OKLAHOMA CITY — Kevin Durant has a lot to consider in the next month.
The face of the Oklahoma City Thunder since it moved from Seattle in 2008 is heading into free agency, and what he chooses to do after July 1 could shake up the NBA landscape.
Durant was the MVP in 2014 and is a four-time scoring champion. He led the Thunder to the NBA Finals in 2012, and to the Western Conference Finals in four of the past six years.
He recovered from a broken bone in his right foot that cost him much of last season to post one of the best years of his career. At just 27, he is in his prime and capable of being the centerpiece of a championship squad here — or elsewhere.
Durant would stand to make significantly more money if he signs for a year with Oklahoma City, then signs a longer deal with the Thunder the following year.
Two days after the Thunder lost to the Golden State Warriors in Game 7 of the conference finals, Durant ruled nothing out.
“I really haven’t wrapped my mind around it since it’s so fresh coming out the playoffs,” he said on Wednesday. “I really haven’t thought about next week, more so than next month or what’s going to happen.”
With the salary cap going up, many teams will have the money to make a run at him. The Washington Wizards, Durant’s hometown team, recently hired former Thunder coach Scott Brooks, whom Durant has great respect for. The Philadelphia 76ers’ Joel Embiid and the Boston Celtics’ Isaiah Thomas are among the players who have made their attempts at luring Durant via Twitter.
Durant said there will be very little outside influence on his decision.
“I’ve got to just hear from me and hear what I want, and talk to myself on what I need and how I can make this thing work for myself, and just try to be a little selfish,” he said. “Obviously, I’m going to have some advice, but also, I want to make the decision that’s best for me.”
He said he loves his teammates, and at times, he spoke as though he planned to be back.
“Are we going to work on our game and come back even better, or are we going to be excited about what we did?” Durant said. “Be complacent, or are we going to want more? I think that’s the next step for us all — thinking of how we can all be better.”
Durant said he doesn’t plan on bouncing from city to city as teams try to woo him, stating, “That’s not who I am.”
“It may seem like I’m not talking and I’m not giving information, but I’m just really trying to make sure I tie everything up properly and make this thing right,” he said.
Durant has elevated Oklahoma’s profile so much that he was inducted into the state’s Hall of Fame late last year — and he has made a point to have a local presence.
He donated $1 million in disaster relief to the Red Cross in 2013 after a tornado ravaged south Oklahoma City and Moore. He also owns a popular restaurant in downtown Oklahoma City.
“He’s obviously had a great impact on this community and this organization,” Thunder coach Billy Donovan said. “Obviously, the organization and the community love him a great deal as well. This is about Kevin. If he needed anything from me, I would be there to talk to him about anything, but this is about what Kevin wants to do, and it’s his decision.”
Durant bounced back from his injury to average 28.2 points per game — more than when he was scoring champion in 2010-11 and 2011-12. He grabbed a career-high 8.2 rebounds per game, and added 5.0 assists per contest, the second-best total of his nine-year career. He improved as a defensive player, at times dominating in the playoffs.
Along the way, he avoided allowing the hoopla around him to be a distraction.
“I could not be more impressed with the way he handled this year,” Donovan said. “Everywhere we went, people wanted to talk about it, and he never allowed it to get into the team, and I really, really respected that and admired that. He put the team first.”
Durant’s choice could have a domino effect, with Russell Westbrook entering the final year of his deal.
The current core has a promising future. The Thunder took a 3-1 lead on the Warriors before losing the next three games. Together, they could make a move in the Western Conference, provided that the youngest emerging stars — 7-foot centers Steven Adams and Enes Kanter — continue to improve at their rapid pace.
Kanter, 24, was third in the sixth man of the year balloting. Adams, 22, emerged as a bruising, yet agile double-double threat during the playoffs. Shooting guard Andre Roberson, known as a defender, showed promise as a scorer late in the playoffs. Those talented young players could make it tempting to stick around.
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