The beginning of the end for Kevin Durant?

By Justin Ware / Roar Guru

Kevin Durant suffered a number of unfortunate injuries this season, his year ultimately ending in March when he opted to have surgery on his right foot, which had troubled him throughout the Thunder’s 2014-15 campaign.

After winning the NBA’s MVP award last season (32 points per game, 50 per cent field goal) Durant has managed to appear in just 27 games this season.

Durant’s inability to stay healthy has not been an issue in past seasons. In fact, Durant had missed just 14 games before this season, which is an amazing feat considering the grinding nature of the NBA season.

But there are signs that Durant’s famed durability could be unravelling.

It began in late 2014, when Durant informed the basketball world he would be sitting out the FIBA World Cup after witnessing Paul George suffer a broken leg.

“It took everything out of me seeing that,” Durant later told a friend. “Everything I had to play for Team USA, that injury stripped it away from me.”

It’s been a bizarre season for the reigning MVP, who has suffered several injuries, ranging from a toe complication, to a gimpy ankle and now a fracture of the fifth metatarsal in his foot. It’s a story that has been repeated all too often; see Derrick Rose (possibly), Brandon Roy, Tracy McGrady, and Yao Ming’s careers cut short.

The NBA is at its best when the best of the best are healthy and waging war on the court. Durant’s misfortunes this season have crippled any hope of the Thunder pushing the Warriors in the first round – they’ve just been knocked out of the playoffs following an unlikely Pelicans victory over Golden State.

While Russell Westbrook is a nightly threat to amass yet another triple-double, his usage rate (38 per cent), coupled with his boneheaded turnover’s (4.4 per game), mean the Thunder are a fringe playoff team at best when Durant is not healthy.

The positive thing to come out of Durant’s troubles this season is that when he could get on the court, he was still the reigning MVP. Over 27 games he averaged 25.4 points per game and converted on 51 per cent of his field goals. Yet perhaps Durant’s elite production in the face of adversity is also one of the most upsetting developments to come out of this season; he still has it, but he can’t get healthy.

The NBA world will be anxiously awaiting the return of Durant next season. Optimism is ever present, but his career is at the crossroads.

This forgettable season could merely be an outlier in an illustrious career, or it could follow a route that has eventuated for too many far too often.

Let’s hope it’s the former.

This article originally appeared on swingman.com.au

The Crowd Says:

2015-04-12T04:18:13+00:00

Adam Joseph

Guest


this is one of the more ignorant things i've read. "speculative essay" is a poor description.

AUTHOR

2015-04-10T00:56:01+00:00

Justin Ware

Roar Guru


I'm happy to stand corrected on that Jake. This article was written several weeks ago. I think you missed the point of the article however. I am fully aware that his foot injury is different to those that were mentioned in the article, the point I was making was simply many players with immense talent have suffered cruel ends via repetitive injuries. Durant has not just suffered from a stress reaction in his foot, he's constantly suffered from several injuries this year and that is not a good sign. Keep in mind he is 6'10". Heavy minutes and built up mileage on his body could be accelerating his decline. That was the point I was making.

2015-04-09T16:18:45+00:00

jake

Guest


There actually are facts at this stage for this injury, and this bone graft procedure. Here they are. Every athlete who has ever had this procedure done has come back to have a healthy career. 100%. This injury is not the same as Yao Ming or Bill Walton as it is a different bone in the foot. See Stephanie Bell for more on this. http://espn.go.com/blog/stephania-bell/post/_/id/3070/prognosis-good-on-kevin-durants-foot

2015-04-09T15:50:42+00:00

Chris

Guest


Except we do. Saying we don't know how he will recover, although technically correct, is scientifically wrong. It would be on par with saying we do not know if antibiotics work. True, there are infinite possibilities, and there is a chance that they do not but there is a large body of empirical evidence that points to the fact that they are effective. In the same way, Durant's recovery from a medical standpoint is not an anemology or a set back it is simply the result of a natural process of elimination in treatment options. With the large take away being the, scientifically verified, fact that the majority of patients return to their former healthy state.

2015-04-09T04:58:58+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


The Thunder haven't been knocked out of the playoffs just yet.

AUTHOR

2015-04-08T23:30:40+00:00

Justin Ware

Roar Guru


It's called a speculative essay. No ones forcing you to read it, if you are looking for facts at this stage it's pure speculation because to put it simply, no one really knows how he will recover.

2015-04-08T20:58:10+00:00

Swampy

Guest


Wow. I thought I was about to read an article that was going to fill me in with facts about the nature of Durant's foot injury, the likely surgical outcomes and the history of other sportsmen coming back from the same injury. Instead the piece is pure speculation with no research other than the most simplistic stats re Durant's 27 games played. This is not journalism.

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