Ever since he entered the league, itās been understood that Kevin Durant is sui generis, a player who can score, rebound, and perhaps most significantly, distribute.
But even with this skill set, it is noteable to see how his assist percentage has climbed. From 12.5 percent his rookie season in Seattle, Durantās number headed north of 20 percent by 2012-13, and so far in 2018-19, heās at his most proficient level yet: 28.6 percent, close to team leader Steph Curryās 31 percent.
In isolation, this is simply continued statistical proof of Kevin Durantās astonishing career.
But taking a look around the NBA, Durantās work to facilitate the Golden State offense isnāt just vital to what the Warriors do. Itās become the norm for power forwards, no less than the ability to shoot 3s is part of the expected skill set for centers in the league now. (The perception of Durant as a wing hangs on because of his skillset and how played early in his career but Basketball-Reference estimates that Durant has played the majority of his minutes as a power forward for each of the last three seasons).
āI donāt know if itās mandatory, but having playmaking at multiple spots is a really big deal for us,ā Warriors coach Steve Kerr said during an interview last month. āItās just harder to defend, I think, when the ball can move, and then every single guy can make a play. Thatās tough to defend. I think itās easier to defend an offense that is overly reliant on one or two players.ā
I donāt think I have to convince you that the Warriors are a ridiculous offense to try and stop, but just briefly, consider how it works in practice here ā a defense cannot trap Durant, nor so much as help off of Klay Thompson, giving Durant, an impossible one-on-one player to stop, precisely what space he could ever want. What follows is a direct result of knowing that Durant can and will pass his way out of a double-team.
But what is interesting, beyond Durant, is how completely this has taken hold around the league.
Thereās Blake Griffin and his 24.1 assist percentage in Detroit. Domantas Sabonis is at 21.2 percent. Nikola Jokic, of course, is at 36.5 percent, leading to this Monte Morris quote comparing his game, āparticularly his passingā, to that of LeBron James.
Durantās assist percentage ranks fifth among NBA players 6-foot-9 or taller this season. While some of those on the list are simply elongated guards ā Ben Simmons, for instance ā there are plenty of classic bigs there as well, like Amir Johnson, Al Horford, and even a pair of Plumlees checking in north of 15 percent.
Compare this to just a few years ago, when Durantās 21.7 percent in 2012-13 easily led the league among players that size, and just how frequent and common playing offense through bigs is brought into sharp relief.
In the same way, however, that bigs shooting 3s has moved beyond your stars into reserves ā think of Spencer Hawes as an example of seeing that trend reach the masses ā the same is true of Kyle OāQuinn when it comes to big man passing.
Kyle OāQuinn finished his college career at Norfolk State in 2012 with an assist percentage of 8.5 for his career. That climbed marginally in his first three years with the Orlando Magic, with OāQuinn no longer an offensive focal point, but only just, to 11.6. Over his next three years in New York, that jumped to 15.9 percent.
This year, in Indiana? 32.4 percent among the league leaders, and north of many point guards. That numbers may be a bit of small sample noise, considering heās only played 75 minutes this season. But itās clear that the way the Pacers are using him, and the Knicks before that, is very different than the big man role he grew up playing.
āThe systems Iāve been playing with, Iāve got guys that want to score and I know that Iām not a big-time scorer,ā OāQuinn said at his locker, following a game against the Knicks last month. āSo I just like to give the ball to guys that get it going more than I can.ā
OāQuinn laughed when I referred to him as a facilitator, and offered this correction: āThe right pass. I think Iām reliable to make the right pass at the right time. Not a facilitator, but if you want to label me one, maybe somebody will like to hear that.ā
For his part, OāQuinnās coach, Nate McMillan, doesnāt see this as something extraordinary, either, but rather all part of the normal course of events for an Indiana offense with seven different rotation members north of 15 percent assist rate this season.
āThe kid just knows how to play,ā McMillan said of OāQuinn. āWe play basketball and he has a great feel for the game. Great feel for scoring, getting himself open, and when the defense makes a mistake, heās very capable of passing. So we are constantly trying to involve him in some weakside action with both he and [Sabonis], and those guys do a good job of reading each other.ā
OāQuinn doesnāt believe this is about players acquiring a new skill so much as teams utilizing them in different ways. He didnāt spend his summers working on his passing. He said itās always been part of what he can do. Now, though, teams are simply asking him to do it more often and providing the freedom to find offense through other means.
āBefore it was all just go in to creating [for yourself],ā OāQuinn said. āBut now youāre going to see the big at the top of the key ā going each way, having the choice to go each way. Stuff like that. I think itās the way the NBA is ā just a copycat. Once one team does it with any success, everybody else is going to start doing it.ā
It does mean that for people in Kyle OāQuinnās line of work, ball-stopping bigs who can merely rebound and defend other bigs are going to struggle to get those precious roster spots. Everyone knows teams prize shooting at every position but passing is now a prerequisite for a well-done frontcourt job, OāQuinn said, nodding at the question.
āYou have to be able to create,ā OāQuinn said. āYou have to be able to free guys up and you have to be able to create when you get the ball.ā