Kevin Durant
Sport: Basketball
Nation: United States of America
DOB: September 29, 1988
Hometown: Suitland, MD
Career Highlights: Following an inspired run through the NBA postseason, the league's three-time reigning scoring champion will put the heartbreak
of a finals defeat behind him as he focuses on the pursuit of gold in London. Durant has certainly shown his dedication to
USA Basketball in recent years. While many 2008 Olympic standouts like LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Carmelo Anthony and Dwyane
Wade skipped the 2010 world championships, Durant led the Americans to their first gold medal at the event since 1994 and
was named tournament MVP. He set a U.S. record for the event by averaging 22.8 points - more than twice as much as any teammate
- while shooting 55.6 percent from the field. Durant was at his best when it mattered most, averaging 33.0 points in the final
three games, and was later named USA Basketball’s male athlete of the year. Though Durant was considered the most talented
player in the U.S. camp during training for the worlds, the only real complaint coach Mike Krzyzewski had was that he was
being too unselfish - a trait which could bode well with an upgraded roster for London. Durant even played at the U.S. minicamp
in the summer of 2009 despite there being no major competition that year. He nearly made the 2008 Olympic team following his
NBA Rookie of the Year campaign - he was among the final cuts leading up to the 2007 worlds - but did play for the U.S. Select
Team which scrimmaged against the Olympic squad. Durant has become a much more dangerous threat from the outside since then
- he tied for third in the NBA with 133 3-pointers last season - but remains among the world’s best at getting to the basket.
His leadership skills also appear to have improved, as he led the Oklahoma City Thunder to playoff appearances the last three
seasons, including a trip to the finals - where they lost 4-1 to Miami - in June. A first-team All-NBA selection the past
three years and MVP runner-up in 2010 and '12, Durant played in a New York summer league game shortly after the NBA locked
out its players and scored a record 66 points at Harlem’s famous Rucker Park.
Olympic History: None