Rising star: Kevin Durant’s rookie year through the eyes of Seattle’s basketball figures

Every chance he gets, Kevin Durant talks glowingly about Seattle. He said recently that he wants to be part of the franchise in the future. (And Seattle’s mayor hinted that the team could be back soon .) Many in the city would welcome Durant back …

Every chance he gets, Kevin Durant talks glowingly about Seattle. He said recently that he wants to be part of the franchise in the future. (And Seattle’s mayor hinted that the team could be back soon.) Many in the city would welcome Durant back with open arms. Maybe the team would even retire his jersey, even though he only played for it for a single season in 2007-08.

Below, we talked with a number of Seattle basketball figures to get their take on Durant’s rookie year, from the promise of his early career to the devastation from his departure months later:

Ray Allen on the role of NIL in the NCAA: ‘I’m glad I didn’t have to deal with that’

For The Win spoke with Ray Allen about the current state of college hoops.

Few individuals on the planet have enjoyed as much success on the basketball court as Ray Allen.

The two-time NBA champion and Olympic gold medalist is a 10-time All-Star who was recently named as one of the NBA’s 75 greatest players of all time. Allen held the NBA’s record for most 3-pointers made in a career with 2,973 until Stephen Curry broke surpassed him in 2021.

During his time in the pros, Allen saw a little bit of everything and was able to offer some of his insights about his experience during the NBA’s Rookie Transition Program back in July.

For The Win caught up with Allen to discuss the program, the state of college basketball and more.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Bob Whitsitt: ‘On my watch, no Trail Blazer ever went to jail’

If you were a fan of the NBA in the 1990s and early aughts, the name Bob Whitsitt probably rings a bell. Dubbed ‘Trader Bob’, Whitsitt was instrumental in transforming the Supersonics and Trail Blazers into powerhouses in the Western Conference. He …

If you were a fan of the NBA in the 1990s and early aughts, the name Bob Whitsitt probably rings a bell. Dubbed ‘Trader Bob’, Whitsitt was instrumental in transforming the Supersonics and Trail Blazers into powerhouses in the Western Conference. He was the one who drafted Shawn Kemp and then Gary Payton the following year to set Seattle up to contend for years.

Whitsitt is coming out with his own book, Game Changer: An Insider’s Story of the Sonics’ Resurgence, the Trail Blazers’ Turnaround, and the Deal that Saved the Seahawks, which is set to be released on October 10, 2023, and goes into detail about his experiences as a basketball executive. Whitsitt talked with HoopsHype about his nickname ‘Trader Bob’, his thoughts on the Damian Lillard situation, Seattle as a potential expansion team, and more.

A new arena guarantees the Thunder’s tenure in OKC will outlast the Sonics’ in Seattle

A new arena will help future generations of NBA fans view the Thunder as its own NBA franchise without the Seattle baggage involved.

Another milestone was achieved on Tuesday for a potential new arena the Oklahoma City Thunder would call home.

OKC Mayor David Holt unveiled the details of Paycom Center’s successor, but an important temporary one-cent sales tax vote remains to be decided. If the vote on Dec. 12 approves the extension of the sales tax, then arena plans will be finalized.

The new arena is expected to cost at least $900 million and is planned to open by the 2029-30 season. The Thunder will sign a 25-year lease once the building is open and that will keep them in OKC beyond 2050.

If everything goes to plan, a new arena will guarantee the Thunder’s tenure in OKC will outlast the Supersonics’ tenure in Seattle.

By 2050, the Thunder will have played 42 years in OKC since their arrival in 2008. The Sonics were only in Seattle for 41 years, from 1967 to 2008.

A pretty interesting fact considering how some circles within the NBA community still view the Thunder as foreign and unwelcome considering how OKC acquired them.

By the time a new arena opens, maybe both sides can have their way. There’s been talks over the last several years of the NBA expanding soon and Seattle is always listed as one of the top preferred choices for fans.

The Sonics returning to Seattle as an expansion team could cool the animosity between both franchises.

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Tyler Lockett wants to be a part of owning a Seattle NBA team

Seahawks wide receiver Tyler Lockett is pretty well-prepared for the day when he eventually has to retire from the NFL.

Seahawks wide receiver Tyler Lockett is pretty well-prepared for the day when he eventually has to retire from the NFL. In addition to running a growing real estate business in the Seattle area, Lockett is eager to add other items to his post-football portfolio.

