Mateo’s Hoops Diary: Nets Better Off Keeping Kevin Durant
To some, Kevin Durant looks like an NBA labor hero for asking to skip town with four years and $198 million remaining on his deal. Others see him as the dude trying to take the easy way out.
As for his trade request, it would defy logic for the Brooklyn Nets to move Durant. He’s perhaps the league’s most lethal scorer because of his arsenal and the mismatches a 6’11 frame creates. Yet, for some inexplicable reason, the organization is bending over backward, acquiescing to KD’s wishes and looking for a negotiating partner.
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Durant doesn’t have any leverage. Willingly putting him on the market is a dereliction of duty by the front office. They have not realized that whatever could be sent back for him won’t be as impactful as the man who already wears the uniform. Taking on assets for the future is risky as well. There is no guarantee the players picked will hit.
Keeping Durant ensures the team is always in the mix, competing or at least the headlines. How many opportunities will any franchise get to have a guy like KD signed long-term? He’s a made man who needs to be convinced the grass isn’t always greener on the other side.
Offensively, the Slim Reaper has no weaknesses and is one of the rare players in the NBA who would fit well next to any playstyle. When a man as gifted as he has already committed to a team like that, the plan should be trying to fix whatever the differences between the two camps are.
The team has Kyrie Irving riding shotgun for at least one more year. The Nets should have asked Durant the moment he gave notice why he can’t make it work for $198 million? Why can’t he commit to the team as they did to him while he spent an entire year recovering from an Achilles tear? They believed enough in him to devote themselves for four years when no one knew what version of the Easy Money Sniper was coming back. But here we are. The ink on Durant’s extension hasn’t dried, and his interests are elsewhere.
Helping the team win 1/3 playoff rounds he’s participated in and only playing in 106 games as a Net in three seasons shouldn’t buy him the cache to make such an asinine favor.
Ben Simmons still has not made his debut for Brooklyn. His size, versatility, and explosive lateral quickness make him one of the NBA’s premier defenders. He can switch on opponents in zone or man coverage, which will fix some of the Nets’ weak spots while also benefiting the offense by adding transition opportunities.
There are few athletes in the NBA like Simmons. In fact, Durant hasn’t played with a specimen like him since he was Russell Westbrook’s teammate in Oklahoma City from 2008-2016. Simmons is a threat whenever he puts his head down and attacks the basket. His role as a playmaker while sharing the floor with Irving would leave #11 in single coverage while playing off-ball. Kyrie wouldn’t have to work as hard getting open to avoid traps and doubles.
Running pick ‘n’ roll with Simmons as the screener for Durant or Irving could be a nightmare for opponents to guard. The man setting the pick always gets open after the player he pinned shakes loose. If Simmons gets the ball back on the roll, he can attack if the lane is clear, or if he catches a pair of help defenders, he could pass out to an open teammate on the baseline or perimeter. In this play, the Nets could use Ben at center surrounded by a few sharpshooters like Joe Harris, Irving, and Durant to spread out defenders.
This team has never gotten close to maximizing its full potential. Injuries were a factor but Irving selfishly avoiding taking the COVID vaccine negatively affected how the team performed as well. Perhaps if he were available for more than 29 regular season games, the Nets would have been a higher seed than seventh and likely seen a different opponent in round one.
Going forward, per Executive Order 62, courtesy of New York City mayor Eric Adams’ signature on March 24, Irving’s vaccination status won’t prevent him from contributing next season as it did in 2021/2022.
Management shouldn’t give in to Durant’s desires. It’s perfectly feasible that Brooklyn’s star threesome can make things interesting next season. Not giving Durant, Irving, and Simmons the chance to take the floor together would be a colossal failure.
If the Nets capitulate, it will prove they are an unserious organization.
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