NBA

Kevin Durant, alleged NBA villain, ignoring the noise: 'I'm at peace'

Sam Amick
USA TODAY Sports
Kevin Durant looks on from the court in the first half of a game against the Indiana Pacers.

OAKLAND – The noise that surrounds Kevin Durant is growing louder by the minute.

But this isn’t the latest hot take about how the Golden State Warriors star is allegedly arrogant. Nor is this the chorus of nationwide boos relating to the lack of competition in the NBA playoffs, with Durant and his decision to leave Oklahoma City last summer being blamed by so many for this supposedly boring basketball.

This is the sweet sound of joyful children, more than 200 of them spanned across Lincoln Square Park in downtown Oakland where Durant is unveiling four newly refurbished basketball courts on a recent off day. He towers over the youngsters who can’t stop looking at him, all of them giddy as Durant walks his 6-11 frame from hoop to hoop and takes a few casual shots.

The iconic Oakland Tribune tower is in the background. Warriors legend Al Attles, the namesake of these very courts, is here too. A local columnist who grew up on these streets, Marcus Thompson of the Bay Area News Group, received a personal request from Durant to host this event and give it a familiar feel. Durant may have come up in the tough neighborhood of Seat Pleasant, Md. that’s almost 3,000 miles away, but it feels like he’s one of them.

Kevin Durant unveiling four newly refurbished basketball courts in Oakland.

If you didn’t know the back story, about all the millions of fans and even some media members who were so enraged when he decided to head this way to play hoops, it’d be hard to imagine anyone being mad at this man. And if you think Durant is going to try to control this narrative that has him pegged as a ring-chasing wrecker of all that is good in the NBA, you’re sorely mistaken.

Ask anyone who truly knows Durant, and you hear the same message: The man is in as good a mental place as ever right now. And truth be told, he worries less about what you think with every passing day.

“I'm just at peace with myself; I'm at peace with myself as a basketball player, most importantly,” Durant told USA TODAY Sports recently. “I think this move, and the criticism that comes with this move, has made me zero in on what's the most important thing, and that's just playing basketball, working out every day, getting better, enjoying every single day as a basketball player. It made me really appreciate that. It made me go back to that. When you listen to the nonsense, then you start to really let it take control of your thoughts, that’s (not good), you know what I'm saying? So I just got back to the game.”

The game had to save him, though. Just 10 months ago, Durant was paralyzed by the very noise he now ignores.

The next chapter

Durant broke his own news, detailing why he was bound for The Bay in the Players' Tribune article that kickstarted the chaos. But for two days after his decision, he stayed inside a Hamptons mansion where free-agency meetings had taken place and shuddered at the thought of the scrutiny he would face.

He would laugh weeks later about how he assumed the worst, how he wondered aloud among friends and family if he’d be treated like a modern-day O.J. Simpson or worse, as he said in mid-July, if someone would “just hit me with their car” if he walked outside. But once October hit, when the balls started bouncing and he learned little by little that new teammates like Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and all the rest were as genuine as advertised, the noise started to fade.

Durant and Stephen Curry laugh during media day at the Warriors Practice Facility.

“I had to get used to the attention,” said Durant, who averaged 25.2 points, 7.8 rebounds, 3.7 assists, and 1.2 blocks per game as the Warriors became the first team in league history to enter the Finals 12-0 in the playoffs. “I wasn't used to this much attention, no matter if it was good or bad. I had to get used to that. And once I got used to it, it's like, 'Alright, let's roll with it. It's part of the journey.' Let's just go and play the game. That's the only thing that matters.”

It certainly helps that Durant, who used to routinely respond to fan criticism on Twitter, has taken the minimalist approach to social media. He deleted his Instagram page and checks his Twitter mentions no more than once a month.

YouTube has become his favorite platform. Durant has his own channel that offers a look at his life on the court and even inside his home. Like so many elite athletes today, he loves having creative control. But as Durant learned the hard way early on, he has no jurisdiction inside the road arenas where the noise and negativity knows no bounds.

It was one thing to face fiery fans in Oklahoma City, where the Thunder faithful were clearly crushed by his departure and let their voices be heard in his two regular season returns. But an Oct. 14 preseason game in Denver? Durant couldn’t comprehend why so many non-Thunder fans acted as if he’d kicked their family dog.

“A kid was behind the bench, and he was like, 'You sold everybody out! You're a coward! You're a p----, a b----!’” Durant said. “I was just like, 'Why are you this upset?' That's what I was thinking, and that's why I was talking back, I was like, 'Why are you so mad again? What's so important about this that you want to call me all these disrespectful names?' That (expletive) doesn't fly where I'm from, where any one of us are from. If he walked up onto you, and said that to you, you would confront him. I'm like, 'Where is this coming from?'

“And then after a while, I just — it just became so normal, that it was just, 'What am I even worried about?' Because I know it's not real. ‘Why am I even responding to this?’”

Little by little, his teammates noticed the change.

Durant arrives before Game 4 of the Western Conference finals.

“A couple times early on in the year, he’d be jumping back at people in the crowd, folks right behind the bench,” Warriors forward David West said. “And then he just blocked it out, started focusing on the game, stopped letting it affect him. I mean it was bad on the road early on. I think once he just got past it, got focused on what we were doing, he just got comfortable.”

Just like he was back in Seat Pleasant, or in his one season at the University of Texas, and Seattle and Oklahoma City.

“At the core, he’s the same guy,” said Warriors assistant coach Ron Adams, who has been close with Durant since they spent two seasons together in Oklahoma City. “He’s got a lot more going on in his life. He’s had so much success, and the MVP award and all that sort of thing, so he’s busier.

“(But) he’s just really a good human being, and I like how he loves the game. I like how he respects the game. I like how he respects the people who played the game in the past, and I like how he respects other players in the league. From a coaching standpoint, that’s so good to see. He’s very respectful of the game, and it helps make him who he is.”

The parity problem

The noise gets tougher to navigate in the playoffs, though, so Durant finds himself fighting that urge again after a recent shoot-around in San Antonio.

Already on this morning, he has heard about the criticism about his news conference the night before. After the Warriors’ Game 3 win in the Western Conference finals, Durant spent a nuance-filled minute answering a question about all the blowouts in this postseason. He offered an opinion from the player’s perspective, expressing an understanding of why fans prefer tight games and capping his candid comments by saying in a matter-of-fact tone, “If you don’t like it, don’t watch it.”

Cue the simplistic headlines. Start the silly debates. Durant will clarify his comments the following day, and even apologize to fans who were offended. But what he won’t do, as he makes clear, is allow anyone to try and peg him as the poster boy for the NBA’s parity problem.

“Like I'm the reason why (expletive) Orlando couldn't make the playoffs for five, six years in a row?” he said. “Am I the reason that Brooklyn gave all their picks to Boston? Like, am I the reason that they're not that good (laughs)? I can't play for every team, so the truth of the matter is I left one team. It's one more team that you probably would've thought would've been a contender. One more team. I couldn't have made the (entire) East better. I couldn't have made everybody (else) in the West better.”

He stops himself. The noise is winning again. Peace, he remembers, must remain the priority.

“I think it's just something every 28-year-old goes through in different forms with their life,” Durant explains. “I'm a basketball player, but somebody else might be working in business or might be fresh out of grad school. At different parts of your life, I just feel like there's a natural progression where you just feel at peace with yourself.

"Certain stuff that used to bother you really doesn't bother you anymore. It's easier for me to kind of speak my mind, speak what I'm thinking because I now realize that I'm in control of my own destiny.”

Follow USA TODAY Sports' Sam Amick on Twitter @Sam_Amick

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