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Why Kevin Durant’s ultimatum to Nets requires just a one-word response from owner Joe Tsai

Kevin Durant’s achievements include: He’s not afraid to go to his mattress.

But let admiration, awe, or understanding stop there.Durant’s moves reportedly this week brooklyn nets Lie down with owner Joe Tsai me or them ultimatum It’s the latest evidence that the only thing Durant does better than basketball is his incredible talent for turning tone-deafness into an art form.

He is a diva May Care. And Tsai has to say the same words Nets general manager Sean Marks said to this guy, as we suggested here when news of Durant’s trade request first surfaced. .

No, Kevin, you are not responsible.

No, Kevin, we’re not blowing up our team, trading you, or – cuing Durant’s latest power play – firing every adult in the room. Reaction to difficulties.

Durant reportedly told Nets owners in London that they would have to trade him or fire head coaches Steve Nash and Marks.

As Shams Charania reported to The Athletic, Durant is “transparent and professional,” not an explanation for the supposed mood of a strong confab. All of this has happened, including the timing and tone of this news story, because Durant has made it a habit too often for him to be neither transparent nor professional.

You don’t need to be a rocket scientist to read this article from world-class NBA newsbreaker Charania. Charania is sometimes transparent and speculative about its willingness to water sources that enable them to provide such accurate and valuable information. Durant or those close to him leaked the report in exchange for casting all this in a favorable light.

As such, KD’s latest me-me-me-me move is marketed as an on-board power broker who handles such difficulties with calm maturity. Just don’t buy it.

Get rid of the payoff that is the heart of breaking sports news. “I don’t believe in team direction” really goes like this:

Like: Durant asked for a trade, Marks said no, and the superstar, unfamiliar with the word, responded with next-level moves. You know, despite the details that just one year before the Tsai conference, Durant signed his four-year, $198 million contract extension.

Durant isn’t just saying keep me or keep me. He says that no matter how the Newsbreaker tries to present his latest diva demands, either trade him or make him the boss.

You see, Durant is an otherworldly talent and a dedicated basketball player. His talent is nothing short of miraculous, and his love of the game is evident. He’s also by all accounts a great guy when he doesn’t go full diva. Talented, dedicated, hungry, kind, interesting, insightful, and full of petty grievances and anxieties.

This is not to say Durant is a bad person. Many of the greatest players of all time are very twisted and want to be GMs.Tsai, look west los angeles lakers And then there’s one LeBron James as a real-time, real-time reminder.

To trade Durant (at the right price) or not. Trust him or decide enough is enough. But last year was tough, so don’t let Durant burn it all down. Don’t let him hold you hostage because he didn’t give in to demanding a deal that would ravage the Nets without a fair return. Don’t let him end the run of a Hall of Famer who deserves more time to show what he can and can’t do as a head coach.

This is scorched. Things got worse, let me go. You don’t just let me go, you fire everyone. I’m not going to fire everyone. It’s time for a public news bomb pressure campaign.

That’s the other part of this.

It’s hard to believe that Tsai and those around him would entertain the thought of leaking this news. Nets owners don’t have to exploit themselves by leaking blockbuster news to put pressure on themselves. he is the decision maker. So, given that this report from Shams is from Durant and those around him, it’s very clear, especially given Durant’s rosy presentation about doomsday, that KD will be out in 24 hours. , asked Tsai to fire Nash and Marks, in an attempt to publicly pressure Tsai to do so.

It’s a tantrum. Or hardball baseball. or both. Either way, it’s bad business. One word remains in the responseEither trade generational talent like KD for less than you want, or fire GMs who don’t, along with his handpicked head coaches.

No.

no Kevin.

No.

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