Saturday, June 2nd, 2007 at 10:39 am  |  173 responses

Links: Decision 2007

In the new issue of SLAM, we get at both Greg Oden and Kevin Durant. Who’s number one? Lang Whitaker reports. You decide.

by Lang Whitaker

Those who are successful in life often preach a similar message: Learn from your errors. And after SLAM 109 dropped with both our cover subjects sitting at home, we didn’t want to go there again. We knew SLAM issue 110 would hit newsstands just as the NBA Finals were getting underway. And considering that we began working on this issue during the first round of the Playoffs, we didn’t want to guess (and miss) again.

This cover, actually, was sort of a no-brainer. We knew the biggest story of the summer, aside from the NBA Finals, was going to be the Draft. And we hadn’t been able to properly get at Kevin Durant or Greg Oden during the NCAA season. They’d both been in the magazine a few times, but neither guy had really had their full say. So, we figured, why not holler at both of them?

Our initial idea was to shoot them together, which hadn’t been done. We nearly pulled that off, until both of their schedules went completely haywire at the last minute. So we did the next best thing: We shot and interviewed each of them in their hometowns, Greg in Indianapolis and Kevin in Washington D.C. (Right about here I should probably issue a big thanks to both Greg and Kevin and their assorted people for all their help making this cover happen.)

Originally we were going to write two separate stories on the guys, giving each of them 8 pages to ramble on. But as our schedules and their schedules got all tangled up, I somehow ended up in charge of writing one big story, telling both of their tales and exploring their NBA futures. And yeah, there was a lot to get in there, not to mention (even though I’m mentioning it now) that the NBA Draft Lottery was going to happen one night after the entire magazine went to the printer.

One night I was sitting around trying to figure out how to write this beast, and I flipped past one of the early Democratic debates. Bingo. After all, the whole Draft process was going to be about figuring out who to pick first, regardless of which team ended up with the first pick. I’d also been thinking about how Kevin and Greg were going to forever be connected, almost like Magic and Bird. Even though they come from different parts of the country, play different positions on the court and own dissimilar body types, Greg Oden and Kevin Durant will forever be their generation’s Larry and Magic, the two best players of their era, tied together through hype and hope as much as anything else.

We ended up calling the story “Decision 2007,” and I asked both Oden and Durant the exact same questions. I looked at it like I was the NBA team with the first pick and this was their job interview, their chance to convince me they should be the first pick. Both guys gamely submitted, and they said some pretty interesting stuff. We talked about their college days, their work ethics, how they decided to go pro, their thoughts on the NBA. A quick excerpt…

SLAM: What was the whole college experience like for you?

GO: I loved it. Just being around the students and being able to go out and have fun with people of your age, your peers, who love to learn and go out and have fun with each other. Especially being at Ohio State, with so many people, you get to meet new people every day.

KD: For me it was a big adjustment. Coming from a real small high school, there was a lot of people at Texas. But it was fun learning new things, seeing new people every day, so it was a great experience for me. I also went to all the home football games. I never went to a school with a football team before, so every chance I got to support the football team I went.

SLAM: Do you think you could have played in the NBA straight out of high school?

KD: I don’t even know, man. But I know right now I have a better chance of being an OK player in the NBA because I went to college. I’ve matured a lot. It was a blessing in disguise, really. A lot of people say, Man, they’re not letting those kids get that money. But it helped me out so much that I don’t even care.

GO: No, I don’t think I was ready for it straight out of high school. Just gaining experience and being able to learn so much, especially the attention to detail in the college game. Being able to have this year playing against different competition that’s not high school guys, that helped me a lot.

SLAM: Is it fair that you guys will always be compared to each other?

KD: If we played one-on-one he’d probably take me, because he’s too big and strong for me. With Magic and Bird it was different, because they actually played against each other in college. With me and Greg, people have just been saying since high school that we were one and two. People talked about one more than the other, whatever. But Greg and I play two different positions. It’s not even the same thing at all.

