Draymond Green Suspension Looming For Game 5

Warriors in complete control of the Finals leading 3-1 heading back to Oracle for what could be the clinching game for the repeat championship. The Warriors are clearly the better team as Andre Iguodala is my Finals MVP pick heading into tomorrow night. Great all around player who doesn’t get the attention he should be given.  It’s what you do in post season which matters–not meaningless regular season games against bad teams. Iguodala and Kawhi Leonard are two players who do it all. Maybe not flashy scorers, but they do everything well.

Draymond Green has once again hit an opposing player between the legs and since it was LeBron and not Steven Adams he might actually get suspended this time.

Either way–I’m looking for the Warriors to close out the series and celebrate at Oracle with their fans.

Maureen Dowd Bushworld Interview

I haven’t done anything political on here in a while, but since the NBA Finals and the Sam Presti exit interview have both left much to be desired–I thought I’d put this on here to kind of alter the flow, feel of things. You see, it’s okay for journalists to sometimes write things others may not openly welcome and embrace with open arms. Ostensibly…that’s why we need journalists.

 

Sam Presti Exit Interview

I listened to all forty-five minutes of Sam Presti’s  press conference and in all honesty didn’t learn anything I didn’t already know. The highlight for me was the Teddy Roosevelt quote from 1910 which Presti evoked.  TR is my favorite president of all-time. Maybe.. if I’d been there we could have had some interesting talk in regards to Roosevelt and my second favorite president in James Polk. I think maybe Presti was a history major at Emory College if I recall his profile. I have a history degree as well and we’d have had an interesting talk if we could have pushed the OKC media dullards out of the room.

In all candor, I thought  our local Prestettes didn’t ask many questions which interested me much at all. Very bland. Not one question about the meltdown at the end of Game 6. Not one question in regards to Russell Westbrook and what the WTF happened in those five minutes of horror. Not one question if Presti himself thinks Durant may possibly doubt if Westbrook and Durant can win a championship together. This is why Bill Simmons calls them the Prestettes.

I never heard Tramel. I have no idea where he was. Usually—he’s good for one tough question or two. Slater appears to be regressing, seems scared to ask tough questions like he used to when he first started. He and Royce Young must have sleepover parties where they compare off the record notes is all I can figure.

I don’t even know why this presser took place other than perfunctory courtesy.

Anyhow… here it is all forty-five minutes of nothingness. Don’t expect OJ to confess to killing Ron and Nichole is all I’m saying. I wonder how a guy like me who runs a small, ecsoteric rogue Thunder blog could get a press pass to these events? Keep in  mind, my father is a tough in your face courtroom lawyer. I understand the process of cross examination. They’d never let me back in the room after one presser would be my guess.

Here’s Sam Presti and his Prestettes. Yawn.

 

Warriors Blow Out Cavs in Game 2

A pretty horrible NBA Finals so far with the Warriors obliterating the Cavs in Game 2 in a game which was not remotely competitive in any sense. Again, what makes this scary for the Cavs is Curry and Thompson have been relatively quiet. They haven’t been needed all that much.

When you think about it, there’s really only been two good series this post season with OKC-San Antonio and OKC-Golden State giving NBA fans some bang for their viewing participation.

Putting aside my bias for OKC,  I in no way can see how Kevin Durant moving to the already loaded Golden State Warriors does anything positive for the NBA or basketball as a whole unless you’re into little league load up teams where it’s a gut cinch one team wins the championship every season.

When you think about what Golden State already has with Curry, Thompson, Green, and Iguodala, it would make LeBron’s move to Miami pale in comparison.

The Bulls dominated with six championships, but they basically did it with the two stars and role players. This would be something altogether different.

It would be horrible for basketball as far as competitive interest because unless Cleveland has something in them we’ve not seen in these first two games this series will be over before it ever started.

June 1, 2016 –Narz Mohammed Exit Interview

Narz came out of retirement to rejoin the Thunder late in the season to add a calming effect to the team in the wake of tragedies in the back third of the season. Narz is the only member of the Thunder with a championship ring which he won as a starter on the 2005 Spurs’ team. He’s also one of only five current Thunder members who played on the Thunder 2012 Finals team.

In Need of More Break Songs

I was wrong. In no way have I put the Westbrook-Durant meltdown in Game 6 behind me. I won’t lie, it hurts. It hurt even more watching Golden State cruise to a relatively easy 104-89 Game 1 win where both Steph and Klay struggled shooting the ball.

Not a good sign for the Cavs when the Splash Brothers shoot around a combined 30% from the field yet win by 15 points.

It hurts because it’s obvious OKC was good enough to win a championship this season.

Call me crazy if you want, but if you put Andre Iguodala in a Thunder uniform then I’m saying OKC would hands down be the best team in the NBA. He’d be the perfect compliment to Durant and Westbrook. He’d be the tougher than nails grownup the Thunder need so much.

Why do the Golden State Warriors need Kevin Durant when they’ve already got Steph, Klay, Draymond, and Andre?

They don’t and I find it obscene they’re coming after Durant come July 1.

