Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Durant recruiting trip paid off with the title

- By Janie McCauley

OAKLAND, Calif. — They made their group plea to Kevin Durant last summer, Stephen Curry and the core of the Golden State Warriors traveling cross-country to go at a prized free agent the only way they do it around here: with “Strength in Numbers.”

Durant didn’t really need a hard sell that day in the Hamptons. He chose Curry, Draymond Green, Klay Thompson and a chance at his first championsh­ip over returning to Oklahoma City. Scorned and scrutinize­d from every angle for that decision, Durant triumphant­ly raised his arms and an MVP trophy Monday night all these months later— beaming as a first-time NBA champion, just as planned.

He hugged mother Wanda many a time. And Curry, too. Even LeBron James, celebratin­g the fight and brilliance they each demonstrat­ed during an entertaini­ng back-and-forth basketball show in this Finals trilogy. Golden State in 2015, the Cavaliers last year, the Warriors again this time.

“I hear all the narratives throughout the season that I was joining, I was hopping on bandwagons, I was letting everybody else do the work,” Durant said. “But then that was far from the truth. I came in and tried to help my team. Like I said, tried to be myself, be aggressive and sacrifice as well.”

For all that chatter about chemistry on a super-team — some called them “supervilla­ins” — how there might not be enough shots for all the big-time scorers, the Warriors kept winning as the world watched the every move of the East Bay franchise under the microscope.

Durant and Curry were always right in the middle, yet they stayed loose and focused by building their own relationsh­ip — not to mention shooting skills — through regular shooting contests that were oh so close.

“The way that he embraced the opportunit­y in the Finals, it was unbelievab­le,” Curry said. “It’s kind of crazy to think about the conversati­ons we had this summer and going into the year about how we can both mesh and do what we do and be the players that we are and (to) see it come to life in this series, it was unbelievab­le.”

Durant, an eight-time AllStar who only needed a ring to cement his superstar status, scored 39 points in a championsh­ip-clinching 129-120 victory and averaged 35.2 points and 8.4 rebounds in these Finals.

“I’m just happy for him. He’s had an amazing career, but he just took it to the next level,” coach Steve Kerr said. “He was incredible all season long. He had an amazing series, just dominated. Everybody for the last 10 years knew how good he was, but until you break through and win that first championsh­ip, there’s always still something there. I’m just so happy Kevin has broken through. And there’s more to come from him.”

Ten years after becoming the No. 2 draft pick behind Greg Oden, Durant has reached the pinnacle. Whenever he is asked about his own accomplish­ments, he is always quick to offer a reminder just as he did with a new NBA champions hat on his head: “It’s a team sport.” He can’t do it alone.

 ?? EZRA SHAW/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kevin Durant, left, and Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors celebrate their championsh­ip on Monday.
EZRA SHAW/GETTY IMAGES Kevin Durant, left, and Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors celebrate their championsh­ip on Monday.

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