Yesterday on Twitter, Lockett responded to a Steph Curry quote on the NBA returning to Seattle, saying he’d want to be a part of any ownership group for an expansion team.

Seattle’s greatest sports heartbreak remains the SuperSonics leaving town for Oklahoma City, an even more traumatic blow than the ending of Super Bowl 49. In the years since, Seattle has proven time and again and again that there’s a robust sports market here – perhaps the most-robust on the west coast. It seems like only a matter of time before the NBA returns to Seattle and it would be great to see Lockett and other Seahawks sports legends participating in ownership.

As for his day-job, Lockett has posted at least 950 receiving yards and eight touchdowns for five years running. This coming season will be his ninth in the NFL. Lockett’s current contract has him locked up through 2025.

More Seahawks Wire stories

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Geno Smith channels MJ energy after ESPN’s QB rankings come out

Not only did Smith miss out on the top 10, he didn’t get an honorable mention or even a single vote.

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Michael Jordan turned being cut by his high school varsity basketball team into becoming the greatest, most celebrated athlete in human history. Once he’d reached the apex of his sport, Jordan sometimes imagined slights in order to keep himself motivated.

Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith doesn’t have to make any slights up, though – as his game is being disrespected even after a strong 2022 season. Today ESPN shared their top 10 quarterbacks, as polled by NFL coaches, scouts and executives. Not only did Smith miss out on the top 10, he didn’t get an honorable mention or even a single vote.

A short time later, Smith shared the famous Jordan laughing at his Ipad GIF from The Last Dance.

 

While it’s ridiculous that he didn’t even get a single vote, Smith can help his case by cutting down on turnovers. He threw for over 4,000 yards and 30 touchdown passes, but Smith also ended the season with 11 picks and eight fumbles – several of which came in the red zone in crunch time. We think that some analysts are letting those examples color their commentary on his game a bit too much – but it’s not difficult to see why most of them are not as high on Smith as the average Seahawks fan.

For what it’s worth, we did our best to balance it all and in the end we had Smith ranked No. 10 in the league at his position.

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Bill Simmons suggests Seattle should look into buying the Thunder back from OKC

“What does Clay Bennett do if Seattle just offers him like $5 billion for the team?”

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After enjoying a season of unexpected success with the youngest team in the league, the Oklahoma City Thunder have caught the attention of the national media.

The recent return of Chet Holmgren — who missed the entire 2022-23 season due to a Lisfranc injury — has put OKC in the spotlight once again over the last week in summer league.

The Ringer’s Bill Simmons took the opportunity to talk about the Thunder in his latest podcast episode, where he praised the best young core in the league in his opinion and then offered an interesting take about the franchise.

Simmons threw out the idea that perhaps Seattle can swoop in and regain the franchise after previously losing the Thunder to OKC in 2008. He cites the recent arena talks as a reason why this could happen, believing OKC is not willing to fund a new arena with taxpayer money.

“I was thinking if Chet is as good as some of our Ringer people thought he was — potentially — but also just how he’s looking in these clips. Can you think of what OKC had last year, where they just were like super small-ball? They had no big guys. But everybody played (really) hard and everybody rebounded and they were able to still go .500 somehow and SGA was unbelievable.

But now they have SGA, Jalen Williams, Josh Giddey and hopefully Chet — which is the best young nucleus in the league if Chet’s good. It just is… (If I can) have any four under-27 (year old) guys on one team, you’d probably pick those four. There’s a chance he might be as impactful as Wemby in the first couple of years anyway.

I hate to start (crap), but you know, OKC did steal a team from somebody else. This is the smallest market in the league. They have the smallest arena in the league… Google ‘Oklahoma City Thunder arena lease.’ Go Google all that stuff. It’s been a story there for a couple of years. They want the taxpayers to pay for a new stadium. They want to keep the team and the lease I think was up this year. They did a little three-year short lease extension.

But I just wonder — again, I hate starting (crap) — but I just wonder, you had the Bucks being valued at $3.5 billion (and) you have Phoenix at $4 billion. What happens to this team when they have all these young assets?

Like if I’m in Seattle, and I don’t know if I’m gonna be able to get an expansion team anytime soon, because you know, I still think Seattle and Vegas are gonna be the expansion teams if/when it happens, but what if you get a little (anxious) in Seattle? You look at that OKC team with the assets they built, you have the lineage of they played in Seattle once upon a time anyway.

