Durant leads Warriors to win in return to Oklahoma City
Published 1:10 am Sunday, February 12, 2017
By Cliff Brunt
AP Sports Writer
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Kevin Durant scored 34 points while being booed throughout his return to Oklahoma City, and the Golden State Warriors beat the Thunder 130-114 in a chippy game on Saturday night.
It was Durant’s first game back since he left the Thunder after eight seasons in Oklahoma City to join the rival Warriors as a free agent last summer. The crowd jeered him loudly during pregame warmups, starter introductions and whenever he touched the ball.
Emotions ran high throughout the game. At one point in the third quarter, Durant and Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook yelled at each other as they walked toward their benches during a timeout. Later in the third quarter, Oklahoma City’s Andre Roberson fouled Durant hard, and the two got in each other’s faces and were called for double technicals.
Westbrook finished with 47 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists.
Oklahoma City kept it close early, but the Warriors gained their footing late in the first quarter. Golden State made 16 of 22 field goals in the second quarter, and Durant’s dunk with four seconds left in the first half gave the Warriors a 73-50 lead at the break. The 43 points by the Warriors in the second quarter were a season high.
The Thunder cut Golden State’s lead to 12 in the fourth quarter before Westbrook checked back in, but the Thunder couldn’t cut the deficit further, and Durant punctuated his dominant performance with a 3-pointer over Westbrook that put the Warriors up 123-104 with 3:39 to play.
TIP INS
Warriors: C Zaza Pachulia sat out with a right rotator cuff strain and F David West missed the game with a fractured left thumb. … It was Golden State’s third convincing win over the Thunder in three meetings this season. The Warriors won the first two meetings by 26 and 21 points in Oakland.
Thunder: Westbrook had 21 points and nine rebounds in the first half. … Westbrook usually rests at the end of the third quarter, but this time, he played the whole period and dunked in the closing seconds.
THUNDER FANS FIRED UP FOR DURANT’S RETURN
Hours before Kevin Durant was to play in Oklahoma City for the first time as a visitor Saturday, some Thunder fans were already gathered around Chesapeake Energy Arena, showing their contempt for the man who left as a free agent last summer and joined the rival Golden State Warriors.
The venom continued as the game approached. Durant was booed loudly during warmups, and booed even more loudly during starter introductions. After tip-off, he was booed whenever he touched the ball.
Brady Cox of Newcastle, Oklahoma, stood outside the arena wearing a blue Durant jersey that had the word ‘Traitor’ duct taped under the No. 35 on the front. He held a sign with ‘Mr. Unreliable’ at the top, referencing a headline that The Oklahoman ran above a photo of Durant during the 2014 playoffs and later apologized for.
“When they first came out with Mr. Unreliable, I was very upset,” he said. “I thought, ‘That’s nothing like KD.’ A few years later, I’m upset again. I’m like, ‘How could he do this to us?’”
Durant said before the game he didn’t expect a warm reception. He knows how passionate the fans are, and they are part of why he has such fond memories of Oklahoma City.
“You plan for the worst,” he said. “Obviously, I know how it is. I know fans are loud, especially here. Just try not to think about it and go out there and play. Once the ball is tipped up, just go out there and play the game.”
Durant felt strange going to the visitor’s locker room for the first time.
“There’s definitely emotion,” he said. “I played here for eight years. There’s no getting around that.”
Another Thunder fan wearing an orange Russell Westbrook shirt held a sign that said ‘KOWARD” with the K and the D in orange and the rest of the letters in blue.
Still, many fans have fond memories of Durant’s time in Oklahoma City. He won the 2014 MVP award, was a four-time scoring champion, led the team to the NBA Finals in 2012 and is a member of the state’s Hall of Fame.
“He did do a lot of good stuff for the city,” Chris Cordova of Edmond, Oklahoma, said. “I’m not going to discount that at all.”
The fact that Durant led the Thunder to a 3-1 lead over the Warriors in the Western Conference finals last season before losing the final three games made the fact that he went to Golden State that much more difficult to accept for some fans.
“Definitely mixed emotions,” Cordova said. “A lot of angry people, a lot of bitter people. And just the team that he went to. He went to Golden State, the team that eliminated them. It makes you wonder if they (the Thunder) had won Games 5, 6 or 7, if he would have even gone.”
UP NEXT
Warriors will play at Denver on Monday.
Thunder will play at Washington and former Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks on Monday.