Home > Recap > Durant drops 44 on the Nuggets, but takes over without scoring

Durant drops 44 on the Nuggets, but takes over without scoring

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Kevin Durant gave Thunder fans quite the Christmas present tonight, dropping a season-high 44 on the Nuggets in a 114-106 win.

And he did it with just four points in the fourth quarter. Yet, he completely took over the game. How you ask?

As Durant would say, “hockey assist.”

After piling in 40 points through three quarters, including a spectacular 21-point third, Durant looked well on his way to a 50-point night. Or at least on his way to surpassing his career-high of 47. But the Nuggets threw a constant double-team at him every trip down and Durant showed off how much he’s improved. He passed with confidence out of the doubles, moved the ball to open men and found cutters in a position to score. Denver tried to take Durant out of the game by taking the ball out of his hands, but he took over by giving it up. Serious evolutionary stuff here people.

“The only thing I was thinking was ‘hockey assist’,” Durant said after the game. “I just wanted to catch the ball as close as I could to the basket and go from there.”

Of course Durant couldn’t lie after the game though. He looks at the scoreboard. He knew how many points he had. He had 50 on the brain. But he wasn’t going to get greedy on Christmas. He was fine with what he had and the only other present he wanted was a nice Thunder win under his tree.

“Back of my mind I wanted it bad, but I wanted a win worse,” he said.

Not to say Durant did this all by himself. He did score 44 on a slick 14-20 shooting, but James Harden poured in 21 off the bench and Russell Westbrook added 19. It’s a luxury the Thunder have. It’s one thing for your star to pass out of a double-team. It’s another to pass it to guys that can actually put the ball in the hold. That certainly helps.

Of course this game might’ve been a lot different had Carmelo Anthony been available. Anthony of course is away from the team currently after the death of his sister. But without him, Denver just didn’t know where to go – on both ends. George Karl tried a number of things with Durant. The aforementioned double, the bigger Kenyon Martin, the smaller J.R. Smith, the middle-sized Arron Afflalo – obviously it didn’t really work.

Wait, that’s exactly what Kenyon Martin said too when asked what the Nuggets tried. “Whatever it was, obviously it didn’t work. That kid’s a helluva player. He can shoot the ball with unlimited range so when a guy can do that it’s rough.”

But not only would Anthony have provided a natural fit defensively to check Durant, but also someone to look to on the offensive end. Chauncey Billups was great with 30 points on 10-16 shooting, Ty Lawson added a solid 19 and Nene had 21, but the Nuggets were missing that go-to option late in the game. OKC outscored them 26-21 in the final frame and pulled away to hold a 12-point lead late when Denver came up empty on multiple trips.

For the Thunder, it’s a nice bounce-back win after dropping a sloppy loss to the Knicks last Wednesday. For the Nuggets, it’s the third loss in four tries, but a valiant try without Anthony. And for the Thunder’s star, it was quite the gift to a sold out crowd in OKC. Not quite the 50 he was hoping for, but like Durant said, the win will do just fine.

“It’s been a great Christmas already so far,” Durant said. “Waking up in the morning with all my family around, opening gifts and just having the opportunity to play the game of basketball on Christmas. Not too many people get to do what they love to do, so getting to do it on Christmas Day in front of family felt great. But to get 50 would’ve been a cherry on top.”

NOTES:

  • Big differences in the game? Free throws and turnovers. Denver shot almost 53 percent, but turned it over 16 times to OKC’s seven the Thunder went 28-35 from the line.
  • KD scored 44, again three off his career-high. He missed three free throws.
  • This is Durant’s first 40-pointer this season. He scored at least 40 eight times last year. I can’t tell how much I love it when he plays like this. It’s like, well, it’s like something.
  • How awesome was James Harden? Durant had 19 at the half, but Harden poured in 14, all of them coming in the second quarter. He finished with 21 and was a perfect complementary scorer to KD in this one. And you should’ve seen his postgame swag. It was like Craig Sager grew an awesome beard and knew how to coordinate colors.
  • The best thing Harden did was feel the game tonight. He totally worked into a flow. He scored all 14 of his points in the second quarter but didn’t check back in until three minutes left in the third. He then scored his next basket with a little over 11 minutes left in the fourth. But he never drifted and stayed locked in. Big steps for Harden lately.
  • Jeff Green struggled shooting the ball going 5-15 from the field, but was really good I thought. He had a game-high six assists and was solid defensively.
  • With about 30 seconds left in the third, Durant went for the two-for-one. He fired up a DEEP 3. Most times, you might think it was a poor shot. With the way KD was playing, I don’t know if I could’ve thought of a better shot. That’s how locked in he was. Of course he airballed, but still, don’t tell me you didn’t think it was going on.
  • The hefty guy with the mask that always uses that bullhorn to yell at opposing free throw shooters removed his shirt tonight and added some tinsel and lights around his body. He got Kenyon Martin’s attention on one of them, causing him to laugh.
  • Of course everyone had the yellow colorways on tonight, sans Serge Ibaka. His contract with Adidas prevented it. Westbrook actually wasn’t wearing the KD III’s either, but they were close enough. I thought they looked pretty good. Better than the Creamsicles.
  • BIG NEWS: Byron Mullens shaved. Kind of. He’s got a goatee-ish thing going on now.
  • Why do people always get super loud when the Noise Meter goes up? Do they actually think they’re moving the needle? The only other time people freak out that much is when someone says, “FREE T-SHIRT”.
  • The Thunder successfully executed an iso KD to end the first. Durant handled it perfectly. The Nuggets started to send a double but Durant felt it, pulled the ball back a tick and then attacked to the opposite side. He can figure it out. It’s just taking some time.
  • Kenyon Martin said after the game he thinks the rip move is a cheap basketball play. He said he’d like to “take the rip move out of basketball” and that he doesn’t think it’s playing basketball. He confessed to Chauncey Billups using is successfully at times, but isn’t a fan. I asked KD about it after the game and he basically said he’s going to do it as long as the rules let him. How could it possibly be cheap or tacky though? To me it’s a smart basketball play. A foul’s a foul. It’s just a useful move that a good player knows how to use.
  • With Krstic back, Cole Aldrich was back to being inactive.
  • If you told me that I had to stay in front of Ty Lawson or someone would drop an ATM on my face (I just watched Season 1 and 2 of Breaking Bad), I’d just lay down on the floor and make it easier for them. Lawson is about as quick a player as you’re going to see.

Next up: Home versus the Mavericks Monday.

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I am the hefty guy with the mask and megaphone, and in your foot notes you missed out on the best part of the Kenyon Martin free throw. Not only did I get Kenyon Martin to laugh but he missed the first free throw, which usually would mean next to nothing; however, that was Kenyon Martin's first free throw of the year so I find it a little more humorous.

Jeff Green is a great player, but I think its pretty obvious that him playing the 4 is bad for him and the Thunder. Its not just tough for us to watch, but its going to kill him physically if he has to keep guarding bigs every night.

Jeff is good when he starts from the perimeter because of his speed and athleticism. Sunday night, there were just one too many times where Russ would throw it to him in the block and clear out.I really do like seeing Jeff Green play because of his effort and energy, but seeing him back down on the block is like watching a car wreck in slow motion. The defender just allows him to get way too deep and forget when he is, then he goes up really strong but way too wide and gets rejected by the rim or backboard almost every time.

You don't see Scott Brooks give James Harden nearly as many one-on-one opportunities as they give Jeff. And trust me, I was begging to trade James all last year and the beginning of this year, but he's definitely stepped up his contributions lately. If Scott Brooks insists on using Jeff, then it should really be from the perimeter so he has room to use his athleticism and skills. If they really want another big, let Aldrich come and be our garbage guy. He'd score as much in the post as Jeff would.

The conclusion of my novel is that it would probably be best for Jeff to go somewhere else and get to dominate as an over-sized 2 (a la Tracy McGrady) as opposed to an undersized 4.

MANonymous :
The noise / decibel meter isn’t canned video as it doesn’t raise at the same pace or in the same intervals every time. Same with the crowd noise. It’s not tinned in as you most definitely don’t get the same reaction or noise level every time.
Just because you’re not seeing the people making the most noise doesn’t mean there aren’t people making noise. I know my season tickets are in a rather mellow section. Always makes me jealous to see the sections on the jumbo tron where everyone is going crazy and dancing around. Most people in my section never leave their seats. And when I do stand up I get glared at for blocking other peoples views.
I distinctly remember once this season when the noise meter came up and the crowd got loud and the needle didn’t move at all. Gave me a giggle.
Not as much of a giggle as these ridiculous conspiracy theories though.

