Durant Hamstring Injury – Short Term View

Kevin Durant missed 55 games last season and basically was absent from high level basketball for eight months. He was just rounding back into form when this minor hamstring strain occurred in the last minute of the first half against the Wizards. This hurts because Durant and this team are all in the process of learning their new roles under Billy Donovan.

Even more to the point, the 9-0 Golden State Warriors have come out of the gate as a defending champion with an obvious focus on not only repeating, but maybe setting their sights on a 70 win regular season. They won 67 regular season games a year ago  enroute to their championship–so I don’t think it’s crazy talk, especially considering Memphis and New Orleans don’t appear to be what many of us thought they might be this year–namely two tough, grinding teams in the West. The Pelicans under first year coach Alvin Gentry have been horrible. How can you have a player like Anthony Davis and be 1-7? They never should have fired Monty Williams. In Memphis—there’s talk of moving Zach Randolph and owner Robert Pera possibly considering removing Dave Joerger as head coach. So–in essence the West may not be as tough asmost thought it might be this season beyond the top five teams in Golden State, San Antonio, OKC, LA Clippers and Houston. The young Timberwolves will come back to earth as the marathon season unwinds.

From what I’ve read–Durant’s strain is the most minor degree of a hamstring strain. With rest—the hope is he’ll be back on Nov. 22 when the Thunder host the Dallas Mavericks.

The interim five games are against my pathetic Philly 76’ers (more on the idiot Sam Hinkie tomorrow), Boston Celtics, Robert Pera’s Grizzlies, the NBA’s most disappointing team in the Pelicans and the NY Knicks. Combined these five teams are 11-25 into this young season. So there’s that working for the Thunder in the next ten days or so.

Russell Westbrook, Serge Ibaka, Dion Waiters and Enes Kanter have all been solid offensively as of late. This trend will need to continue during Durant’s absence–however long that turns out to be. Role players like Steven Adams, Andre Roberson, DJ Augustin, Nick Collison, Mitch McGary, Kyle Singler and Anthony Morrow need to do fill their roles. Be professionals. Especially Singler and Morrow in that they’re basically small forwards and need to help fill the Durant vaccum at small forward or call it finesse forward if you will. If I’m Donovan—I’m challenging both of these guys in private to show me who wants to play rotational minutes once Durant returns.

Westbrook has been spectacular offensively this season, defensively not so much. But Westbrook will have to be the guy and while being the guy not suffocate the progress Ibaka, Waiters and Kanter have made in recent games.

Good thing they start with my former favorite team in the Philly 76’ers who for some reason have used all their tanking to date to draft a defensive zone only player in Noels, a big man with chronic foot problems in Joel Embiid who will miss his second straight season since being drafted by the analytics savant Sam Hinkie, and of course, Jahil Okafor from Duke in the recent NBA draft. Okafor can actually score the ball from within six feet, but can’t make free throws and couldn’t defend Byron Mullins, but at least he can make some baskets.

So take heart Thunder fans–it could be way worse. You could be a Philadelphia 76’er fan and been forced  to watch Sam Hinkie’s bullshit for three years running. I’m sure Tramel will have his Annual Sam Hinkie Progress Report at newsok. Can’t wait. First F bomb on my blog…f–k Sam Hinkie.

More on Bain Capital’s  Sam Hinkie tomorrow.

 

Mike Jackson

 

Durant Out 7-10 Days With Strained Hamstring

Kevin Durant will be out for at least seven to ten days with a strained hamstring he sustained late in the second period last night in D.C. He’s to be re-evaluated then…heard that before. Mitigating ‘good’ news is that OKC plays the Sixers, Celtics, Grizzlies, Pelicans and Knicks during this span. Grizzlies and Pelicans have both been early season disappointments—so maybe this won’t be too tough. Dave Joerger may even be in trouble in Memphis.  Dion Waiters should get the starts as good as he’s been playing of late.

OKC Thunder 125 – Washington Wizards 101

No Nene. No Bradley Beal. Not even Kevin Durant in the second half after a hamstring strain late in the first half. Nary any drama from the Wizard crowd in regards to Durant’s impending free agency. But most of all no contest whatsoever in an alleged battle of elite point guards as Russell Westbrook destroyed John Wall while leading the Thunder to a no mas blowout 125-101 win over the punchless Wizards.

Vintage Russell Westbrook. Triple double No. 20 in the Westbrook File. In twenty-eight minutes it went 22 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists and most importantly a message sent….why would Kevin Durant leave Russell Westbrook to join John Wall if he’s serious about winning an NBA championship? Know what I mean?

Russell Westbrook is my OKCThunderGround No. 1 Star of the Game.

Another very good game from Dion Waiters. He was second on my list. That’s two back to back seconds for Dion in his pursuit of this prestigious award. Waiters finished with 25 points on a 7-10 night from the field. He wasn’t just good, he was excellent.

 

Other things…..

With Durant—OKC won the first half 68-50. Without Durant–OKC won the second half 57-51.

OKC had 27 assists to 12 turnovers.

Thirteen different Thunder players scored. Even Anthony Morrow, who went 1-6 in 16 minutes.

Have to keep an eye on that Durant, Westbrook, Ibaka, Kanter, Roberson lineup as the season moves along and how often Billy Donovan employs it against good teams.

OKC is the No. 1 rebounding team in the league and showed it pounding the Wizards 53-41 on the night.

John Kasich and Jeb Bush, the two guys who worked for Lehman Brothers are in serious trouble…they couldn’t answer the banking question. Oh, wait—this is a basketball blog.

