Leaked DMs Show Kevin Durant Defending His Legacy After Failed Season With Suns
As a member of the Houston Rockets, Kevin Durant is optimistic about the future. But before he can start his new chapter, answers must be found on what went wrong in his previous stop. In a long chat exchange with a Phoenix Suns fan, Durant came up with his explanation as he defended himself (and former head coach Mike Budenholzer) from blame.
Advertisement
It all started when the fan called out Durant for taking away Devin Booker's "competitive fire."
Kevin Durant: "So you're saying I only take away his fire?
Fan: "Not necessarily take it away, but your demeanor is a calm one, and body language isn't always the best, which I think has rubbed off on Book a little bit, but I get why it would be. You've been here for three years, and nothing has gone as expected."
Kevin Durant: "So when Book plays good, do I rub off on him only when he plays bad?"
Fan: "I think it's a little bit of both..."
The Suns were a disaster last season and couldn't even make the play-in despite having three All-Star caliber players and one of the highest payrolls in the NBA. So when they struggled to even hold the 10th seed, morale hit an all-time low. According to the fan in this encounter, Durant's leadership and body language are what sealed their fate and eliminated any hope of a redemption arc.
Advertisement
Fan: "Just watch the game against the Raptors, the body language is horrible, and when players see one of the best players of all-time acting like that, it's gonna rub off."
Kevin Durant: "My body language is why we lost? You don't know these players, you don't know how they feel," said Durant. "You are assuming and trying to use me as a scapegoat because you don't know why are are losing."
The Suns were an utter failure, and while fans and experts try to find someone to blame, Durant believes it was other circumstances that caused their downfall.
Fan: "It's pretty obvious why y'all are losing right now, and it's the coach."
Advertisement
Kevin Durant: "It's easy to always look at me, I'm that big of a star. I get it, but if you don't know the game, just ask me. You don't know basketball well enough to know why a team loses, so you look to blame anyone you can."
We don't know when exactly this exchange took place, but it was obviously during the season, before Durant's trade out of Phoenix, and when frustration levels were sky-high. Clearly, the fan was disappointed with the lack of results, and he didn't know what else to say when Durant claimed he knew nothing about the game.
Fan: "Okay, so if I don't know basketball and can't say why a team is losing, inform me. I'd love to know why a team with Kevin Durant, Devin Booker, Bradley Beal, and a good supporting cast is three games under .500 since I don't know ball."
Kevin Durant: "You know what, my body language is the reason, you're right. My bad for questioning a fan. I should be above this, seriously. I don't want any problems, bro, I should've left it alone. I don't wanna ruin your experience, so believe what you want, brother. Enjoy the game tonight and the rest of the season."
Advertisement
Kevin Durant has no issue taking the fight to his critics, but he usually doesn't resort to arguing in someone's DMs like that. In this case, it seems he couldn't help but speak up after he saw a Suns fan looking for someone to scapegoat for the failed season.
In Durant's eyes, the reason for their struggles was not tied to one individual. A mix of different variables came together to create the perfect storm of chaos and dysfunction. Now that it's all said and done, he can think more about this time in Phoenix, but with the way things ended there, he may want to forget that chapter of his career entirely.
