Kevin Durant: Tony Allen Is In My Head

Big Boss

Veteran
Joined
Sep 26, 2012
Messages
188,992
Reputation
15,225
Daps
370,250
Reppin
NULL
OKLAHOMA CITY -- By his own admission, Kevin Durant has let Tony Allen into his head.

A few days ago, Durant became annoyed when it was suggested that Allen might be affecting him a little. The presumptive MVP defiantly said he was not being shut down. But some of the worst shooting games of his playoff career have brought some reflection and humility.

After that first step of acknowledging it, Durant is now trying to deal with it.

As he collected himself before Tuesday's vital Game 5 in the tied Oklahoma City Thunder-Memphis Grizzlies mini-drama, Durant said he's got to stop worrying about where Allen is -- whether that be on Durant's hip, behind his back or even in his face.

Durant's focus has been getting blurred by Allen, which is not only the highest achievement a defender can hope for against a player trying to manage Durant's talent but also a huge factor in how this series has played out.

"I'm worrying about a guy coming from behind trying to block the shot," Durant said. "I've just got to focus in on the rim and my shot. I can't go out there and think too much, I have to let my instincts take over."

Durant shot just 35 percent in Games 2-4, all of which went to overtime. His offensive slump has significantly reduced the Thunder's margin for error. Rock bottom, he hopes, was his 5-of-21 shooting in Game 4.

Statistics speak for themselves. But even before Durant admitted the Grizzlies' ace defender was harassing him out of his comfort zone, there were some signs. Durant appears to have fallen into a habit of short-arming his release a bit. His high and smooth stroke seemed at times to become shorter and jerky during Game 4. As did his balance, where it seemed he often wasn't able to get into that trademark form on his takeoff.

Allen has fought through so many screens to crowd Durant, kept so close to him when he's just standing off the ball and become such a pest at denying passes headed Durant's way that it has the scoring champ flustered.

"I'm not being disciplined enough in my shot," Durant said. "I'm either pulling it back too quick or shooting too quick."

The most classic example of what Allen has been doing to Durant might've come in Game 3. In the final seconds of regulation, the Thunder had the ball on the side with 2.7 seconds left. Coach Scott Brooks drew up a nice play to get Durant the ball, running him around two screens as he dashed toward the sideline to get the inbound.

Allen beat the first screen but Serge Ibaka caught him on the second and Durant broke free to catch the pass cleanly and with space to move. Despite having time to catch and square up, perhaps even take a dribble for rhythm, Durant immediately grabbed the ball and shot without fully looking. The result was a bad miss -- he didn't even get the rim -- and the Grizzlies ended up with an overtime they'd eventually win.

Allen wasn't even on him and yet the tenacious defense played that night had forced Durant to rush the important shot.

"[Allen] knows his role and he wants to do it very well," Brooks said. "But I like the shots that Kevin has been getting. He got shots all over the floor and that's one of the things we've wanted to do, spread his looks around the floor."

Brooks said his film review told him that 18 of Durant's 21 shots in Game 4 were what he called "good looks." The implication is that the offense is working and the plays and actions the Thunder are running are getting Durant free from Allen often enough.

Brooks' belief -- and this is a reasonable expectation -- is that those good looks will eventually turn into a Durant turnaround. But that thinking is predicated upon the belief that Durant is executing at his baseline level and the averages correct themselves. As this series has worn on, though, Durant has slowly been pulling away from his typical zone.

So that is what Durant seems to be concentrating on, getting back to that confidence that he has developed when he rose to MVP level this season. He has played against Allen numerous times in his career; this is the third time he has faced him in a playoff series.

He knows how to do it and, frankly, he expects to.

"I'm just staying confident and not reading media or looking at Twitter or Instagram and keeping my mind right," Durant said. "I think before a breakthrough you can go through a tough period so I always put the work in and I have to trust in it."



2014 NBA playoffs: Kevin Durant trying to get Tony Allen out of his head - ESPN
 

No..Money..Mo..Problems

it is what it is
Joined
Mar 16, 2013
Messages
17,225
Reputation
-2,976
Daps
47,731
Reppin
Worldwide
All that efficiency bullshyt doesn't matter anymore does it -- Tony Allen could not stop Kobe like this or Melo.

:usure:breh, last time I checked Durant was a better scorer than both of them. Melo might have a slightly better chance because of his strength in the post but lets be real all of these dude would struggle just like Durant is. Why you think the Griz gave a SG who can't shoot and misses layups on a consistent bases a 4 yr 20 mil deal?
 

Broke Wave

The GOAT
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
18,704
Reputation
4,580
Daps
44,606
Reppin
Open Society Foundation
:usure:breh, last time I checked Durant was a better scorer than both of them. Melo might have a slightly better chance because of his strength in the post but lets be real all of these dude would struggle just like Durant is.
Last time you checked huh :laff: Check again nikka

Durant is an amazing player but his obviously glaring weakness here is he cant abuse a shorter smaller defender in the post. Therefore all that efficiency crap they were talking about all year doesn't matter when a team has the ability to take you totally out of the game with one adjustment. Kobe is less efficient than Durant but do you have any idea what Kobe would do to this nikka in the low post with all those post ups :comeon:
 

keepemup

Banned
Joined
Jun 9, 2012
Messages
4,740
Reputation
-1,008
Daps
5,345
IMO it's good for him to let it. It shows humility and that he's not scared of addressing the issue. I believe that Durant will have an outstanding game tonight.
 

No..Money..Mo..Problems

it is what it is
Joined
Mar 16, 2013
Messages
17,225
Reputation
-2,976
Daps
47,731
Reppin
Worldwide
Last time you checked huh :laff: Check again nikka

Durant is an amazing player but his obviously glaring weakness here is he cant abuse a shorter smaller defender in the post. Therefore all that efficiency crap they were talking about all year doesn't matter when a team has the ability to take you totally out of the game with one adjustment. Kobe is less efficient than Durant but do you have any idea what Kobe would do to this nikka in the low post with all those post ups :comeon:

He would still get his 25-30 points but dude would have to take 30 shots. All 3 of these dudes efficiency would plummet if they played this Griz team in the playoffs. It's not just Allen who's giving Durant a hard time it's the entire Grizzlies team. Everywhere he goes there shading him you think they not gonna do the same against Tobe and Melo?
 
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
18,099
Reputation
-412
Daps
58,774
Reppin
NULL
All that efficiency bullshyt doesn't matter anymore does it -- Tony Allen could not stop Kobe like this or Melo.

old ass Kobe with shot knees lit him up in 2010.

what does kobe have to do with this discussion...melo too?

next somebody will bring up lebron...and really ruin what could be a good thread
 
Top