Sat
3
Nov
8:45 am

Although Acie had a broken wrist that caused him to miss the first part of his senior season, Law’s performance in the sixteen remaining games in the school’s season earned him first-team Class 5A all-state honors, again, the trademark clutch player. In those crucial sixteen games, Law averaged 16.6 points per game and a good 6.5 assists per game. When it came to the Texas State High School All-Star Game Law scored 35 points, leading Law’s team to victory, all thanks to his clutch game attitude.

The Texas A&M University basketball team has solid reasons for being grateful to Acie Law and vice-versa. Their relationship was mutually beneficial and both parties should acknowledge this connection. For one, before Acie Law became an NBA player in 2007, he was a product of the University’s collegiate basketball team. It is projected that Acie Law will perform well, if not better, in the professional basketball league and credit will be given to his former school for uncovering his potentials in this particular sport. On the part of the school, basketball has never been that popular as it was during the years when Acie Law was part of the roster.

Kevin Durant- a legend in the wings

Kevin Durant is just 19 years old. Despite his age, he is already being talked about as the next National Basketball Association legend. The 6’9 225 forward played one year of collegiate basketball at the University of Texas, and was the second overall draft choice, and his new location is Seattle Washington.

While in high school, Durant was the 2006 Co-MVP of the McDonalds All-American Game(along with Chase Budinger). Then in college, albeit one season, Kevin cleaned house with the awards. Here is a list of Kevin’s awards at the University of Texas:

  • 2007 ESPN All-American
  • 2007 ESPN Player of the Year
  • 2007 NABC Division I Player of the Year
  • 2007 AP Player of the Year (First freshman to do so)
  • 2007 AP All-America 1st Team (unanimous)
  • 2007 Oscar Robertson Trophy
  • 2007 Adolph Rupp Trophy
  • 2007 Naismith Award Winner (First freshman to do so)
  • 2007 John R. Wooden Award All-American Team
  • 2007 John R. Wooden Award Winner
  • Big 12 Rookie of the Week (six times)
  • Big 12 Player of the Week (four times)
  • 2007 Phillips 66 Big 12 Men’s Basketball Awards:
    • Player of the Year
    • Big 12 Freshman of the Year
    • All-Big 12 First Team (unanimous)
    • Big 12 All-Defensive Team
    • Big 12 All-Rookie Team (unanimous)
  • 2007 AP National Player of the Year

If these awards aren’t enough, let’s talk a little more about the phenom. Already signed with Nike, and sports drinks, and trading card companies, Kevin is being thrown around with names like Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, and LeBron James even before lacing his shoes for his first regular season game. At 6 foot 9 inches, Kevin has amazing offensive skills. He has a great mix of talent and size. One negative about Durant his, at times he seems to rely way too much on his jump shot. One thing about the man, he does like to shoot the rock. He’ll get his 20-25 shots a game in, guarantee. That ain’t all bad, especially in Seattle. Another negative about Durant is, right now he seems to be a little weak, but once he gets some pounds packed on him, look for him to go to the boards, and dominate the inside a little bit more.

With little support in Seattle, Durant will be asked to carry his team on a lot of occasions. My guess is KD will average 20-22 points a game, even in his rookie season, but the comparisons to Allen Iverson will be made in regards to his shot amounts. KD will jack up shots. My guess is the man will be a little low in rebounds in his rookie campaign, due to his strength, so we’ll say 6.5 boards, but look for our boy K.D. to be double double material by 09-10.

One thing I do know. Kevin Durant is a star in the making.

- KDCMan

SEATTLE — Kevin Durant refutes the desperate talk here that he is the SuperSonics’ savior as deftly as he launches his smooth jump shot.

“I’m not the only one on the floor playing, you know. I can’t do everything,” the second overall choice in June’s draft said. “So I don’t think it’s all on me. I don’t know why people are saying, ‘Save the organization.”‘

Excuse Kevin Durant for being naive. He’s 19 and only been in town a month.

