Mama's boy Kevin Durant pilots OKC 'closer to dreams'
But with victory secured and a few seconds remaining in the sixth game of the Western Conference finals, the Oklahoma City Thunder star fell into an embrace with his mother near her courtside seat.
The Thunder would go to the 2012 NBA Finals. They would beat the San Antonio Spurs, one-time rulers of the Western Conference, 107-99. But first, a moment of shared elation with family.
MORE: Thunder finish off Spurs to advance to Finals
COLUMN: Lopresti: Thunder take fast track to Finals
BLOG: Thunder complete uphill climb to NBA's top
"I
never want to take those moments for granted," Durant said. "I know
we're just one step closer to our dreams. But it felt good. We've just
got to continue to keep believing."
The Thunder are indeed one step closer — one step closer to claiming the NBA
title that eluded the franchise for 28 years before it relocated from
Seattle in 2008. One step closer than they were a year ago, when the Dallas Mavericks denied them in the conference finals. One step closer to their goal in choosing Durant with the second pick in the 2007 draft.
The
6-9 forward, whose postgame television interview was interrupted by a
deafening chorus of "MVP" chants, was willing to do anything to fulfill
that goal — even take a charge.
Early in a fourth quarter in which Oklahoma City
wrested the lead for good, Durant encountered Manu Ginobili weaving
into the lane, set his feet and drew the offensive foul, his first of
the season.
That's what stood out to coach
Scott Brook's about Durant's performance. Not his game-high 34 points.
Not the third-quarter rally during which he scored 14. Not the team-high
14 rebounds. It was a charge, a single foul, that had Brooks grinning.
"I'm
not so sure he took one in his first few years, but you know that was a
big play," Brooks said. "It's amazing for him to play like this in this
moment, in this setting."
Durant was the only
man on the floor who played all 48 minutes. Teammate Russell Westbrook
was the runner-up with 41 minutes. Westbrook scored 25, climbing his way
out of a shooting slump which contributed to Oklahoma City's 2-0 series
deficit.
In winning Games 3, 4, 5 and 6, the
Thunder became the 15th team in league history to rally from 2-0 down to
win a best-of-seven series. The Celtics will try to match them
Thursday, when they host the Miami Heat with a 3-2 lead in the Eastern Conference finals.
When
Oklahoma City fell behind in the series, critics pointed to the Spurs'
superior experience. Ginobili (34 years old), Tim Duncan (36), and Tony
Parker (30) have shared three titles together in San Antonio. All that talk fueled the Thunder, whose three biggest contributors — Durant, Westbrook and James Harden— are 23, 23 and 22.
"I
think the youth is kind of something that wills us," Westbrook said. "A
lot of people around the league say we're young and we're not able to
make clutch shots, perform under clutch moments. A lot of guys on our
team have such great heart and want to do good, and it showed a great
thing tonight."
Yet Oklahoma City seemed on
the verge of returning to San Antonio for a Game 7 with its first-half
showing. San Antonio had sprinted to an early lead behind Tony Parker's
17 points and five assists in the first quarter. He had a double-double
by halftime (21 points, 10 assists) and finished with 29 and 12.
Durant
led a third-quarter rally which helped Oklahoma City climb back from
down 18 in the first half. He scored 14 points in the quarter, including
a contested three in front of Stephen Jackson
with more than 90 seconds left to take the Thunder's first lead. His 20
second-half points helped Oklahoma City maintain a slim lead for the
majority of the fourth quarter.
"This was the
toughest game I've played since I've been here," Durant said. "We kept
playing hard to inspire my teammates both ends of the floor. And I'm
glad I got this for Oklahoma City. … We didn't want to go back to San
Antonio."
San Antonio's point total declined
through the first three quarters after the Spurs scored 34 in the first
behind 60.9% shooting from the field. Their loss drops coach Gregg Popovich's
record in games where the Spurs are facing elimination to 7-11.
Popovich congratulated the Thunder organization, and nodded to their
ascension in the West.
"As sad a disappointed
as we are… it's almost like a Hollywood script for OKC in a sense," he
said. "You know they went through Dallas, last year's NBA champion, then
they went through the Lakers, then they went through us."
Popovich pointed out that those franchises represent 10 of the last 13 NBA titles.
"I
don't know if anybody has ever had a run or gone through a playoff
playing those kinds of teams," he said. "It's just incredible."
A Hollywood story from a team led by "arguably the best player on the planet," as Popovich described Durant during the series.
Few
are the men capable of drawing that kind of verbiage out of the surly
Spurs coach, whose press conferences are measured in words, not minutes.
Yes, Kevin, you deserve a hug.
Comments
Post a Comment