Related: Dwyane Wade Claims Kevin Durant Would Never Join The Heat Because He Doesn't Follow LeBron James
This story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on Jun 28, 2025, where it first appeared.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
32 minutes ago
- New York Times
Scouting notes on the Futures Game standouts and under-performers
I'm going to write this until MLB finally sees the error of its ways or I die in the process of trying to explain it to them, whichever comes first: The Futures Game should be nine innings again. Its current seven-inning format turns it into a Little League event, no offense to Little Leaguers, and detracts from its purpose of promoting the game's rising stars, many of whom will be in the majors inside of a year of playing in this event. Several top prospects got a single plate appearance, or faced one better. Major League Baseball shot itself in the foot the moment they decided to make this seven innings and cede time to the Celebrity Softball Game, which, sorry, I do not and will never care about. I could be playing in the game and I wouldn't care about it. Advertisement Anyway, the 2025 Futures Game was a remarkably well-played affair. There were no defensive gaffes, only one pitcher couldn't find the plate, and we had enough offense to make it interesting (as opposed to years when pitchers dominate because they're all amped up since they're throwing maybe 10-15 pitches and can air it out). The MVP of the game was Dodgers prospect Josue De Paula, because he hit the home run, getting a left-on-left slider from White Sox prospect Noah Schultz and tagging it at 108.5 mph, the hardest-hit ball of the day, out to right-center. Hit a homer, get a trophy. The flip side of all of this is that there weren't many standouts at all; everyone played well, no one played that poorly. Here are some of the players who impressed and a few who underwhelmed (scouting grades are on the traditional 20-80 scouting scale): • Mets right-hander Jonah Tong has an ugly delivery, really — it's straight over the top and he comes across his body — but my word what comes out of his arm is good: 95-97 with big ride and above-average extension, a plus curveball at 78-80 with real depth (boosted by the slot), and a solid changeup. He seems to get to his glove side better than I'd expect given the slot and landing spot. • Mariners right-hander — hang on a second — Jurrangelo Cijntje was 96-98 with a plus slider and good feel for a changeup. He did face one batter throwing left-handed, with his fastball at 93 and slider at 79, but the difference in delivery and quality of stuff is dramatic. Rather than continuing to switch-pitch, I really think he should just throw right-handed at this point. He's at least a No. 2 starter as a right-handed pitcher. The switch-pitching thing is fun until it gets in the way of him becoming a star from the right side. • Cardinals shortstop JJ Wetherholt played the whole game, first as the DH and then as a second baseman. He had two of the hardest-hit balls of the day, a double to left-center on a slider from a lefty and a lineout to center on 95 middle-away. I'm not surprised — he can hit, always has when healthy — but it's good to see him do it against premium stuff. Advertisement • Cubs outfielder Owen Caissie, who may find himself traded before the month is out, was on base three times, with a pair of walks — one of which came after he was called out on strikes, challenged the call, and walked to first base because he was so confident he was correct — and a double the other way on a curveball that stayed up. • Tigers shortstop Kevin McGonigle had the most impressive 0-for-2 day, as he squared up a pair of pitches for a flyout to deep right-center and another to left field. • Diamondbacks center fielder Slade Caldwell struck out looking in his only at-bat, but he had the defensive play of the day with a diving catch in center. Also, I can confirm that he's 5-foot-7 after shaking his hand. • Tampa Bay picked up right-hander Brody Hopkins from Seattle in the Randy Arozarena trade last year. At the Futures Game, Hopkins was 98-99 with an above-average slider at 86-89 and average or better cutter at 92-93. He has a long arm swing and I don't think he repeats it that well, but it's rotation-ready stuff if he just throws enough strikes with it all. • Atlanta right-hander JR Ritchie started for the NL squad and sat at 97 with an above-average curveball at 82-85, above-average changeup at 77, and a promising slider at 83-84. There might not be a true plus pitch here, so the ceiling may be more like a strong No. 3 starter. He throws strikes and has the pitch mix to be a big-league starter of some sort, and perhaps there's more progress to come as he matures and gets further from his 2023 Tommy John surgery. • Tigers outfielder Max Clark walked and stole second off the pitcher (Ritchie) in the first, then beat out an infield single with an 80 run time (3.89). I saw him and McGonigle on Thursday at Harrisburg as well, and I don't think there should be any concerns about Clark's speed or defense in center. I still think he's going to be a star once the power comes. Advertisement • Yankees shortstop George Lombard, Jr. came close to making the play of the game, ranging far to his right to stop a grounder and nearly throwing the runner out from deep in the hole. He walked and smoked a double to left field on a 94-mph fastball before lining out in his last PA. • Hopkins and Angels right-hander George Klassen had the fastest pitches of the day, both hitting 99; Klassen technically came out on top at 99.2 and every pitch he threw was in the 98.7-99.2 range. With that and a short but sharp slider at 