You may still wish to believe in Santa Claus also ...........but that crowd noise is piped in.

justin :I dunno where the whole blame Jeff Green thing came from. Obviously it’s not his fault personally he’s not a power forward or that he’s playing all those minutes. Ibaka playing so much center with Green at PF hurts his performance, that’s all I was saying in the first place.

The blame Jeff Green thing comes from you. You like to point out Green is not a power forward and then you kill him for it. You point out Serge is not a Center and then you kill Jeff Green for it. You are not consistent, at least in this thread.

This is my favorite sham character issue: http://www.shamsports.com/content/character/dannyfortson.htm

@Elegy444

That's hilarious. At least it not as gross as Gary Neal's

it's tough to be a stretch 4 when you can't shoot effectively

@DizzyDai

Too funny... In other news, click the Mo Pete! o.O

Ryan Reid has a past with weapons related charges. He doesn't seem like one of Presti's "character" guys. ;)

http://www.shamsports.com/content/character/ryanreid.htm

@Kivman
How dare you defend Green on this site :)

I dunno where the whole blame Jeff Green thing came from. Obviously it's not his fault personally he's not a power forward or that he's playing all those minutes. Ibaka playing so much center with Green at PF hurts his performance, that's all I was saying in the first place.

Keith-

Good job with your comments. I tend to agree that the "Jeff Green is responsible for all ills" has gotten too far. I generally agree with all the comments about JG, but saying that he is a bad pair with Ibaka because he can't cover for Ibaka's problems is unfair in that it appears to place all the blame with Green and none with Serge. Neither are good at blocking out, so that is somehow Green's fault alone. That's silly. They both have deficiencies that they both should improve upon. The fact that they are a bad pairing is on BOTH of them.

Just browsing the net and found this....

http://www.shamsports.com/content/pages/data/character/index.jsp

I'm glad most of our team is not on this page. (Shame on you Nenad)

On the positive note we have two guys who were "voted" to have 2 of the 15 best dunks of 2010 http://vol.is/?p=5580

Not so sure of the list though

serge iBlocka :@justin

Aren’t you the guy that wanted David Lee for $14 million? lol

Yeah he is, I remember that. Don't feed the troll.

@justin

Aren't you the guy that wanted David Lee for $14 million? lol

@lilrip133
Is Ibaka a good center without Green next to him? That's debatable. And that's really my point. Green isn't a PF, and Ibaka isn't a C. Green has no chance of playing SF because of KD. Ibaka can't really play PF because of Green (whether that is prudent or not is beside the point). I know that Green-Ibaka is a bad pair, but I'm just not sure we can glean anything from that. Green isn't a PF, we already knew that. He is a bad pairing because he shouldn't be there, but he has no choice because of KD at the 3. The same can be said of Ibaka at the 5.

My point is that individuals still need to do their job whether the pairing is ideal or not. Green often fails at this because 90% of his pairings have him against a starting PF, and he just can't DO that job. Ibaka does better because he doesn't have the same forced minutes that Green does, but he's still not a good center.

@DSYIII
The problem with that is Westbrook's explosion came primarily because the team needed him to be the best player on the team and do everything on offense. This is a good transition time because obviously Westbrook needs to realize that KD is the better scorer. But, I'm not sure how that relates to defense. He's been pretty lackluster in that regard for a while now, even last year when our defense was great. The fact is, he doesn't lock in most of the time even though he could be an above average defender just giving 80%. Instead, he gives closer to 25%, giving up easy penetration and not fighting through screens because he just assumes help will bail him out. And it's true that help usually comes, it's just a very bad habit because it discombobulates the entire rest of the defense.

I just don't know why. We've seen him, for entire games, lock down an opposing PG because he had some personal rivalry with them. I know he CAN do exactly what we hope from him on the defensive end. So someone needs to get in his head and force him to defend like he has a personal stake in every game. I can accept guys who don't have the physical tools to be a great defender so long as they try. I can't accept guys who have all the physical tools to be amazing yet seem to be just lazy on the court.

I think the next major step russ needs to take is realizing that when KD has it going, he needs to devote his energy entirely to shutting down his man, and initiating the offense. When he tailors his game more to what is needed on a given night, it'll give the team a big boost.

I'm not sold on starting "best available" lineups or even playing it if we have two first round centers sitting in suits at the end of the bench. I'm sure they are more than capable of playing ten minutes a game.

They might be tired on the second of a back to back but watching the Sixers shut down the Nuggets makes me miss our defense.

