently. It wasn’t anybody’s fault. I think there’s just a weight to everything.”

Durant won’t play for Nets if NBA resumes season: Report — Canoe

Brooklyn Nets star Kevin Durant will not play if the NBA restarts the season, ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported Sunday. The Nets are determined to let the four-time scoring champion rest until next season rather than risk reinjuring his right Achilles tendon. “Kevin Durant’s not coming back to the Nets this year,” Wojnarowski said during “The […]

Durant won’t play for Nets if NBA resumes season: Report — Canoe