Greenwich Time

Durant unsure what to expect as return nears

- NBA

NEW YORK — Kevin Durant used to worry about how he would play.

There hasn’t been reason for concern for years. He became an NBA MVP and a two-time champion, an explosive scorer who could get 25 points on a bad night and 45 on a good one.

But that was before having one of the most serious injuries a basketball player could face. Now, 18 months after rupturing his Achilles tendon and finally set to play for the Brooklyn Nets, Durant once again has reason to wonder if he will be one of the league’s greatest players.

“Who knows?” he said Tuesday. “I’ve just got to see how I feel in a real NBA game again.”

He hasn’t played in one since Game 5 of the 2019 NBA Finals, when he went down early in the second quarter of his last appearance for Golden State. Surgery followed and then shortly after he decided to join the Nets along with friend and fellow superstar Kyrie Irving.

With that duo plus a deep and talented roster, the Nets have a chance to be one of the NBA’s top teams. But that may depend on how quickly — or if — Durant regains his form.

Few players have bettered it. The 6-foot-10 forward is a four-time scoring champion who has averaged 27 points, easing whatever fears he had earlier in his career.

“I definitely used to have crazy anxiety wondering how I was going to play the next day or the next series and it used to drive me crazy,” Durant said.

He got over that by relying on his work ethic and he believes that will help him overcome the uncertaint­y he faces now. Nets officials have praised the way he attacked his rehab and it seems clear that if Durant does struggle, it won’t be because he wasn’t prepared.

Instead, it will be because he’s a 32-year-old coming off an injury from which some players much younger have never fully recovered.

“I’ve been through surgeries and injuries before, but the longest recovery I had was three months,” Durant said. “But the first phase of the Achilles, I couldn’t walk or run. You had to use a scooter.

“So I think those milestones of reaching, like learning how to walk, learning how to run, jump again and getting used to certain movements again, I think that’s underestim­ated.”

Irving thought Durant was perhaps rushed back from his last injury, when he missed nine games during the 2019 postseason and then suffered the Achilles injury the night he returned. This time Durant has had more time than expected because of the coronaviru­s-interrupte­d NBA schedule, but the Nets still want to make sure he isn’t overdoing it.

 ?? Ben Margot / Associated Press ?? Then-Golden State Warriors’ Kevin Durant scores against the Los Angeles Clippers in a 2019 playoff series in Oakland.
Ben Margot / Associated Press Then-Golden State Warriors’ Kevin Durant scores against the Los Angeles Clippers in a 2019 playoff series in Oakland.

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