Obviously Ibaka has tons of growing to do, but to compare the Jeff Green/ KD positional relationship just isn't the same as comparing the Ibaka/ Green one. KD is good at the things that small forwards are supposed to do. This doesn't leave a gaping hole in those responsibilities. However, Jeff Green is very very NOT good at the things power forwards are supposed to do, forcing Ibaka to have to compensate for the responsibilities of both positions. Obviously Jeff Green is a bad power forward because he's not a power forward, that's been established, but as far as him being a bad power forward because he's playing out of position while KD's alongside him is just wrong.

I do agree a "true" center would help, but there are about 25 other teams out there saying the same thing. Quality starting caliber true centers are hard to come by, so instead of playing "best available" lineups and waiting for one to fall from heaven, it makes more sense to me to stop begging for one and do like every other successful team without a true center... make the best of what we have on our roster.

@justin
You can't blame Ibaka on Green any more than you can blame Green on KD. It's the same issue, isn't it? Green can't play SF, so his weaknesses are magnified. Ibaka can't play PF, so his are as well.

Obviously there is the difference in that KD is KD and Jeff isn't, but still. Ibaka needs to get much better at boxing out and playing man defense. That's on him. Now, I can see the argument that Ibaka should be taking more of Green's minutes and fewer of Collison's, but let's not pretend that Green doesn't have better pairs as well.

In the end, no one is really going to be "ideal" until we have a true center. Whether Green is around for that or not, it will probably have a huge impact on how good Ibaka ends up becoming and how far the team gets in the playoffs.

Side note: can someone please remind Westbrook that he is as big and fast as anyone he will ever check at the PG spot? Can someone remind him that with his physical tools, defense is 100% effort? While were at it, can someone remind him that HALF of his entire job is to play some defense? Seriously, Russ, play hard on both ends.

The noise / decibel meter isn't canned video as it doesn't raise at the same pace or in the same intervals every time. Same with the crowd noise. It's not tinned in as you most definitely don't get the same reaction or noise level every time.

Just because you're not seeing the people making the most noise doesn't mean there aren't people making noise. I know my season tickets are in a rather mellow section. Always makes me jealous to see the sections on the jumbo tron where everyone is going crazy and dancing around. Most people in my section never leave their seats. And when I do stand up I get glared at for blocking other peoples views.

I distinctly remember once this season when the noise meter came up and the crowd got loud and the needle didn't move at all. Gave me a giggle.

Not as much of a giggle as these ridiculous conspiracy theories though.

I hadn't looked at our schedule for a while. Starting now, our schedule gets crazy tough for the next month. I think we'll have a much clearer picture of the team once February hits. For me, staying at .666 winning percentage is the goal, .500 for the month is the baseline expectation and anything below that would be a disappointment. Good to see kd and harden hitting their strides as well as having everyone healthy going into this stretch. The key as it has been all season will be to see how consistent we can get our on-and-off defensive execution.

@anonymous
You don't see how one's rebounding might be affected by playing at center next to a power forward that's terrible at boxing out his man compared to playing at power forward next to a center that is fantastic at getting a body on his counterpart?

KD did a great job of getting to the paint and posting up. After he hit several nice, easier shots from 10 foot or less, his confidence exploded and he started hitting everything. I really liked his focus on getting to the paint and posting up on his man. If could put on a few more pounds he could do it more often on bigger fellas. If he can start games with those types of shots and then work in and out the rest of the game, he'd be even more lethal. Scary thought.

Oh ... and those shoes were amazing.

@Anonymous

It depends on your point of view. The fact of the matter is that Serge plays better when he plays with Nick Collison and is not having to play as the biggest guy on the court. No, it doesn't change who Serge is as a player, but playing alongside Jeff Green (and at center) gives Serge much different responsibilities than when he plays PF next to someone like Collison, or even Krstic. Serge had some nice games at center when Green was out, and when Collison was out, but it's generally an unfavorable matchup that could be prevented more if Jeff Green was not given forty minutes a game.

KD was really really good in this game. We heard so much about how KD was going to become a playmaker this year and in the early part of this season he seemed to try to do to much with his ball handling to meet those expectations. However, in this game it was all about making plays without really having to handle the ball all that much. It was devastatingly effective and I'm am really hoping it is a harbinger of what's to come.