SuperSonics fans are clinging to any form of hope for an NBA franchise in Seattle on the eve of a season that will be unlike any in the team’s 40-year history.

The day of the opener, Oct. 31, is also the deadline owner Clay Bennett has set to either secure a new arena deal or begin relocating Seattle’s oldest professional team to the tycoon’s hometown of Oklahoma City for the 2008-09 season.

Happy Halloween, Seattle fans. Tricks and no treats.

Instead of trumpeting a new era featuring Kevin Durant, the team’s most anticipated rookie ever and last season’s national college player of the year at Texas, the Sonics are in federal court with city government.

The team is trying to get permission to have an arbitration panel rule on whether it can buy its way out of the final three years of its KeyArena lease, which NBA commissioner David Stern has called the worst in the league for a team’s revenues. In response, the city has sued the Sonics.

A resolution is expected before year’s end. Bennett has until March 1 to meet a league deadline to file for relocation for the following season.

Seattle appears likely to become the third city to lose its NBA team this decade. Vancouver lost the Grizzlies to Memphis in 2001, a year before the Hornets went from Charlotte to New Orleans. Before that, the league hadn’t had a relocation since the Kings fled Kansas City for Sacramento in 1985.

None of those jilted cities had its team even half as long as Seattle has had the Sonics.

Stern had said this summer he believed that Seattle would find a way to keep the team, which claims the city’s only major pro championship. Gus Williams, Dennis Johnson and Jack Sikma won it all in 1979.

But this month, Stern sounded far more pessimistic about the Sonics’ future in Seattle.

“There doesn’t seem to be a lot of movement on a new building,” he said. “We always hope that there will be, (but) the team has started litigation.

“Welcome, again, to NBA 101, which is about lawyers. I don’t want to knock lawyers having been one myself, but it’s not at all pleasant. But hopefully, good things will happen once we throw the ball up in the regular season and it will take people’s minds off of some other sidebars.”

Not likely in Seattle.

Some want to show 11th-hour love to keep the Sonics, even though no viable arena proposal exists to secure the team’s future in the city. Most are apathetic, thanks to the two sports palaces recently built downtown with large public subsidies, for the NFL’s Seahawks and baseball’s Mariners.

The rest want to spurn the team to spite Bennett. Many believe he never intended to keep the Sonics here from the day he bought the team 15 months ago.

Bennett said ticket sales climbed after Kevin Durant was drafted but have since dropped, foreshadowing a possible repeat of last season in which the Sonics said they lost $17 million while going 31-51. As of Thursday, season-ticket packages were available in all price ranges. And Kevin Durant’s Seattle debut has gotten a lukewarm response - tickets remain for the home opener Nov. 1 against Phoenix.

The team is giving away more seats than ever. Season-ticket holders have been given eight free tickets each for use at games in November and December. They got two last season.

“Never in a million years did I envision this would go this long or be this uphill,” said Brian Robinson, a real-estate investor and Sonics season-ticket holder who co-founded Save Our Sonics, a fan organization of about 6,000.

“I want this to be around for my kids to enjoy,” said Robinson, who grew up going to Sonics games with his father. “I have a 7-year-old son that should be all into the team right now, and we have to worry about this.”

Bennett keeps bemoaning a lack of fervor among Seattle officials and residents to keep the team.

Then again, why should fans spend from $430-$4,730 per season ticket, or from $10-$2,000 per game, on a team that is trying to leave? Why, many ask, should I give a dime to Bennett?

“I would implore them to engage in the basketball,” Bennett said. “Come have fun. Bring your friends, your family, your business associates.”

Veteran forward Nick Collison says he loves Seattle and feels the fans’ frustrations. He also acknowledges this is going to be one weird season.

“I guess I understand if they are upset about some of the stuff that’s gone on. But for now, we’re here,” he said. “You don’t know what the future will hold, but come on out and watch basketball. … If we play well, then we’ll be fun to watch. And people will come out.”

The Sonics player with the closest ties to region is starting point guard Luke Ridnour, who grew up in Washington and starred at the University of Oregon.

