Durant to have another surgery, miss rest of season | Inquirer Sports

Durant to have another surgery, miss rest of season

/ 09:26 AM March 28, 2015

FILE - In this March 4, 2015, file photo, injured Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant, center, watches from the bench with guard D.J. Augustin, right, and assistant coach Mark Bryant, left, during the first quarter of an NBA basketball game against the Philadelphia 76ers in Oklahoma City. Durant will have bone graft surgery next week to deal with a fractured bone in his right foot, and he will miss the rest of the season, the Oklahoma City Thunder announced Friday, March 27, 2015. AP PHOTO

FILE – In this March 4, 2015, file photo, injured Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant, center, watches from the bench with guard D.J. Augustin, right, and assistant coach Mark Bryant, left, during the first quarter of an NBA basketball game against the Philadelphia 76ers in Oklahoma City. Durant will have bone graft surgery next week to deal with a fractured bone in his right foot, and he will miss the rest of the season, the Oklahoma City Thunder announced Friday, March 27, 2015. AP PHOTO

OKLAHOMA CITY — NBA MVP Kevin Durant will miss the rest of the season and have bone graft surgery next week to treat a fractured bone in his right foot.

The Oklahoma City Thunder said last week he likely would be shut down for the season. The team was trying to figure out why his pain remained long after he was supposed to be able to play.

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General manager Sam Presti said Friday the team expects Durant to return to basketball activities within four-to-six months.

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He said this decision was aimed at Durant’s “long-term health and stability” and represented a consensus of Durant and his representatives, specialists and the team. The procedure was termed the “most proactive and recommended approach.”

The Thunder are in position to make the playoffs without Durant, but they clearly will miss one of the game’s most dynamic players. Durant last played Feb. 19 before the discomfort became too much to bear. He has played in just 27 games, averaging 25.4 points, 6.6 rebounds and 4.1 assists.

Durant had his initial surgery in October and had been healing well. But in late February, he had a procedure to replace a screw that was rubbing against another bone. After that second surgery, the Thunder expected him to return in one or two weeks.

Durant then consulted with three foot and ankle specialists. It was determined there still was pain from the rubbing, plus regression in the initial break. It was then decided to proceed with the bone graft, Presti said.

A week ago, Presti said Durant was struggling and the team did not want to rush him back. When asked if it would be best to end Durant’s season, Presti said: “Essentially, that’s the direction that we’re taking right now.”

Presti said the bone graft is a common procedure to fix the less than 10 percent of such foot operations that don’t work out.

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“While everyone is disappointed that Kevin falls into that group, we are encouraged that the bone graft procedure has historically demonstrated long-term health and stability,” Presti said.

The Thunder entered Friday three games ahead of Phoenix for the No. 8 spot in the Western Conference standings. Point guard Russell Westbrook has emerged as an MVP candidate. He leads the league with 27.3 points per game while averaging 8.7 assists and 7.1 rebounds.

The Thunder also are without forward Serge Ibaka, who could miss the rest of the season with a knee injury, and shooting guard Andre Roberson, who has been out with a sprained left ankle. Westbrook and center Steven Adams also have missed significant stretches with injuries.

The addition of forward/center Enes Kanter at the trade deadline has been especially helpful. He is averaging 17.6 points and 10.8 rebounds since the move.

Golden State coach Steve Kerr, whose team could face the Thunder in the playoffs, said he is impressed with the way Oklahoma City has remained competitive.

“Oklahoma City has just had one of those years where it seems like everybody has gone down at some point,” he said. “They’ve done an amazing job of hanging in there. They made a good trade at the break, obviously hoping that guys eventually would come back and be healthy, but it just hasn’t gone their way this year. They’ve continued to fight, and Westbrook has had an amazing year.”

Kerr said the league needs Durant.

“I always hate hearing when anybody gets injured and is out, especially somebody like Kevin who is just so good for the league and gracious and such an incredible example for the league,” Kerr said. “Those guys, when they go down, it hurts even more.”

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Thunder prepare to play without MVP Kevin Durant

TAGS: Injury, Kevin Durant, NBA, OKC, Oklahoma City Thunder, Surgery

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