GO: When they compare us, hands down he’s going to win in a one-on-one game because that’s his game. I’m a big man—I go in the post and I dunk the ball and I rebound and block shots. His game is outside. When you compare us one-on-one he’s going to win, that’s unfair to me. You’ve got people who look at us as the best college players. I know he is, I don’t know if I’m up there yet.

SLAM: Why should you be the first pick in the Draft?

GO: Because I’m going to be a hard worker. I’m going to come in and I’m going to contribute. I’m going to play my game and I’m not going to try to take over and mess up the atmosphere. I’m going to be a good person, I’ll do my part, work hard and do what’s best for my team to win.

KD: I think I have a winning mentality. Even though I’m young, I can bring leadership to an organization. I’m just cold-blooded. I really don’t care. Whoever’s in front of me, I’m going to do my best to destroy them. Younger people might back down sometimes, but I think I’m a tough player and I don’t back down from anything—I accept challenges. I know it’s going to be hard, but everything you have to face is hard. I’ll be young, and I’m sure people will write me off and say I’m too small or not ready, but I’ve been going through that my whole life.

SLAM: Let’s say you just got drafted first overall. What will you tell that team’s fans?

GO: I’m going to come in, I’m going to be a good person to the city and the organization. I’m going to work my hardest to try to make that team the best that it can possibly be.

KD: Just like I told them at Texas: I’m going to be a hard worker, going to be an emotional player, a passionate player, and I’m just going to try my best to help the organization out. That’s all I can say.

There’s plenty more in the mag, but there’s a few highlights. Just like Fox News, I didn’t do any editorializing in the story: It’s just straight reporting, to give you guys the chance to decide who you’d select first overall.

That said, after being one of the few people in the world to spend significant one-on-one time with both dudes over the last few weeks, I think I know who I’d pick.

I loved Greg Oden. During the photo shoot he rolled in and was all laughs and smiles, joking around. He told our photo editor that he’d always planned on being a dentist…until his hands grew too big. He reminded me a lot of Shaq, with that same sense of humor and playfulness. But unlike Shaq, Greg has an overwhelming modesty, always underplaying his ability and skills. Check that quote above about how he doesn’t even know if he was one of the best college players last year. I don’t know how much of that is an act and how much of that is really real, but I got the sense that he’s really like that.

Kevin Durant was completely different. He came to our shoot with his Mom and he stayed pretty quiet throughout. I’m used to being around these young guys, but until his Mom mentioned it off-handedly, I forgot that Kevin is still just 18 years old. Still, he had an intensity and seriousness about him you don’t often see in 18 year olds.

All of that being said, if I had the first pick in the Draft, I’d take…

Kevin Durant. Look, both of these guys are going to be awesome NBA players — that’s basically a given. But if I had the first pick, I’d want the guy who’s going to be a legend, or at least give everything he has while trying to become a legend. I’m not saying Greg won’t be a legend, but I can’t get this one quote from Kevin out of my head: “I’m just cold-blooded. I really don’t care. Whoever’s in front of me, I’m going to do my best to destroy them.”

He didn’t sound arrogant when he said it, he just kind of threw it out there casually, but you could tell he meant it. And that’s the mindset I’d want to build my franchise around.

Anyway, SLAM 110 officially drops in about two weeks, but it’ll probably start showing up on newsstands later this week. There’s plenty of other great stuff in there, from the Warriors to Joakim Noah’s first rookie diary (which is great — Joakim’s the first rookie diary keeper to talk about Suge Knight) to T-Mac to Boozer to LeBron.

Now it’s your turn: Who would you pick first?

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  • Nothin_personal

    i know this might sound stupid, but if I had the chance all over again, I would pick Hakeem over Jordan. With proper management, Istill believe that he guarantees more than the GOAT. You don’t know if you are gonna unearth a division 3 Gem, and have Seattle hand it to you in a silver platter. On the other hand, what are the chances that you have your 2nd superstar fall of the chart due to injury at the point were you are past rebuilding, and not at the championhip level yet?