Entering his fifth season, he is currently the longest tenured Sonic. Whether he’s at the gym, the grocery store or just with friends, the questions are the same.

“Yeah, every single day. It’s not ‘How’s practice going?’ It’s ‘Are you guys leaving?”‘ Ridnour said.

“This is a city that has had basketball here forever. It’s been a great basketball city. Me being from here, obviously it’s a great situation. And you definitely want to be around.”

Call Ridnour a native optimist.

“I think we’re going to be here,” he said. “I think there will always be Sonics basketball here.”

Collison was born in Iowa and starred at Kansas. He would seem to be the most amenable of the Sonics to a move to the heartland.

“Nah, not really. This is my home now. I love it out here,” said the newly married Collison. “I’ve been here four years now. So I’m not looking forward to leaving. Hopefully, they’ll find a way to get it done here. That would be my preference.”

Robinson’s too.

“Clay Bennett may own the title to the team,” Robinson said, “but this team is part of the fabric of the community.”

He remains hopeful that Stern will step in to broker an arena deal. Maybe one that would require more of the Sonics’ cash and less than the $400 million in public money that Bennett proposed in April during a failed arena presentation to the state Legislature.

“David Stern is not going to waste Kevin Durant’s first three years in a litigious situation,” Robinson said.

He sounded more hopeful than convinced.

Sat
20
Oct
6:07 pm

Earl Watson, Wilkins, Durant, Nick Collison and Swift will start against the Lakers, and it’s likely Wilkins will be assigned to Bryant. Wilkins practiced Wednesday after sitting out Tuesday’s scrimmage because of a sprained right ankle.

According to “The Sports Network” Kevin Durant is the #7 guy to watch this season.
7. KEVIN DURANT (SEATTLE SUPERSONICS) - On draft night, the SuperSonics grabbed multi-talented Kevin Durant of Texas with the second overall pick. Durant was the most talented offensive player in the draft and is expected to make an immediate impact.

The 6-9 Durant looks like he is going to start out his career playing shooting guard. He can drain threes, is tough to guard off the dribble and knows how to create his own shot. Using Durant at guard will definitely cause matchup problems for Seattle’s opponents. Look for huge numbers offensively from the Texas product and expect to see plenty of Durant jerseys being worn in the crowd.

Tue
16
Oct
9:31 pm

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Tue
16
Oct
9:24 pm

CLEVELAND: Somewhat thin and baby-faced, Kevin Durant doesn’t much resemble LeBron James physically at the same age, but the Seattle SuperSonics rookie is the closest thing the NBA has seen in five years.

Kevin Durant has the same superstar potential, preseason media hype, millions from Nike and sports drink and trading card endorsement deals and even a spot on a potentially dreadful team. He quietly breezed through town during the weekend. while most fans were focused on the Indians, which was just fine with him. That will likely being an exception.

As when James was a rookie for a shaky Cavs outfit in 2003, intrigued fans and media are likely to flock to him to make their initial judgments even if they are premature. Especially with No. 1 overall pick Greg Oden, out for the season with a knee injury, not there to share the spotlight.

”I don’t think he likes the attention, but he can’t control that,” said Sonics coach P.J. Carlesimo, a veteran hired in large part to groom Kevin Durant and fellow top-5 draft pick Jeff Green. Carlesimo’s role is not unlike the role veteran coach Paul Silas was hired to perform when James arrived.

”He doesn’t want to be different,” Carlesimo said.

Oh, but he is. At 6-foot-9 with well developed offensive skills for his age, Kevin Durant’s mixture of talent and size makes him the sort of prospect scouts dream about. He’s still maybe a little too reliant on the jumper and does like to shoot a lot he took 22 shots in 23 minutes against the Cavs. But when he gains a little weight and learns to play inside and out, he could be dominant offensively.

”He’s going to be one of the premier players in this league once he learns the game,” James said. ”He’s got all the tools you need to be a leader.”

James got to know Kevin Durant during the summer, when the Sonics rookie spent several weeks in training camp with Team USA. He and James immediately struck up a relationship and have been talking by phone.

