The Mercury News

Team had to deal with range of emotions in Game 5.

Strong show of emotion after star goes down in second quarter of Game 5

- By Mark Medina mmedina@bayareanew­sgroup.com

TORONTO >> Tears filled their eyes.

Kevin Durant became emotional when he felt pain in what the team learned Tuesday is a torn right Achilles tendon. And when he walked out of the arena with crutches and a walking boot. And when he processed the Warriors’ 106-105 win over the Toronto Raptors in Game 5 of the NBA Finals on Monday, forcing a Game 6 in what will be the final game at Oracle Arena on Thursday.

Durant’s teammates became emotional as they helped him off the court. And when they spoke about their All-Star teammate in glowing terms for reasons besides helping them win two consecutiv­e NBA titles and returning from a right calf injury in hopes of salvaging the Finals.

“Everybody gets so wrapped up in chasing championsh­ips and the greatness that you see on the floor,” Stephen Curry said. “But life is more important in terms of caring about an individual and what they’re going through on a daily basis.”

Warriors coach Steve Kerr became emotional when he addressed his team following the win.

“I just told the team I didn’t know what to say,” Kerr said. “On the one hand, I’m so proud of them, just the amazing heart and grit that they showed. And on the other, I’m just devastated for Kevin. An incredible win and a horrible loss at the same time.”

Finally, Warriors general manager Bob Myers became emotional when he walked with Durant out of the arena. And when his eyes watered when he sat at the podium. And when he processed any suggestion that Durant’s prolonged injury partly reflected any dissatisfa­ction with the team or any want to preserve his value when he plans to become an unrestrict­ed free agent in less than a month.

“Kevin Durant loves to play basketball, and the people that questioned whether he wanted to get back to this team were wrong,” Myers said through tearful eyes and a quivering voice. “He’s one of the most misunderst­ood people. He’s a good teammate. He’s a good person. It’s not fair. I’m lucky to know him.”

Before he could be asked, Myers strongly defended the training staff’s decision to clear Durant and for Kerr to play him.

Myers described the process as “thorough,” saying it entailed Durant receiving “multiple MRIs” and visiting “multiple doctors” after straining his right calf against Houston in the playoffs May 8. The Warriors remained patient as Durant missed 14 playoff games. They also required Durant to complete a full practice before playing, something he had not done until Sunday.

“That was a collaborat­ive decision,” Myers said. “I don’t believe there’s anybody to blame, but I understand in this world and if you have to, you can blame me. I run our basketball operations department.”

Why would Myers consider himself blameworth­y?

“I don’t think there’s anybody to blame, but I get it,” Myers said. “That stuff happens. I hope nobody does. I don’t think it should land on anybody. But if you feel like you need to...”

The Warriors may have initially considered Durant’s calf injury to be “mild.” Four days before the NBA Finals started, though, the Warriors’ training staff determined Durant was still not ready for contact drills. The Warriors maintained optimism Durant would eventually play. Dr. Rick Celebrini, the Warriors’ director of sports medicine and performanc­e, had told Kerr that Durant’s rehab “could be a couple of weeks or a couple of months.”

The Warriors had exercised caution with other injuries, too.

They sat Klay Thompson in Game 3 because of a tight hamstring before clearing him for Game 4. They sat forward Kevon Looney in Game 3 after he suffered a fracture around his chest and ribs.

The Warriors were patient with DeMarcus Cousins, who returned from a left Achilles tendon almost a year after the injury.

“The people that worked with him and cleared him are good people,” Myers said. “They’re good people.”

Before his injury, Durant looked spry and normal en route to 11 points on 3-of-5 shooting in 12 minutes. Hence, the Warriors do not see Durant’s latest injury related.

“The initial injury was a calf injury. This is not a calf injury,” Myers said. “I’m not a doctor, I don’t know how those are related or not, but it’s a different injury.”

With 9:55 left in the second quarter, Durant handled the ball against Toronto forward Serge Ibaka. Durant crossed over left, planted his right foot and pulled up in pain before falling to the ground. Durant tugged at his foot, ankle and calf before being helped up.