Thunder shot 51.2% from the field and an even gaudier 15-23 from beyond the arc.

Kevin Durant garnered a first half double double with 17 points, 10 rebounds in 17 minutes.

Kyle Singler must have seen my Duke video of him here on the blog and decided it was time not to suck. Dude knows what Thunder blog to follow.

OKC improves to 5-3 with the easy walk-off win. My former Philly 76’ers in OKC Friday night on Friday the 13th. Just me, but I wouldn’t even allow Kevin Durant to dress out for this one.

Mike Jackson

 

 

 

Game 8 — OKC Thunder @ Washington Wizards Preview

The national narrative on this one will be is this Kevin Durant’s last game in D.C. wearing a Thunder uniform as his free agency creeps closer. Durant’s free agency in July of 2016 is there, as Thunder fans we all know it, we dread it, but in the end know either way it goes Kevin Durant will forever be a part of Oklahoma not only for what he’s done on the court, but off the court as well. So much of what Oklahomans love about Durant is his quiet humility, his desire to get better, and to ultimately be part of a championship in Oklahoma City. If he does decide to leave we know it will be with a quiet sense of dignity which was absent in the branding of LeBron James in Miami.

I’ve always thought of Durant as a Tim Duncan or a Dirk in a sense in that he appears to be very comfortable in his own skin and doesn’t need to play in New York or LA or Miami to define his own legacy. You never know though. But either way, even if he leaves, he has me as a fan for life because the guy exudes class which is so often missing in our contemporary sports stars.

Now the preview. OKC at 4-3 visits the 3-3 Wizards tonight. Should be a good game. Wizards have a solid starting five in John Wall, Nene, Gortat, Bradley Beal and the emerging Otto Porter. Both teams looking to play better and get something going with their respective seasons.

The Anthony Morrow talk continues to dominate the local Thunder talk both on the internet and radio sports talk. I’ve written all I’m going to write on it though. Billy Donovan is the coach. It’s his call.

I would expect Nick Collison to reassume the minutes Mitch McGary possessed on Sunday night in that it’s a road game against a pretty good team in the Wizards. Maybe home at Philly later in the week is a better spot for getting McGary into some sort of flow.

Russell Westbrook – John Wall matchup should be fun.

Otherwise—should be a good game with the Thunder hoping to get some answers to their early season identity as a team. OKC 1-2 on the road so far–with the only win coming in the miracle finish at Orlando.

Kyle Singler Duke Mix

Kyle Singler is a player I enjoyed watching at Duke. Loved his game, his swagger, his court attitude. I was okay with the trade.  I see none of this in his game with the Thunder to date. If he’s going to play in the rotation over Morrow–then I’m hopeful he’ll relax,  play with an attitude and start making open looks.

OKC Thunder 124 – Phoenix Suns 103

Behind a Kevin Durant 32 point, 11 rebound night, the OKC Thunder eventually overwhelmed the Phoenix Suns by a 124-103 count to end their three game losing streak. OKC improves to 4-3 while Phoenix drops to 3-4.

OKC jumped out quickly to an early double digit lead, but OKC’s bench promptly allowed Phoenix back into the game. OKC’s starters got part of the lead back and led 60-54 at halftime.

The second half was pretty much OKC expanding the lead and taking care of business in a matter of fact win against a Phoenix team which isn’t nearly as fun to watch this season without  Dragic, Gerald Green and the departed Morris twin.  Eric Bledsoe was the lone bright spot for Phoenix with a line of 28 points and 11 assists.

But a win is a step forward, you take it and hope some things were learned by OKC tonight as far as self team discovery.

Westbrook was solid with 21 points, 6 rebounds and 11 assists. Both Enes Kanter and Dion Waiters had solid nights for the otherwise struggling OKC bench unit. Kanter was 9-10 from the field going for 21 points. Waiters scored 19 points on a six of nine night from the field. Interesting note–this marks the first time in the history of the Thunder two bench players have scored at least 19 points on the same night. The rest of the OKC bench was in a word…lacking.

Mitch McGary did play regular rotational minutes tonight coming off the bench, but looked rusty, awkward and a step out of sync. He struggled. Kyle Singler kept his minutes and like McGary…struggled. DJ Augustin was better than Singler and McGary, but I’m not sure what that says at this point. Nick Collison was a DNP, as was Anthony Morrow.

Expected this on the Collison front tonight, didn’t expect it on the Anthony Morrow front. Early in this season it appears Billy Donovan has relegated Morrow to basically a three point specialist role who might play on some nights, but on other nights won’t play because of his defensive issues. But still—Singler hasn’t shown much and I loved watching him play at Duke so it’s not like I’m a Kyle Singler hater or something of the like. We’ll see if he can get going and make some shots to make it appear the Reggie Jackson trade to Detroit isn’t a bust.

The North Edmond Little League soccer mothers on the Cox telecast awarded Dion Waiters as their player of the game. Not horrible, and in fact I thought of going with Dion and Enes Kanter as my co-players of the game. But in the end couldn’t do it because the Big Dog exerted his will in this game . Kevin Durant is my OKCThunderGround No. 1 Star of the Game with 32 points on a 12-19 shooting night. Throw in the 11 rebounds, 4 assists and three steals and unless you’re into participation ribbons how could it be anyone else tonight but Kevin Durant.

A win in the West is a win. You don’t piss on it, but in reality we didn’t learn much tonight except this Phoenix team is pretty boring to watch without Dragic getting under Westbrook’s skin, the Morris Twins playing happily together in their fantasy basketball play crib and Gerald Green jacking shots.

OKC on the road against the Wizards on Tuesday night.

Mike Jackson