”I’ve talked to LeBron a lot,” Kevin Durant said. ”He’s told me to try to take my rookie year in stride, to try to have fun.”

”I’m open to him. When he wants advice, I give it to him,” James said. ”I was never a guy who wanted to reach out when I was a rookie. I wanted to do my own thing. But he’s got my number, and I’ve answered the phone whenever he’s called.”

James’ advice likely is less fundamental and more philosophical. Kevin Durant will learn on his own how to defend the NBA pick-and-roll or how much to tip the bellhops in New York. But dealing with a ‘’savior of the franchise” tag is a little more complex.

In the midst of a battle over an arena, the Sonics and new owner Clay Bennett appear intent on moving to Oklahoma City as soon as possible. There was more stability with the Cavs when James arrived, but coming off the worst attendance year in the NBA, the Cavs were in significant trouble.

When James showed up, he tried to deflect such responsibility. During the first weeks of that year, whenever he was asked, he always said the Cavs were ”Ricky Davis’ team, not mine.” Everyone knew it was a political answer Davis was shipped out six weeks into the season but it was also understandable why James took that respectful path.

Kevin Durant, perhaps on the advice of others, is taking the same position.

”I don’t think I’m the face of the franchise like everybody has been saying or the go-to guy,” Kevin Durant said. ”I don’t think I’m going to be the star. I just want to play within the flow of the team.”

When the Sonics learned they’d be assured of getting Kevin Durant or Greg Oden at the draft lottery, they traded All-Star Ray Allen and did not re-sign All-Star Rashard Lewis. That makes Kevin Durant the certified franchise player, which he knows.

So was James when he was a rookie, which Kevin Durant knows. So it isn’t surprising Kevin Durant would like to follow in James’ initial path, both with his play and with how he attempts to deflect all the hype.

”I remember how well LeBron played as a rookie,” Kevin Durant said. ”I don’t know if I can play as well as he did.”

Around the NBA

Several league sources said Cavs General Manager Danny Ferry went to Brazil last week to meet with unsigned forward Anderson Varejao. The Cavs were careful not to let word of the meeting leak out, and no one from either side was willing to talk about it. If there was any progress, it was minimal; the holdout continues. With the Cavs and Ferry in China all week, it is doubtful there will be a resolution soon. Varejao is believed to have been working out in his hometown of Vitoria.

Want to make an NBA GM sweat? Get his boss talking. Some owners say nothing, some say way too much. Last week, Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss turned a quiet training camp stormy when he told reporters that he would be willing to trade Kobe Bryant. Before that, the Kobe Bryant trade talk had all but died, but now it is re-enveloping the team. Meanwhile in Utah, Jazz owner Larry H. Miller started talking about the contract he wanted to sign guard Deron Williams to next summer.

”If he keeps making the kind of progress he’s making, I couldn’t look him in the eye and tell him it was fair that he wasn’t a max player,” Miller told the Salt Lake Tribune. No matter what happens this season, you don’t suppose his agent will bring that to the bargaining table, do you?

During the summer, Sonics part-owner Aubrey McClendon was fined $250,000 for telling the media: ”We didn’t buy the team to keep it in Seattle.”

There has been speculation recently that the Minnesota Timberwolves got better offers for Kevin Garnett than the one they took from the Boston Celtics. Only a few people in Minneapolis know if it is true. The Timberwolves said they wanted young players, expiring contracts and draft picks in the rebuilding trade. The Celtics gave them all three. The five players making about $19 million sent to the Timberwolves could all be off the books by next summer if they wanted, but they’ll be keeping several, especially centerpiece Al Jefferson. Plus, there were two first-round picks in the deal, a provision few teams could offer.

Certainly more established players were offered to the Wolves to help them right away, but that wasn’t what they wanted. Maybe the Wolves could’ve done better by moving quicker and making the deal for picks in this draft. Perhaps those were mistakes, perhaps not. But the Celtics appeared to be the only team that had everything the Wolves wanted at that exact point in time, even if looks like history might not remember it that way.