  • whooo!

    that background is gawd-awful. what were you all thinking?

  • whooo!

    having durant n oden’s pretty dope though! i’d take oden w/ the 1st, but i still question if he’ll be better than dwight howard, and i don’t like how the hype machine jumps so quick, proclaiming him a potential legend.

  • Holiday

    @ lone jazz you dumbf*#k, you have no idea of what I was trying to say obviously, and like me your a Jazz fan so maybe you live in salt lake or close to it, so why don’t we meet up so I can smack you in the mouth for talking to me like that homo!

  • Holiday

    I was simply making the point that Oden might not be a great scorer, but maybe he will! and any team would benifit from him but in the same sense any team could benifit from somebody like Kobe but he won’t necessarily make them a contender! Maybe somebody could explain that to lone jazz, and stop reppin my team punk!

  • Tim Dogg

    I’m a Blazer fan, so believe me, I’ve given this lots of thought over the last few weeks…. It really depends on what we want to do with Randolph. If we want to trade him, take Oden. If not, Durant. SF is actually our biggest need position, in my opinion….
    That said, obviously the big defensive center is the way to go. Look at the finals again this year. Two defensive teams.
    Do the Blazers want to go in an offensive or defensive direction. This pick will determine that, or be determined by that, I think.

  • Dennard

    Charley Rosen will probably predict that Greg Oden will be a marginal player for most of his career and he’ll say that Kevin Durant is weak and defenseless. Or something stupid like that.

  • nexus6

    i was 13 years old.i was shooting jumpers after jumpers,alone on a court somewhere near home.all of sudden i saw a guy WAY older than me and way taller than me.he was coming at me yelling:GIVE ME YOUR BALL!!!i began looking for help,but there was no help.so i had no choioce but to give him the damn ball if i didn’t want to get beaten.AMERICA,this is what you are for the rest of the world.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Jake Appleman

    Looking forward to league pass and a lack of sleep next year. Sweet cover.

  • B-rad

    if ur portland, do u need a big man or a small/swingman first? exactly….zbo and lamarcus are good, but other than roy, they have nothing in terms of outside and midrange scoring. take durant

  • jay

    cool cover…i will cop!!! waiting to see when durant signs with the swoosh! i see kobe re-upped his deal..you know he got a a pretty penny for that one!

  • chalkboard guru

    Nice article! Props to my man Lang! Greg Oden should be #1 without a doubt. Too bad you couldn’t get them in a single shot for the cover. Keep up the good work on the magazine!

  • http://nba.blog.hr Muraya

    Greg Oden #1, man vs boys, simple as that.

  • http://. H to the izzo

    I literally love whoever made this cover happen

  • VLDS

    Why Oden is in LeBron 4 shoes?????

  • VLDS

    Why Greg Oden is In a LeBron 5 kicks in da photo???

  • Rod Strickland

    I’m surprised the Pistons aren’t on the cover.

  • whooo!

    ryan, i saw some of those stats, but you left out something pretty startling. players are tested to see how many times they can bench 185, and while oden didn’t participate, only ONE player couldn’t bench 185. his name was kevin durant. once he gets w/ nba strength coaches, i’m sure he’ll get strong, but how the hell can he not bench 185!?

  • http://slamonline.com Ryan Jones

    That’s a little scary, but as Reggie and Tayshaun have shown, a scrawny chest & arms don’t preclude you from being a very good NBA player. Of course, both those guys had pretty horrible playoff performances this year, so maybe I shouldn’t go there…

  • Allenp

    Nothing Personal is right.

    If Ralph Sampson doesn’t turn into a walking knee surgery, and the rocket’s GM’s don’t struggle at findign a legitimate perimeter threat, Hakeem wins more rings, in my opinion. Jordan is the best, but it’s always easier to win with a big fellow dominating on offense and defense. Always.

