The Brooklyn Nets have seen plenty of players come through the franchise since the organization was once located in New Jersey and now as the team seeks to win titles in Brooklyn. One of the players to have donned a Nets jersey, Kevin Durant, recently completed a feat that has only been done by seven other players in the history of the NBA: scoring 30,000 points.
Granted, Durant, who now plays for the Phoenix Suns, has not been in Brooklyn in two seasons at this point, but what he did for the Nets franchise still has fans wondering if he will ever return to finish what he started. Durant played in Brooklyn from 2019 to 2023 and during that time span, he scored 3,744 points in 129 games, amounting to an averaged of 29.0 points per contest, his highest scoring average for any team in his 18-year career.
Durant’s time in Brooklyn saw him play with Kyrie Irving and James Harden at one point in time while the former Texas Longhorn made three All-Star appearances, second-team All-NBA, and even received some MVP votes during the 2021-22 campaign. The reason that Durant is being brought up for Nets purposes is due to some of his former Nets teammates dishing on what makes him such a lethal scorer as he continues to score points in bunches (quotes via ESPN’s Tim MacMahon):
“He’s that guy that you see almost like a monument in a science museum of just like, what does a great scorer look like? Seven feet, able to handle the ball, able to shoot over anybody, but also a fierce competitor. He’s a scientist out there. He’s always hovering around 50/40/90. Man, he’s like an efficient machine when it comes to breaking down how he goes about scoring and doing it for so long.”
“It’s rare that you have seen a guy who is a legit 7-foot who can handle how he handles but also stop. He stops under control to get to a shot. You can’t block it. … I’ve never seen — in recent history, today’s game — a guy that tall with the handle that he has [and] that’s super smooth that can do what he does. Obviously he’s a volume shooter, but the efficiency of how he scores, it’s not like he’s going 6-for-25. He’s going a cool 13-for-19, 14-for-20. It’s not like people are making him miss. If he misses, it’s because he missed. And he makes a lot of tough shots.”
“His change of pace, change of direction … he’ll get you leaning one way and once he crosses back over, he’s so tall that if you’re not on his hip, he’s shooting right over you or he’s getting to the basket. That right there automatically is just a different type of a handle for a 7-footer. You really don’t see that. I don’t see [another] guy at 7 feet that can shoot it fluidly like him and handle the rock and do the things he do. He don’t care where you at. You could be a tall defender, shorter defender. Once he raises up, all he sees is that rim. It’s unbelievable.”
“He’s stronger than you think and he looks. He uses his body and his athleticism to shoot over you, to get to the elbows. His hesi (hesitation) pull, you might know it’s coming, but he’s still getting it off. It’s just all the hard work and routine for him and the craft that he puts in. Once he gets there, you better hope he misses, but it’s tough. You can’t block it. It’s a high-arching shot. I always say he’s the toughest player I’ve had to guard. He knows exactly where he wants to get and what type of shots he wants to shoot. I think the fact that he’s unpredictable in a lot of it matters. You never know if he’s going to hit you with a pull-up, drive, fadeaway. He’s just got so many things that he can counteract with. That makes him so tough to guard — just his counterattacks versus you, the way he sees the game and the way he shoots the ball.”
“He’s just really good at, no matter where he is at on the floor, just kind of getting square up to the basket and then [shooting with a] high release point. And obviously you’re not going to block it. The balance, the rhythm and all that stuff, it’s just something you’ve never seen from a 7-footer before. KD’s just pure skill. He’s just smooth. We ain’t never seen nothing like it. We probably never will, to be honest.”
By Kilty Cleary is a Los Angeles-based media and marketing pro with 18+ years of experience. He's worked with top brands like Sporting News and Sports I
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