soonerliberal
02-25-2012, 05:21 PM
Includes some interesting, but accurate comments about OKC:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/wizards/kevin-durant-the-nbas-unassuming-superstar-remembers-his-dc-roots/2012/02/24/gIQAQpB8XR_story.html?hpid=z5
So why Oklahoma? With other players clamoring to jump to big markets, what does an NBA player even do in Oklahoma City?
“We chill,” Durant said. “Play basketball, watch basketball, that sort of thing.”
“Everything’s pretty much closed after 10 o’clock here,” Thunder teammate Royal Ivey said. Sundays are particularly dead, but they’ll usually gather at the Cheesecake Factory or eat at a player’s home. A Dave & Buster’s opened this month, and players say that might be a good place to hang.
Kevin Durant, the NBA’s unassuming superstar, remembers his D.C. roots
View Photo Gallery — From Elgin Baylor and Dave Bing to David Robinson, Grant Hill and Kevin Durant, the Washington, D.C. area has produced a plethora of basketball stars through the years. Here’s a look at some of the area’s top basketball players.
“People always ask us what we do,” said point guard Russell Westbrook, “and my answer is always the same: ‘We win.’ ”
On the northern end of Oklahoma City is an upscale gated community known as Gaillardia. And in one corner of the neighborhood, not far from the golf course’s eighth tee box, is a 3,460-square-foot home that houses Durant and a small cast of visiting family and friends.
The player concedes he thinks about what it’d be like to live and play in a larger city, but Durant says he’s pretty content.
“A big market is something that doesn’t really concern me too much. It’s cool to think about, it’s good for off-the-court deals. But I’m more of a basketball player,” he said. “That’s what I want to be known as. And this is the best place for me to play basketball. I’m glad I’m here.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/wizards/kevin-durant-the-nbas-unassuming-superstar-remembers-his-dc-roots/2012/02/24/gIQAQpB8XR_story.html?hpid=z5
So why Oklahoma? With other players clamoring to jump to big markets, what does an NBA player even do in Oklahoma City?
“We chill,” Durant said. “Play basketball, watch basketball, that sort of thing.”
“Everything’s pretty much closed after 10 o’clock here,” Thunder teammate Royal Ivey said. Sundays are particularly dead, but they’ll usually gather at the Cheesecake Factory or eat at a player’s home. A Dave & Buster’s opened this month, and players say that might be a good place to hang.
Kevin Durant, the NBA’s unassuming superstar, remembers his D.C. roots
View Photo Gallery — From Elgin Baylor and Dave Bing to David Robinson, Grant Hill and Kevin Durant, the Washington, D.C. area has produced a plethora of basketball stars through the years. Here’s a look at some of the area’s top basketball players.
“People always ask us what we do,” said point guard Russell Westbrook, “and my answer is always the same: ‘We win.’ ”
On the northern end of Oklahoma City is an upscale gated community known as Gaillardia. And in one corner of the neighborhood, not far from the golf course’s eighth tee box, is a 3,460-square-foot home that houses Durant and a small cast of visiting family and friends.
The player concedes he thinks about what it’d be like to live and play in a larger city, but Durant says he’s pretty content.
“A big market is something that doesn’t really concern me too much. It’s cool to think about, it’s good for off-the-court deals. But I’m more of a basketball player,” he said. “That’s what I want to be known as. And this is the best place for me to play basketball. I’m glad I’m here.”