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Kevin Durant: College basketball stats, best moments, quotes – NCAA.com

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Kevin Durant is one of the greatest basketball players on the planet. He’s the 2014 NBA MVP and has won two NBA championships. Before being an NBA superstar, he was a star at Texas as a gangly, sharpshooting freshman.
Here’s everything you need to know about Kevin Durant’s time at Texas.
School: Texas
Position: Forward
Height: 6-9
Weight: 215 pounds
Years active: 2006-07
NCAA tournament record: 1-1
Texas went 25-10 in one season with Kevin Durant. The Longhorns went 12-4 in the Big 12, finishing third.
As a senior at Montrose Christian, Kevin Durant’s high school team was ranked No. 1 in USA Today’s Super 25 rankings. Montrose Christian was so good that they traveled all the way from Rockville, Maryland, to Hawaii to compete in the Iolani Prep Classic. The Honolulu Advertiser noted that Durant was regarded by some as the best high school player in the country.
He averaged 19.6 points and 8.5 rebounds per game, while shooting 65 percent from the field and 42 percent from three as a junior at Oak Hill, before committing to Texas over UConn and North Carolina in June 2005. As a senior, Durant averaged 22.4 points, 10.2 rebounds and 4.7 assists per game while shooting 54.6 percent after transferring to Montrose Christian.
What did β€” and does β€”Β make Kevin Durant’s game unique is his perimeter-oriented offense for a player who’s so tall. He entered college around 6-9 and he’s now somewhere in the neighborhood of 7-feet tall, yet he has a great shooting ability and guard-like offensive skills, while being a tremendous rim protector on defense.
“Last night, Durant, a 6-foot-10 forward, showed the sellout crowd of 1,050 his ball-handling skills, ability to run the floor and even swished a 3-pointer in the second half for good measure,” wrote The Honolulu Advertiser’s Wes Nakama after Durant’s top-ranked Montrose Christian High School team knocked off reigning Hawaii state runner-ups Kahuku 88-45. “He also scored on three first-period dunks, including a spectacular alley-oop slam to put Montrose Christian up 21-9 with one minute remaining.” Durant scored 16 points in the first quarter alone.
After Durant committed to Texas, the Austin American-Statesman’s Mark Rosner wrote, “He has an uncommon combination of skills for someone so tall, the abilities to shoot from outside, drive to the basket and find the open man.”
He had savvy low-post moves, yet a soft shooting touch. He had quick handles, along with the height to shoot over virtually any defender.
Durant led the Big 12 in scoring and rebounding as a freshman, averaging 25.1 points and 11.4 rebounds entering the Big 12 tournament, while ranking second in the conference in blocks, seventh in field-goal percentage and sixth in free-throw percentage.
“There’s a streetball term for Durant’s skill set,” wrote the Fort Worth Star-Telegram‘s Wendell Barnhouse. “Sick.”
In 35 games in college, Durant scored in double figures in every single one. That’s how good he was as a freshman. He broke the 20-point mark in each of his first seven games, so it was clear Texas had a rising star on its roster.
Durant’s season-high was 37 points, which he reached on four occasions β€” three of which were on the road and one was in the Big 12 tournament:
Durant scored at least 30 points 11 times in 35 games. He had 20 double-doubles, including six in a row. His 37-point, 23-rebound game on the road against Texas Tech is one of the all-time great stat lines in recent memory. In a single game, he had as many as 16 free-throw attempts in a game (against New Mexico State in the NCAA tournament), six 3-pointers (at Kansas in Texas’ regular-season finale) and six blocks (against Kansas in the Big 12 tournament).
Here are some of the awards Kevin Durant won in college:
Here are some of the records Kevin Durant set and where he ranks on all-time statistical lists:
The following screenshot comes from the Austin American-Statesman.
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Hawaii All-State guard Junior Ale, who played against Durant in high school: “We did our best, but what can you say when you’re playing guys who are 6-8, 6-9, 6-10? I played in Las Vegas last summer against some good Mainland players, but not NBA-type guys like Kevin Durant. That’s what he is.”
Former Texas coach Rick Barnes: “He’s an excellent shooter, an excellent passer, somebody who makes the players around him better.”
Barnes: “People talk about freshmen, but I’d put him out there with anybody. He could care less about what we’re talking about. He really wants to win.”
Barnes: “That’s what you like best about a guy. Nobody told him he had to (practice).”
Barnes: “He’ll put on 25-30 pounds in the next few years and just kill guys inside. With his perimeter skills, plus that added size, the sky is the limit for him. But he’s just a kid right now.”
Fort Worth Star-Telegram‘s Wendell Barnhouse: “Durant’s silky smooth shooting ability β€” he flicks NBA-range 3-pointers as effortlessly as someone firing a paper wad at a waste basket β€” means he’s probably best-suited to playing on the perimeter in college.”
Barnhouse: “Durant is 6-foot-9 with the wing span of Ralph Sampson, the shooting range of J.J. Redick and the court demeanor of Tim Duncan. Hyperbole? Hardly.”
Montrose Christian High School coach Stu Vetter: “I coached Dennis Scott, and Kevin is a lot like him. Kevin has a lot more upside.”
Vetter: “When he fills out, he’s gonna be an awesome, awesome, awesome player.”
Former Mercersburg (Penn.) Academy coach Mark Cubit: “Right now, Durant is head and shoulders above (Luol Deng and Charlie Villanueva). I don’t know where Durant is going to end up, but his status as one of the top players in the country is warranted. He’s got a great vision for the game. If you’re an old-school kind of guy…he’s got new-school talent with an old-school appreciation for the game.”
Former Oklahoma State coach Sean Sutton: “I think Kevin Durant is the best player in college basketball.”
Durant on his position: “I think I can play all five positions.”
Durant: “(Vince Young) plays fearless. Whenever he wants to take the game over, he does. I kinda pattern my basketball game like that.”
Durant on his individual awards: “I hope as a team we can pull down some hardware. I want a national championship, a Big 12 championship, a Big 12 tournament championship.”
Andy Wittry has written for Stadium, SI.com, Sporting News, the Indianapolis Star, Louisville Courier-Journal and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He is a graduate of Indiana University.
The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NCAA or its member institutions.

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