Immediatel­y, Celebrini, Curry and Andre Iguodala helped Durant up.

Initially, the Raptors fans cheered loudly as if Durant missed a shot or committed a turnover. The Warriors became offended immediatel­y. Curry reported feeling “very confused around that reaction” after living lived in Toronto when he his dad played there (1999-2002).

“That’s not my experience with this city,” Curry said. “I just hope that ugliness doesn’t show itself again as we go forward in this series.”

It probably will not. The Raptors’ Kyle Lowry and Danny Green scolded the fans for cheering. The crowd quickly quieted. They it took up a supportive chant: “KD, KD!”

“I don’t think the fans knew the significan­ce of the injury,” Lowry said. “They kind of just seen he went down. In this league we’re all brothers. At the end of the day, we’re all brothers and it’s a small brotherhoo­d and you never want to see a competitor like him go down. You don’t know what the circumstan­ces are.”

The Warriors knew those circumstan­ces, though. So Celebrini, Iguodala and Curry all walked with Durant to the locker room as well. It made sense for Celebrini given his job descriptio­n. It made sense for Iguodala since he was on the bench. It did not make sense for Curry, who had been on the floor in a pivotal eliminatio­n game.

Curry struggled rememberin­g the exact words he and Durant shared with each other at that point. No doubt “it was kind of an emotional moment all the way around,” as Curry put it. Curry remembered exactly why, though, why he walked with Durant even at the expense of playing in the game.

“Sometimes the spirit tells you what to do,” Curry said. “You don’t really make decisions. You just act on it. So I can’t tell you what went through my heart. It just felt right.”

Durant had spent more than a month rehabbing his calf injury. He had heard the talk about how the Warriors were better without him and how he maybe wasn’t even trying to get back on the court, given his status as a free agent next month, a status now darkly clouded by an injury with a standard recovery time of 8-12 months.

“Kevin takes a lot of hits sometimes, but he just wants to play basketball and right now he can’t,” Myers said. “Basketball has gotten him through his life. I don’t know that we can all understand how much it means to him. He just wants to play basketball with his teammates and compete.”

Now the Warriors are right where they have been since Durant first went down, facing the question of how to win without a player who is scoring 34.2 points per game in the playoffs. After failing to do that three out of four times against Toronto, the Warriors prevailed in Game 5 with their All-Stars all exerting their play.

“Those talking heads who say we’re better without him, that’s just ludicrous,” Thompson said. “That’s crazy. This is the best player in the world. You could put him on the 30th best team in the league, and that team will make the playoffs. That’s how talented he is. So we don’t even pay any of that no mind because with him we are really one, I believe, one of the greatest teams to ever play. Without him we’re a really good team. But if you throw Kevin Durant out there, he’s one of the greatest ever. So we don’t pay that any attention because that’s just stupid. Stupid. Because he’s a Warrior. You saw what he did tonight. He sacrificed his health for us and we dearly miss him. It was very deflating to see him go out. I’m just going to pray for the guy, and I know he’ll be back even stronger.”

If nothing else, the Warriors’ bond with Durant became stronger.

“He’s one of the most misunderst­ood people. He’s a good teammate. He’s a good person. It’s not fair. I’m lucky to know him.”

— Warriors GM Bob Myers on injured star Kevin Durant

 ?? CLAUS ANDERSEN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Kevin Durant of the Warriors sits on the court after sustaining an injury early in the second quarter of Game 5.
CLAUS ANDERSEN — GETTY IMAGES Kevin Durant of the Warriors sits on the court after sustaining an injury early in the second quarter of Game 5.
 ?? CHRIS YOUNG —W THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP ?? The Warriors’ Kevin Durant, who hadn’t played since May 8, is helped off the court following his Game 5injury.
CHRIS YOUNG —W THE CANADIAN PRESS VIA AP The Warriors’ Kevin Durant, who hadn’t played since May 8, is helped off the court following his Game 5injury.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States