OKLAHOMA CITYâ"It was the biggest basketball game this town has ever seen.
Fortunately for the Thunder, they had the best closer left in the NBA playoffs to finish things out.
Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant scored 16 straight points in the fourth quarter of his team's 109-103 win over the San Antonio Spurs. (AP Photo)
If itâs crunch time, I want the ball in Kevin Durantâs hands. You can have LeBron James or Dwyane Wade. You can have Rajon Rondo or Paul Pierce. You can have anyone on the Spurs, and I might even let you rummage through the heap of eliminated teams for Kobe Bryant.
The most cold-blooded closer in the game? Yeah, itâs probably still Kobe. But itâs been a while since heâs come through in a truly big situation, hasnât it? Maybe Bryant no longer is as deadly with the daggers as his reputation holds.
Durant, on the other hand, just came throughâ"16 straight points for his team down the stretch of Game 4â"in the signature win of the OKC era. The Thunder are within two victories of the Finals for the first time. Heck, the franchise hasnât gone this deep into the postseason since Shawn Kemp, Gary Payton and Seattle lost in the Finals 16 years ago.
Seattleâs relevant here. Why? Because thatâs where Durant spent the first season of his career. Things were beyond bleak then. The franchise was a hideous mess and the team was even worse. Could Durant possibly have had even the slightest sense of what was in store for him four years ago ?
Heâs six wins from a championship. And heâs the guy who can bring any one of them home.
âHeâs been doing a great job all season of closing games for us,â said his point guard, Russell Westbrook.
Thunder coach Scott Brooks called timeout after Tim Duncan scored to bring the Spurs within 86-82 with 6:54 to play. Durant had 18 pointsâ"and only 12 shot attemptsâ"to that point.
âI wasnât freezing him out, trust me,â Brooks said.
No, Durant was simply playing team ball. Have I mentioned yet that he had a career playoff high eight assists? Sorry, the 16-point explosion that started on the first possession out of that timeout was just too spectacular to see through.
The poetic fadeaways on three straight trips. The dead-nails jump shots. The alley-oop finish. Durantâs entire arsenal was on display.
âWe were feeling good ourselves, but we just couldnât make a stop,â said Spurs guard Manu Ginobili. âWe just couldnât contain him.â
And thatâs why the Thunder may be the team with the best chance to win it all. Even at their best, the Spurs are at an athletic deficit in this series. Theyâve lost all momentum to the Thunder, who go into Game 5 without the pressure of being the No. 1 seed. And if Mondayâs outcome is in doubt down the stretch?
The Spurs will know theyâre essentially at Durantâs mercy.
Ask James if he wants to be known as the gameâs premier closer and heâs sure to give you the run-around. This is what Durant said: âYeah, I would like that.â That clear enough for you?
âHe wasnât second in MVP votes for nothing,â said Spurs guard Gary Neal.
And MVP James doesnât struggle with late-game situations for nothing.
As Durant said Saturday, âSometimes itâs nerve-wracking in those situations.â
They arenât for the weak-hearted or weak-minded, thatâs for sure.
âI try not to be nervous,â Durant said. âI just want to be calm and composed, poised in those situations, and make the right basketball play.â
Closing doesnât necessarily equal scoring, you see. James is a terrific late-game passerâ"no, thatâs not sarcasticâ"and in Game 4 Durant was as well. Perhaps his best pass was the one that helped end his scoring binge. Ahead by six with a little over a minute to play, Durant felt the defense collapsing around him just above the foul line and kicked it out to a wide-open James Harden.
Game over.
âIt was terrific that Kevin did a great job of closing the game,â Brooks said, âbut heâs not about scoring. Heâs about winning.
âHeâs a team player, and heâs only going to get better.â
The Spurs know heâs already plenty good enough.
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