Golden State Warriors small forward Kevin Durant had a bit of a scuffle on Twitter yesterday , calling out his former organization, the Oklahoma City Thunder. Given his status as one of the most prominent figures in basketball, it got quite a bit of attention. Durant is a pretty prolific Twitter userĀ and was onstage at TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2017 to give a short explanation of what happened. Durant said he uses Twitter to primarily connect with his fans, but sometimes it seems itās easy to get carried away.
Weāre just going to put his full response hereĀ because itās better to just let him say it in his own words: I use Twitter to engage with the fans. I think itās a great way to engage with bb fans. But I happened to take it a little too far, thatās what happens sometimes when I get into these basketball debates. What I really love is to just play basketball, and I went a little too far. I donāt regret clapping back at anybody or talking to my fans on Twitter. I do regret using my former coachās name, and my former organization that I played for. That was childish, that was idiotic, all those type of words. I regret doing that, and I apologized to them for doing that.
I donāt think I ever stop engaging with my fans. I think they really enjoy it, and I think itās a good way to connect us all. But, I will scale back a little bit right now, just focus on playing basketball. So, I want to move on from that. It was tough to deal with yesterday, I was really upset with myself. But I definitely want to move on and keep playing basketball. But I still want to interact with my fans as well. Durant was onstage with Rich KleimanĀ to talk about some of his investments and the rest of the way he interacts with the tech universe. A lot of pro athletes like Durant are looking to get into early-stage companies as they look to deploy some of their wealth. KleimanĀ said a lot of the challenge to ensure Durant is on board with the investments that his organization is making is ensuring that heās able to give a quick and logical pitch as to why he should care. āNone of this is possible unless heās playing basketball, we get that,ā KleimanĀ said. āIf heās not on the court doing his job, none of this is possible. What I have to do with that time Iām given to talk about these deals is figure out the concept, if itās the right company to introduce him to the executive team. If I canāt explain it in one sentence, the regular consumer wonāt understand it in one sentence.ā
And for good reason. Durant won the NBA championship after moving to the Bay Area to play with the Golden State Warriors, taking down the defending champions, the LeBron James-led Cleveland Cavaliers. Durant stressed over and over that basketball was his first priority, but getting into the tech universe was a curiosity that he still needed to explore. With Durant, Golden State took down the Cavaliers in 5 games after blowing a 3-1 lead to Cleveland in the finals the prior year. Durant played alongside Russell Westbrook, who exploded in 2017 and averaged a triple-double following Durantās departure, in Oklahoma City before he joined the Golden State Warriors in their (kind of inevitable) march to the championship. Still, Durant doesnāt seem quite ready for technology to take hold of the court in terms of getting AI-powered referees ā which, given advances in image recognition and machine learning, doesnāt seem too far out of reach.
āI get away with a lot of stuff, Iām sure they would catch a lot more than a human ref,ā Durant said. āIāll stick to what we have right now.ā