This was a top 3 game for KD in terms of offense. Really liked his shot selection, and his passing out of double teams and traps. I thought his focus level was stellar, as was the whole team IMO. We played really under control for the whole game.

The importance of KD's 4th quarter can't be overstated. After that ridiculous third quarter, the Nuggets were forced to double team and he routinely made the right pass for the "hockey assist." This is something that franchise players need to do and they need the players around them to capitalize on it. Kobe Bryant does this better than nearly everyone else in the NBA. If he's not making the hockey assist, he's drawing a double team and shooting tough shots when he knows his teammates are able to get the easy putback. Gasol has benefited heavily from this and I'm sure we all remember Ron Artest catching Kobe's airball and hitting the buzzer-beater in last year's playoffs. Kobe's shooting percentage may suffer, but it's the smart play. Yesterday, we saw Kobe routinely making the smart play only to have his teammates fail him. Later, we saw Durant do the same, only his teammates were able to capitalize against an inferior defensive team.

This is my main reason for wanting Harden and Ibaka to start at SG and PF respectively. James is obviously a far more reliable shooter, ball-handler, and passer than either Thabo or Jeff Green. While Ibaka is a reliable shooter from 12-15 and can crash the boards when given an open lane.

@justin
What?! You mean there should be a reliable shooter for Westbrook to kick out too? You don't like seeing Thabo get a wide open look and then crashing to the rim right after Russ executed the exact same play?

I almost get the feeling that the Thunder have been experimenting. They just want to throw wacky lineups out there and see how the players respond. But... that would require them eventually running away from all the different small ball lineups.

I almost feel like they could use 3 lineup changes. Harden in for Sefolosha (Sef can be the anchor of the 2nd unit D instead of the anchor draggin our 1st unit's O down), Serge in for Green (Green takes over the scoring punch taken away from the 2nd unit by moving Harden) and... Collison in for Krstic. Why not? Is Krstic really better than Collison? They could keep Collison's minutes down too the way they do that with Krispy. Also, Aldrich moves to the 2nd unit. This will never happen but I think it would be neat to see the Thunder get off to a good start for games and I think this would work.

In the pre-game warm ups, Nene was practicing the Rip Move at the elbow with another player. He didn't hit any but he was practicing it like he uses it or planned to use it.

The decibel meter on the Scoreboard is fugazi, people. It's a canned video designed to incentivize people to yell louder.

@justin

This concept is also why I think James Harden should get the lion's share of minutes with Russell Westbrook next to him.

@Anonymous

Nick Collison is longer than Jeff Green, and also stronger. He has several years of experience playing center and is fundamentally better defending the post. He's not a 'true' center, and by all rights shouldn't be playing the position, but he's adequate when paired with someone who can cover up his weaknesses. Lateral mobility, protecting the rim, athleticism ... sounds a lot like Serge Ibaka to me.

Player pairs are an important concept. You try to maximize your players' strengths, minimize their weaknesses. Collison and Ibaka play very well together, it's our best (by far) defensive front court because they maximize each other's strengths and cover for the weaknesses.

Jeff Green has poor length for a PF, can't guard the post, does not box out. Pairing him with Serge Ibaka in the front court, you're exacerbating their weaknesses, not covering for them. Ibaka himself is poor at boxing out, he's not experienced enough to guard the post consistently, he bites too much on help defense (like Green does). Ibaka can't do 'Ibaka things' as often when playing center next to Jeff Green.

Ibaka plays his best at PF, next to another center. When he has to come off the bench and play with Jeff Green and guard Nene, it's not the best use of his skills IMO. Collison should be subbing in for Krstic, not Ibaka. And Ibaka should be the first sub for Green. Because Green is universally assured his 40 minutes a game, this is not happening.

" Why do people always get super loud when the Noise Meter goes up? " ....................

I think the crowd noise is piped in with the meter.

I look around.

I see no one yelling.

Yet meter is going off the chart.

The offense has had a lot more movement and a little more complexity than last year's start.

People are so soft nowadays. Since when was it wrong to complain about something that isn't right? Since when did it become such a negative thing not to be happy in sports with a record over .500? Why do people get their feelings hurt if people aren't leaping for joy over the fact that our record is good?

Yes it's very nice that we have a winning basketball team. But at the end of the day, there are some very troubling things that need fixing for us to maximize our growth. Let the realists be real, and let the optimist stay optimistic.

The hefty guy w/ the bullhorn not only made martin laugh, he missed the first free throw.