What does Clay Bennett, who owns that team, they have a couple of other owners — one of them the Chesapeake, whatever the hell that was, they’ve fallen on some hard times, to say the least. What does Clay Bennett do if Seattle just offers him like $5 billion for the team? ‘We’ll take it, here’s $5 billion.’ What does the NBA do? And what happens if OKC wants to do it? What is the value of that team in a small market vs. a big market? And what if somebody just says (screw) it and overpays?

That’s how you get stuff. That’s how Ballmer got the Clippers, remember? Back in the day, it was like, ‘Oh my god. Ballmer, the Clippers are probably worth $1-3 billion and he’s like, ‘No they’re actually worth two.”

That’s how it played out and what happens if somebody comes at them? If I was a rich dude — like a crazy multi-billionaire, I would just want to go buy a team (type of) guy — I would start kicking the tires hard with OKC.”

OKC Mayor David Holt first brought up the possibility of the Thunder getting a new arena last July, citing it would secure the long-term future of the franchise.

“Here’s the bottom line — the NBA has changed our city forever. The vast majority of our residents know that and want that relationship to continue,” Holt said. “That facts speak plainly that we can never rest on our laurels and must always be proactive. I am extremely optimistic that we can and will secure a long-term relationship with the NBA because we have great partners in the Oklahoma City Thunder and the time to open that dialogue is now.”

In his end-of-season press conference in April, Thunder general manager Sam Presti deferred the new arena conversation to Holt, essentially saying the ball is in their court for the next steps.

“I commend him because he’s thinking forward about the future of the city, and I think that’s what’s driving his focus on that,” Presti said. “But I don’t want to talk about that without — he’s the one that needs to speak about it, I think.”

The Thunder’s current short-term lease with Paycom Center ends in 2026.

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On this day: OKC acquires the Thunder from Seattle

After agreeing on a settlement with Seattle, the Sonics officially were on the move to OKC.

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On this day in 2008, Oklahoma City acquired its first professional sports franchise.

Fifteen years ago, the Seattle Supersonics were officially relocated to OKC and rebranded the Oklahoma City Thunder. Seattle and Thunder owner Clay Bennett agreed on a $75 million settlement to opt out of the team’s lease for KeyArena early.

Bennett purchased the Supersonics in Oct. 2006 from Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz. After failing to come to an agreement on a new arena, Bennett moved the Thunder to his home state less than two years later.

The Thunder played their first season in OKC during the 2008-09 season. Since then, they’ve been one of the more successful NBA franchises under the helm of general manager Sam Presti.

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Former Boston point guard Gary Payton, Sr. believes an NBA return to Seattle is coming soon

“”I think we have got a good chance of getting (an NBA team in Seattle) back in 2025-26,” said Payton.

Quite a few members of the wider Boston Celtics family have ties to the Pacific Northwest, from Bill Russell, Dennis Johnson and Bill Walton up to Isaiah Thomas, Avery Bradley and many others.

With rumbles of expansion rippling through the league and Commissioner Adam Silver strongly hinting that adding teams to the NBA is just beyond the process of wrapping up a new media rights deal, a return of the NBA to the state of Washington seems the most logical next step to take.

One person interested in seeing a revived Seattle SuperSonics franchise is former Celtics defensive menace Gary Payton, Sr., who recently spoke with Sports Illustrated’s Landon Buford about such a prospect and Silver’s words to such an end. “Silver is great as a commissioner, he knows what he’s talking about,” related Payton.

“We have already done the collective bargaining agreement; now we have to deal with the TV deal, which will be next year,” he continued.

“I think we have got a good chance of getting (an NBA team in Seattle) back in 2025-26, and it will be there,” the former Celtics guard suggested.

“I’m not worried about that. I think Seattle is the first one on the list of getting an expansion team, and it should be that way.”

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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Ray Allen on his time with the Seattle SuperSonics, UConn Huskies

The Celtics alum recently spoke on his time on the court before he got to Boston.

Many of us basketball fans in southern New England remember Hall of Fame Boston Celtics shooting guard Ray Allen for his time playing basketball at the University of Connecticut or for winning titles in green and white near the end of his career.

A not-small contingent of Celtics fans are not over his decampment to the Miami Heat, but others think fondly of his arrival from the (then) Seattle SuperSonics to complete the star-studded cast that hung Banner 17 back in 2008. Jesus Shuttlesworth had game long before he got to Boston, even if that’s where he won his first ring.

The South Carolina native recently appeared on the “Dan Patrick Show” to talk about his time with the Huskies and playing ball in the Pacific Northwest as UConn worked toward winning the program’s fifth national title.

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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