89-92, Klassen could probably pitch in the Angels' bullpen tomorrow. I'm sorry for giving them any ideas here. • There were a couple of players who did underwhelm in the game. Marlins lefty Thomas White returned to the Futures Game, and for the second year in a row he had trouble throwing strikes. He was 95-98 with a slider at 80-84, premium stuff, but half his pitches were called balls and they were bad misses at that. • Schultz gave up the homer to De Paula, and despite arm strength, Schultz's stuff played way down on Saturday. He was 94-97 with a 'sinker' that didn't sink, and the slider at 78-81 wasn't that sharp. He has a low three-quarters arm slot that should give him some deception; the NL hitters he faced were not deceived. • Rockies outfielder Charlie Condon was 0 for 3 and still didn't look very comfortable at all against sliders, the pitch that caused him so much trouble in his pro debut last year. • Mariners catcher Harry Ford nearly decapitated his pitcher on a throw to second, which certainly isn't going to reduce concerns that he can't stay behind the plate. • Finally, Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin showed plus-plus speed twice on groundballs, but left the game after Astros reliever Alimber Santa hit him on the wrist or hand. Early word is he's fine, but I was just imagining the Pirates saying they'd never send another prospect to the Futures Game if Griffin had broken a bone there. (Photo of De Paula: Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Anders Dreyer scores 2 goals to help San Diego beat Fire 2-0
CHICAGO (AP) — Anders Dreyer scored two goals to help San Diego FC beat the Chicago Fire 2-1 on Saturday night. San Diego's Pablo Sisniega made his first start of the season and had three saves. Dreyer has 11 goals and 15 assists this season and became the third player in MLS history to record at least 10 goals and 15 assists in his debut season. Toronto's Sebastian Giovinco had 22 goals and 16 assists in 2015 and and Minnesota's Darwin Quintero finished with 11 goals and 15 assists in 2018. Advertisement San Diego (12-6-3), which lost 4-3 to Houston last Saturday, has won five of six. Dreyer scored in the eighth minute to give San Diego a 1-0 lead. Hirving Lozano played a low cross from the left side that slipped through three defenders before Dreyer stopped it and then calmly scored from just outside the 6-yard box. In the third minute of first-half stoppage time Dreyer scored on a first-touch finish off another cross played by Lozano to make it 2-0. Hugo Cuypers scored in the 87th minute and Chris Brady had two saves for the Fire. Chicago (8-9-4) has lost four of five. ___ AP soccer:
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Today's Quordle Hints (and Answer) for Sunday, July 13, 2025
If you're looking for the Quordle answer for Sunday, July 13, 2025, read on—I'll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Beware, there are spoilers below for July 13, Quordle #1266! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today's Quordle game. (If you play Wordle, Connections, and Strands, check out our hints for those games, too.) How to play Quordle Quordle lives on the Merriam-Webster website. A new puzzle goes live every day. If you've never played, it's a twist on The New York Times' daily Wordle game, in which you have a limited number of attempts to guess a five-letter mystery word. In Quordle, though, you're simultaneously solving four Wordle-style puzzles, and each of your guesses gets applied to the four puzzles simultaneously. Due to the increased difficulty, Quordle grants you nine guesses (12 if you play on 'Chill' mode, or eight if you play on 'Extreme'), rather than Wordle's six. To start, guess a five-letter word. The letters of the word in each of the four quadrants will turn green if they're correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn't in that secret word at all. Ready for the hints? Let's go! Can you give me a hint for today's Quordle? Upper left: Watercraft Upper right: Not in support of Lower left: Flushed Lower right: Online trolls Does today's Quordle have any double or repeated letters? Upper left: Yes, a repeated vowel and a repeated consonant. Upper right: No. Lower left: Yes, a double consonant. Lower right: No. What letters do today's Quordle words start with? Upper left: K Upper right: D Lower left: R Lower right: H What letters do today's Quordle words end with? Upper left: K Upper right: Y Lower left: Y Lower right: R What is the solution to today's Quordle? Upper left: KAYAK Upper right: DECRY Lower left: RUDDY Lower right: HATER How I solved today's Quordle SLATE and MOUND, my go-to starter words, don't give me a ton of hits today. I'll try PRICY to get some more common letters on the board. The upper right has to be DECRY. Yep. The bottom left is probably RUDDY. Yep. I'll try HATER for the bottom right. On a roll! This last square is a toughie. Its only vowels are A and Y, and it can't end in Y, which eliminates a lot of options. I think KAYAK is the only option. Yep! The best starter words for Quordle What should you play for that first guess? We can look to Wordle for some general guidelines. The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that's still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn't a single 'best' starting word, but The New York Times's Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these: CRANE TRACE SLANT CRATE CARTE Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you'll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these: SALET REAST TRACE CRATE SLATE Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it's better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out.