Any of you stathead guys have numbers on opposing teams shooting at his end of the floor this season?

@Ozark

The Thunder's record is great, they've only lost one division game and are in much better position in the standings than last season.

But I don't think the team is playing that much better. Although the record is 4.0 games better than last season at this point, the point differential is almost identical. Last year we were winning more games comfortably, and this year we've won a lot of close calls.

The defense is far worse than the first 31 games of last year. We've had some great individual improvements, but as a team it's hard to see where any big improvements have been made or what they have 'continuously improved' upon.

@Anonymous
The same reason Jeff Green hasn't been playing good genius. He has him playing a position he sucks at.

It's like if we signed another starting point guard, shooting guard, and kept kd at three while moving westbrook to the power forward. Whose fault would it be that RW wasn't playing good? Whoever's forcing him to play power forward.

Happy now?

justin :
James Harden was great on both ends and should be starting.
It’s tough to imagine what a bad game for Jeff Green would look like, if this was a good one.

word

For all the complaining, put things in perspective.

Look at the first half of the first season in OKC, then the second half.

Look at the first half of last year, then the second half.

Look at our record so far this year.

Haters gotta hate, gotta say things like "If we had so and so player instead of so and so, we'd win the championship, I know cuz I did it on my xbox" -

but quit bitching, people, seriously. Let's be thankful we have a winning basketball team. Check that, not just a winning team, a continuously improving NBA team in our little state.

I got a smile out of Royce's "It's a wonderful life" post. Even if we still had the Thunder, could you imagine how things would be different downtown if we had a Clippers/T-wolves like team?

the only thing worth a s**t about xmas was this game.

MastrMatt :
Saw Mayor Mick too. Nice fella as well. Looks old and wrinkled. Like Yoda a bit.

I sat behind Mayor Mick about a month ago... I thought the EXACT same thing. Looks old, looks wrinkled, looks like Yoda. My exact thoughts.

justin :
James Harden was great on both ends and should be starting.
It’s tough to imagine what a bad game for Jeff Green would look like, if this was a good one.

This.

Nah, I wouldnt trade Sef. We need him more for his guarding the bigger guards and small forwards. But I do agree his role on this team should be tweaked. Green I like the guy but his place on this team is becoming less valuable which each game. He is Mr. Clutch though. Get rid of Nonads. Ibaka is better. Raw, but he showed up at the end of the game. Westbrook didnt totally suck last night. But still wasnt up to par. Interior defense needs to get better so we dont have to over help. And our perimeter defense will get better. Nonads and Green were the biggest problems in that situation. Shout out to E maynor for those clutch buckets and dishes getting the game back in control. And KD well back to himself. Biggest problem with him lastnight was the freakin buzz killin offense.

Count me in on the whole registering to comment thing. Let's keep the trolls in their caves. Also, I was there last night and in pre-game KD was hitting everything and James hit 5 3s in a row. I kind of felt like we had it before tipoff. The crowd was very weak for the first half but turned it up when necessary. Blame the turkey. I would like Nene on this team for Christmas next year. Saw Sam Presti walking around the lower level concourse. Said hello. He was very nice. Good firm handshake. Saw Mayor Mick too. Nice fella as well. Looks old and wrinkled. Like Yoda a bit.

Fun times. Fun game. Mavs up next and that's a bit scary.

Russ' free throw shooting percentage and attempts have regressed and his scoring efficiency is dropping. Only 50.5% TS for the month of December now. Under 54% for the season.

@RH

Tim Legler kept saying that we were taking way too long to get into the offensive sets. And he was right.

For what it's worth, it seemed like Scott Brooks was screaming at Russ to get up the floor quicker.

@Sammy
I think he should remain the 6th man if for no other reason than I could see our offensive being totally abysmal if Thabo were the 2 guard on that second unit. But yeah, I think he needs to play big minutes with KD. Those two both have high basketball IQ, they can both shoot from outside and they just seem to compliment each other really well.

Trackbacks

  1. [...] examines the win.  A particular note is made about their ability to control their turnovers, Westbrook [...]

  2. [...] I remember Kenyon Martin being asked about it earlier in the season too after Durant got the Nuggets a few times with it. Martin said he’d like to “take the rip move out of basketball” and that he doesn’t think it’s playing basketball. I asked Durant about Martin’s comments and KD basically gave the same answer he gave last night. As long as they say I can do it, I’ll do it. [...]