Windsor Star

WARRIORS’ BIG LOSS

Durant goes out with injury

- HOWARD FENDRICH

WASHINGTON Kevin Durant’s latest return home did not go well and did not last long: He hyperexten­ded his left knee and exited the Golden State Warriors’ game against the host Washington Wizards for good after all of 93 seconds Tuesday night.

Durant, who grew up in the D.C. area, will have an MRI exam, the Warriors said on Twitter.

On a Wizards possession under their basket less than a minute into the game, Washington centre Marcin Gortat tossed Golden State’s Zaza Pachulia aside. Pachulia stumbled and landed on Durant’s left leg.

Durant immediatel­y clutched at his left knee, then hobbled around a bit. He stayed in for a few more possession­s before limping off toward the lockerroom when Golden State called timeout. Washington led by as many as 19 points in the first quarter, which ended with the hosts ahead 40-26.

The 2014 NBA MVP for the Oklahoma City Thunder and a four-time NBA scoring champion entered Tuesday averaging Warriors team highs of 25.8 points and 8.4 rebounds, along with 4.9 assists.

Golden State came in with a league-best 50-9 record after a road win over the Philadelph­ia 76ers on Monday night.

This was Durant’s first game in the nation’s capital since signing with the Warriors. The Wizards — and their fans — had hoped to try to sign him as a free agent last off-season.

It was also Durant’s first game against his former coach with the Oklahoma City Thunder, Scott Brooks, who joined Washington this season.

“I have a lot of respect for him and think he’s a great player. He’s happy where he’s at. We had a good run together. I’m glad he’s happy, I’m glad he’s successful, but he’s always going to be successful. He’s a worker; he competes,” Brooks said.

“I got nothing but positive things to say about him, not one bad thing. … He’s a winner. I’ve said it for years and I’ve meant it and I still mean it. The guy is a winner more off the court, and he handles himself with class and dignity and respect for the game and his coaches and teammates. You want … all your players to be a pro like him.”

Durant said before Tuesday’s tipoff that he used to get too worked up about playing in front of friends and family in Washington. Asked what he anticipate­d the reaction from spectators to be, Durant said: “I don’t know. I don’t expect it to be anything.”

It turned out to be quite a bit of loud booing during the Warriors’ pre-game introducti­ons. His teammate, Stephen Curry, heard cheers.

Durant said that during his first few years in the league, he put too much pressure on himself when playing at Washington “because I wanted to play well at home.”

Now, though, Durant said he tries to “approach it like a normal game.”

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Kevin Durant

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