So…I’m in need of another off season break song. I guess this is what Durant calls off season decompressing.

June 1, 2016 Cameron Payne Exit Interview

One of the keys next season will be the continued development of hybrid guard Cameron Payne. I have total confidence  he’s going to be a very good player in this league. I thought one of the mistakes Billy Donovan made this season was not letting Payne continue as the backup point guard the last month of the regular season. Playoffs are another matter. Agree with going with Randy Foye there. But I would have let him go more in the regular season.

Payne clearly has the offensive instincts to play in this league. He just needs to get stronger and better defensively where he’s not an obvious defensive liability when he’s on the floor.

I fully expect Payne to be the backup point guard from Day 1 next season.

June 1, 2016 — Steven Adams Exit Interview

During the next couple of weeks while Golden State goes about winning its repeat championship, I’d like to put some of the exit interviews on here from various Thunder players other than Durant and Westbrook. Not the two superstars, but the role players. Because if you don’t have effective, unselfish, mentally tough role players you don’t have a championship caliber team.

Let’s start with Steven Adams who has quickly become the third most popular Thunder player in Oklahoma City. If for no other reason, Durant should return for at least one more season just to see where the ceiling might be with Adams’ game.

Tough, physical, smart, runs the floor like a deer, excellent on the pick and roll with Westbrook, improving every month in other nuance aspects of his offensive game. This would be the Steven Adams we saw emerge in these playoffs–and the best interview on the team.

Kevin Durant Exit Interview Thoughts

All of the Thunder players gave their exit interviews today to officially end this basketball season for the Oklahoma City Thunder. For obvious reasons, what Kevin Durant had to say created the most interest as he’ll become an unrestricted free agent for the first time in his pro basketball life on July 1st.

Durant spoke fondly of his teammates. Of his time spent in Oklahoma City as he’s grown from a college freshman into a young man comfortable in his own skin. He spoke of his fondness for the city itself.  He spoke of people like Sam Presti and others in the Thunder organization whose relationships he cherishes. But mostly he said he enjoys playing basketball with players he respects and admires as humans not just players. All good things said as far as Durant staying in Oklahoma City to continue his basketball career.

As a fan, I’ve now watched Durant for ten seasons. Eight with the Thunder, one with the Sonics, and one with the Texas Longhorns in the Big 12 Conference.

Durant is one of those rare gems like Tim Duncan or Dirk who don’t come along nearly enough in our modern culture of sport in America.

Humble, modest, and whether he likes it or not a role model to pretty much every kid of every age in the state of Oklahoma. To put it bluntly, he’s probably the most respected, admired person in the state.

Everywhere you go in Oklahoma City you see kids and their parents wearing No. 35 jerseys. This isn’t just Kevin Durant’s team, this is Kevin Durant’s city and his state.

Pretty amazing when you consider he went to college at the University of Texas and to this day still  openly vows his fondness to the hated Longhorns.

He speaks of his friendship with former Thunder head coach Scott Brooks. He and Perk still text. His friendships with Russell Westbrook and Nick Collison seem especially close given the time they’ve spent together building the Thunder from the ground up into one of the top four NBA franchises in the league.

But most of all he said things to his mother in his MVP speech which made every mother and father not only cry, but whisper–thank you.

The only person I’ve ever seen Durant be snarky with is Reggie Jackson. Truth be known that says volumes more about Reggie Jackson than Kevin Durant from my perspective.

Durant has been the centerpiece of a team which went 23-59 its first year here into a team which has now played in four Western Conference Finals and one NBA Finals.

Without Kevin Durant none of this happens.

Kevin Durant isn’t just the key piece to Sam Presti’s team, but he’s the most important ambassador of goodwill in the state. If Durant leaves Oklahoma City, the Thunder will lose their best player and the state will lose its pulse.

From a basketball standpoint, there’s no reason for Kevin Durant to leave. His team was five minutes away from dethroning the defending champions in six games.

Steven Adams, Enes Kanter, Dion Waiters, Andre Roberson, and Cam Payne are all 24 years of age or younger. The Thunder could use another smart veteran wing player, but otherwise Sam Presti has put a team together which can win a championship if they’ll just play a little smarter.

From a basketball standpoint there’s no reason for Kevin Durant to leave a franchise he not only has built from the ground up, but has carried on his shoulders for eight basketball seasons.

For Durant this doesn’t at all seem to be about money or the whole LeBron bullshit show we saw when James went from the Cavs to the Miami Heat. Kevin Durant has never struck me as a guy who thinks what Lebron James did was appropriate.

In the end–I ‘d have to say if Durant leaves after what he just saw in these 2016 playoffs I’d be surprised if he leaves because everything he needs to be happy is already in place in Oklahoma City.

It doesn’t always have to be about playing in New York, LA, or Chicago.

Aaron Rodgers seems relatively content playing in Green Bay. Tim Duncan never left San Antonio. Dirk will finish his career in Dallas.

I really don’t see why it would be crazy for Durant to stay in OKC as long as Presti has a championship roster in place.

Kevin Durant, please stay. Your city needs you.