
It often happens without you even noticing it. It'll be the middle of the third quarter, the game is progressing without much happening of note, and you'll glance at the box score and see it.
Kevin Durant, 20 points.
Durant is arguably the world's best scorer, and that has been increasingly clear over the past five years or so. He owns four of the past six scoring titles.
What makes him so special is his consistency. Last season, he scored at least 20 in every single game he played, except for one -- at the Washington Wizards, in which he pulled a hamstring late in the second quarter and played only a half. He finished the regular season sitting on a streak of 66 straight games with at least 20 points. You could pencil him in for at least 20 before tipoff.
As Durant transitions to the Bay Area to play with Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green, he'll face an adjustment period of learning his new teammates and how his scoring talents fit in the free-flowing Golden State Warriors system. He might get fewer shots. He might see the ball less in crunch time. But even with the changes, Durant is going to do what he does -- he's still going to score, and he's going to make 25 a night look as easy as it possibly can.
When Team USA plays China on Tuesday, Durant will play his first game at Oracle Arena since becoming a Warrior. The fans in Oakland will get their initial glimpse of the Kevin Durant experience. Here are six other things that are part of it:
That even works in the clutch, too. Like last December in a ho-hum game against the Sacramento Kings. Durant had a triple-double -- 20 points, 10 rebounds and ... 10 turnovers. He struggled shooting, looking disinterested and disjointed. He played terribly, by his own admission. That's the word he used to describe his night postgame.
But in the final 90 seconds, he hit two clutch jumpers, including the go-ahead game winner with 23 seconds left. That's Durant. Even when it looks as if he's off and it's just "one of those nights," he'll show up and pop a few jumpers and win you a game.
Oh, and you can bank on this: If he hits consecutive 3s, a third one is going up, no matter what.
Not unrelated: Durant avoids taking long-distance, end-of-quarter shots. Warriors fans love watching Curry unleash those soaring 60-footers that inexplicably seem to go in all the time, but don't expect to see that much from Durant. He's a serial buzzer clutcher. He has even admitted to it.
"It depends on what I'm shooting from the field," he said in 2013. "First quarter if I'm 4-for-4, I let it go. Third quarter if I'm like 10-for-16, or 10-for-17, I might let it go. But if I'm like 8-for-19, I'm going to go ahead and dribble one more second and let that buzzer go off and then throw it up there. So it depends on how the game's going."
Curry has kind of made it his thing to let it fly, so maybe Durant will happily find him in those situations. Or maybe he'll start caring less.
He's not necessarily a big shot-blocker or steal guy, but it's difficult to score on him in isolation situations. He can guard 1-through-5 and relishes big matchups against other top-scoring small forwards.
With the Warriors, Durant will likely have less of a responsibility to score, and he can focus on creating more havoc on the defensive end. And maybe start building that reputation.
Durant especially likes turning over on his outside shoulder toward the baseline and fading a bit on it. If the defense doesn't bring help, Durant gets that off against anyone.
Durant does get a little weak with the ball, though. In the postseason, he called himself out for too many soft one-handed passes, and when he gets trapped or doubled, he'll often react poorly and throw a lazy pass. The Warriors hit him with traps often, and Durant saw his turnovers jump in the Western Conference finals. Guess he won't have to worry about that as much now.
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