Brian Windhorst can be reached at bwindhor@thebeaconjournal.com. Read his blog at http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/cavs/.

CLEVELAND: Somewhat thin and baby-faced, Kevin Durant doesn’t much resemble LeBron James physically at the same age, but the Seattle SuperSonics rookie is the closest thing the NBA has seen in five years.

Kevin Durant has the same superstar potential, preseason media hype, millions from Nike and sports drink and trading card endorsement deals and even a spot on a potentially dreadful team. He quietly breezed through town during the weekend. while most fans were focused on the Indians, which was just fine with him. That will likely being an exception.

As when James was a rookie for a shaky Cavs outfit in 2003, intrigued fans and media are likely to flock to him to make their initial judgments even if they are premature. Especially with No. 1 overall pick Greg Oden, out for the season with a knee injury, not there to share the spotlight.

”I don’t think he likes the attention, but he can’t control that,” said Sonics coach P.J. Carlesimo, a veteran hired in large part to groom Kevin Durant and fellow top-5 draft pick Jeff Green. Carlesimo’s role is not unlike the role veteran coach Paul Silas was hired to perform when James arrived.

”He doesn’t want to be different,” Carlesimo said.

Oh, but he is. At 6-foot-9 with well developed offensive skills for his age, Kevin Durant’s mixture of talent and size makes him the sort of prospect scouts dream about. He’s still maybe a little too reliant on the jumper and does like to shoot a lot he took 22 shots in 23 minutes against the Cavs. But when he gains a little weight and learns to play inside and out, he could be dominant offensively.

”He’s going to be one of the premier players in this league once he learns the game,” James said. ”He’s got all the tools you need to be a leader.”

James got to know Kevin Durant during the summer, when the Sonics rookie spent several weeks in training camp with Team USA. He and James immediately struck up a relationship and have been talking by phone.

”I’ve talked to LeBron a lot,” Kevin Durant said. ”He’s told me to try to take my rookie year in stride, to try to have fun.”

”I’m open to him. When he wants advice, I give it to him,” James said. ”I was never a guy who wanted to reach out when I was a rookie. I wanted to do my own thing. But he’s got my number, and I’ve answered the phone whenever he’s called.”

James’ advice likely is less fundamental and more philosophical. Kevin Durant will learn on his own how to defend the NBA pick-and-roll or how much to tip the bellhops in New York. But dealing with a ‘’savior of the franchise” tag is a little more complex.

In the midst of a battle over an arena, the Sonics and new owner Clay Bennett appear intent on moving to Oklahoma City as soon as possible. There was more stability with the Cavs when James arrived, but coming off the worst attendance year in the NBA, the Cavs were in significant trouble.

When James showed up, he tried to deflect such responsibility. During the first weeks of that year, whenever he was asked, he always said the Cavs were ”Ricky Davis’ team, not mine.” Everyone knew it was a political answer Davis was shipped out six weeks into the season but it was also understandable why James took that respectful path.

Kevin Durant, perhaps on the advice of others, is taking the same position.

”I don’t think I’m the face of the franchise like everybody has been saying or the go-to guy,” Kevin Durant said. ”I don’t think I’m going to be the star. I just want to play within the flow of the team.”

When the Sonics learned they’d be assured of getting Kevin Durant or Greg Oden at the draft lottery, they traded All-Star Ray Allen and did not re-sign All-Star Rashard Lewis. That makes Kevin Durant the certified franchise player, which he knows.

So was James when he was a rookie, which Kevin Durant knows. So it isn’t surprising Kevin Durant would like to follow in James’ initial path, both with his play and with how he attempts to deflect all the hype.

”I remember how well LeBron played as a rookie,” Kevin Durant said. ”I don’t know if I can play as well as he did.”

Sun
14
Oct
12:08 pm

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Who else is ready for Durant and the Sonics 2007-2008 season opener? We are! Check back here from now until opening night for ALL the details on the 2007-08 season!

Go Durant!

Fri
24
Aug
9:13 am

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