Durant’s menacing defence leads way

The Associated Press
Janie McCauley

OAKLAND, Calif.–Kevin Durant is growing a little tired of questions about his ability to play defence.
“Underrated?” Durant responded when recently asked about the perception of his ‘D.’
“My coaches don’t feel like that.”
Neither does he, and KD’s menacing 6’9″ presence from the paint to the perimeter is a big reason unbeaten Golden State is closing in on its second championship in three years.
While best known for his sensational scoring and shot-making from every corner of the court, Durant has been tough on LeBron James so far in these NBA Finals by smothering the Cavs’ superstar.
The Warriors are two wins from a title going into Game 3 at Cleveland tomorrow night.
Durant is chasing his first championship and seems determined to do whatever it takes.
So versatile with his length and ability to alter shots, he even played centre during Game 2 on Sunday when Draymond Green dealt with foul trouble in the 132-113 victory.
“I don’t think there’s many teams in the league who their back-up is better than their starter,” Green noted.
“So I think that’s a luxury that we have with KD here.”
Durant and Green have set the tone all season on the defensive end, establishing an intensity and toughness–and the rest of the Warriors had no choice but to do more during Durant’s 19-game absence this spring with a knee injury.
“If we’re locked in on the defensive end, we’ll score enough points,” Green said.
“Even on an off-night, we’ll score enough points.”
After his NBA Finals failure five years ago against James and the Heat, Durant vowed to become a legitimate, respected defender who could make nearly as much of an impact blocking shots and crashing the boards.
He insists he can do even more.
“I’ve gotten better, and 2013 is when I feel I really turned the corner as a defender,” Durant said.
“Around 2012, that’s when coaches stopped thinking they could go at me and get a basket or get me in foul trouble,” he noted.
Sure, James still notched his record-tying eighth career Finals triple-double while Kevin Love and Kyrie Irving also had big nights.
Yet Durant, Andre Iguodala, Klay Thompson, and the others kept the pressure on the Cavs.
Durant blocked five shots to go with 33 points, 13 rebounds, and six assists after going off for 38 points and eight assists in Game 1 on Thursday.
“His defence was amazing, and we needed it. Especially with Draymond out,” Warriors’ coach Steve Kerr said.
“It’s a small game and you got shooters everywhere, and you have to be able protect the rim with LeBron coming downhill, with Love posting up, and Draymond’s on the bench,” he noted.
“So that’s a pretty scary proposition for us.
“I thought that Kev’s defence was unreal, and it was probably the key to the whole game,” Kerr added.
It could be that Durant’s defence will quiet the critics at last, especially if he comes out a winner after that scrutinized move from Oklahoma City last July to join the super-Warriors.
“I don’t feel like I get picked on or people call sets just to try to score on me. That hasn’t happened in a while,” he noted.
“I’ve grown leaps and bounds from where I was,” Durant stressed.
“I feel like I’ve been a solid defender in this league for a while.”