Waterloo Region Record

It’s time to silence the critics of Golden State Warriors superstar Kevin Durant,

- Sally Jenkins

Kevin Durant violated the unwritten National Basketball Associatio­n code of alpha leaders when he signed on with the Golden State Warriors. His critics practicall­y suggested he had unmanned himself by wanting to play for a ready-made franchise with talent equal to his own.

The offence was right up there with ironing his boxer shorts. Maybe he can toughen up by getting a dollar shave or eating some ribs. Maybe with a couple of more 33-point, 13-rebound, six-assist, five-block, three-steal performanc­es against the Cleveland Cavaliers he can apply for Man Amnesty.

If nothing else happens in these NBA finals, Durant and the Warriors have dispensed with the wrong-headed old attitude that to qualify for full Male Authorizat­ion you have to show you can carry a team alone. With every manhandlin­g of an opponent in this post-season, Durant’s critics look sillier for suggesting that it was “weak” for him to sign on with Steph Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, after they had beaten him in the Western Conference finals last year with Oklahoma City. “He lost and then he joined,” Doc Rivers said accusingly. “It’s something from a competitiv­e standpoint, you would think you wouldn’t do.” Paul Pierce likened it to getting “beat up by the bully’s gang and now I want to join your gang.”

At what point in the history of Mr. Naismith’s game did it become the wrong thing to play well with others? At what point did it become a crime against posterity to seek help and share credit?

It’s hard to precisely date the point at which NBAers decided that too little ego was not properly muscular. But it seems to have started sometime between the Atomic Age and the Informatio­n Age, or when Michael Jordan dropped 69 points on Cleveland in 1990, and Kobe Bryant bombed Toronto with 81 in 2006.

Somewhere in there, the ethos shifted. People forgot that Willis Reed, Earl Monroe, Bill Bradley, Walt Frazier and Dave DeBusscher­e coexisted quite beautifull­y on the New York Knicks without losing their stud identifica­tion papers.

A great’s legacy began to depend on his ability to overshadow his teammates. Remember what Orlando general manager Otis Smith said after LeBron James decided to play with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami? “I thought he was, I guess, more of a competitor,” Smith said. Jordan implied it was the mark of a softer generation, declaring he never would have shared a floor with Larry Bird or Magic. “I was trying to beat those guys,” he said. Charles Barkley went so far as to suggest James had damaged his reputation in perpetuity, and shouldn’t be considered in the same category as a greatest-ever. “This clearly takes him out of the conversati­on.”

But that paled compared to the heat Durant took for leaving Oklahoma after eight championsh­ip-less years to join the Warriors, a franchise that already had an MVP in Curry and won a title in 2015. Barkley charged Durant with seeking to “gravy train.” ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith flatly called it “the weakest move I’ve ever seen by any superstar in any sport.”

What a bunch of donkey-headed braying.

So, to recap: Sharing is weak, chemistry is a gravy train and unselfishn­ess is failing to stand up for yourself.

This notion that Durant did the wrong, unmanly thing, that he overstocke­d the Warriors with too much talent and thus it would take some meaning away from any title he wins, is nonsense. Across the floor, Cleveland has James, Kyrie Irving, Kevin Love and J.R. Smith. Exactly what did Durant’s critics expect him to do, nobly concede his entire career to that crew? Durant has just one rival when it comes to the combinatio­n of individual brilliance and willingnes­s to share, and it’s James, who is likely to lead the Cavaliers to a strong counterpun­ch before the series is over.

Here’s the deal: If the series ends with a victory for Durant, he will have establishe­d himself as one of the truest greats of his age. But just as important, he will have restored honour to the art of collaborat­ion. As the Warriors have taken a 2-0 lead in these finals, Durant has shown us that he wasn’t just after a ring, he was after a certain ethic. He had his choice of “gravy trains” in free agency last season. He could have been a potential ring-maker in Boston, San Antonio or Miami. But he chose the Warriors because of the way “they practicall­y held hands” as teammates, and because “they just really enjoy pure basketball,” he said. “That’s the kind of feel that I wanted.”

Pure. The word is as good a descriptio­n as any of the way the Warriors have swept through the post-season without dropping a game. They have such a well-practised sense for each other’s braiding movement, and such charitable open-handed passing that it seems almost intuitive. They combine it with such active, harrying helpdefenc­e that it looks like opponents are trying to shoot through a cage. They’ve got the top defensive rating, the top assist ratio, and the top assist to turnover ratio in the NBA. As it turns out, Durant’s hydraulic grace was the perfect complement to them, a finishing piece. Listen to this: in Game 1 of the finals they had 31 assists on 45 field goals. In Game 2 they had 34 assists on 46. Who plays that way? Nobody.

That’s not a gravy train, or craven ring-seeking on sheer talent. That’s the beau ideal of the game, five people thinking and feeling as one, the way it’s meant to be played. The only way basketball looks this pretty is if you work so hard at it, with such common dedication to craft, and such a wholly absorbed and internaliz­ed unselfishn­ess, that it becomes magic.

One of the people who recognizes that is Spurs coach Gregg Popovich. “They are really talented, but that’s not the whole equation,” he said after San Antonio was swept in the conference finals. “That’s not everything that describes them. This is, you know, maybe the best defensive team in the league on top of everything. So they don’t just play with talent ... On offence, no team is more unselfish finding the open man and that sort of thing ... Coaches are always trying to get their team to do that. But they’ve got a multitude of people who are unselfish in that regard and play a beautiful game, and on top of that play D at the other end. So they deserve a lot more credit than, ‘Well, they’re talented. They’re supposed to win.’ That is disrespect­ful to them in my book. They’re way, way more than just their talent.”

Enough with the disrespect. Enough with the idea that unless you are a puffed up iconoclast who likes to play one on five, you somehow are the weaker player, talent, and man.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Kevin Durant, left, thwarts Channing Frye in Game 2 of the NBA finals. Durant scored 33 points in a 132-113 Warriors win.
GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Kevin Durant, left, thwarts Channing Frye in Game 2 of the NBA finals. Durant scored 33 points in a 132-113 Warriors win.

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