  • Nothin_personal

    The point is, if something goes awfully wrong, and you can’t build a comprtitive team around your superstar caliber talent, if he is a big man, you still get in the playoffs, and maybe even a couple of times deep into the playoffs. If he is Kobe or Tmac, you get a lot of round-one blowouts!

  • http://slamonline.com Lang Whitaker

    @VLDS: We brought their uniforms but left it up to them on the shoes.

  • Ryu

    These colors are sick. But I still can’t wait this issue.

  • steve

    Kwame Brown told Jordan before the draft that “If you pick me, you won’t regret it” or something along those lines. I don’t think you pick a guy because of something he says in an interview.

  • http://slamonline.com Ryan Jones

    As for Oden’s kicks, OSU was essentially a “LeBron” Nike team, especially in the tourney, so I’m guessing Greg already had those. Oden doesn’t strike me as the kind of guy who would spend a lot of time thinking about the implication of which shoes he’s gonna wear in a photo shoot.

  • DK52

    This cover sucks. Good idea, right time of year, and two great players, but the cover itself sucks. Firstly the point was made by other people that both players look like twigs, as well as Oden looks like Tim Thomas, and Durant looks like Sam Cassell’s son. The last thing these two should be doing is crossing their arms because neither have any muscle at all. I was saying for a while that if Deron Williams, or Michael Redd didn’t get the next cover, than Oden and Durant should as a preview issue for the draft which Slam did. Good job on that but terrible cover, by the way does anyone know what size Oden’s feet are, look at his sneaks their at least 19′s?

  • DK52

    Dwill should get the next cover which Slam should be working on right now, and come July 1 the issue should be out then the NBA champion will be known by then will get the following issue.

  • http://www.slamonline.com jonathan wiener

    Great story–but drafting Durant over Oden is like taking the home-run hitter over a true pitching ace–it’s hard to ignore the prodigious dingers, but everyone knows which one gets you to the championship. Shaq and Tim Duncan have dominated the playoffs ever since Jordan left…that’s what you get with Greg Oden. Durant could be another Garnett, Nowitzki, or McGrady– but I’m bettin the house and the Lincoln that Oden gets the rings. Take your pick

  • Richie
  • doctaj

    KD35 baby!!!! im glad to see that killer comin out in him. he’s got the tools, and now he got that SWAGGA!

  • doctaj

    odens feet are 20′s

  • http://www.gabesunit.piczo.com gabriel

    nice cover for the right time.

    just one thing,………. were da f is yao ming in slam

  • http://www.gabesunit.piczo.com gabriel

    nice cover for the right time.

  • john

    in the first pick of the 2007 nba draft the portland trailblazers select greg oden out of ohio state.

  • pablo

    Oden. No doubt. I see Durant as some next T-Mac or even KG. But GO it´s like Duncan. At least that´s how I see it. Besides, as time goes on, it gets tougher and tougher to get a guy who plays in the post. And by that I mean somebody who plays with his back to the basket. I thought TD was going to be the last dominating force with his back to the basket. I was wrong

  • Nothin_personal

    Come on, let’s get in another stupid all-time greatest debate. Ryan, I will even say Stockton is better cost effective than Magic this is gonna get things rolling!!! CAN THE FINALS BEGIN ALREADY?

  • Awesome

    this might be 1984 all over again. Bowie or MJ?

  • Awesome

    Hmmm…

  • Raeniel

    awesome cover! wayyy better then the shaq and dirk one. they fishin’ now suckas! well i didnt buy that ish’ so now i have to buy this one. 2 thumbs up.

  • jawn

    man i thought this was pretty easy… i don’t think durant has all the tools to dominate a game on both sides of the court. I’d take oden in a second! he can use both hands, he is actually faster than durant (check the camp results), stronger than durant, and can make a difference on the defensive end. All you need is an offensive minded guard to join oden and you have a future franchise. I guess you can say durant made that whole “cold blood” comment. BUT! that can be a bad thing. So does that mean he is going to force shots against ron artest. i pray to god no.

    ODEN FIRST PICK!

  • mike

    Lang, I think you’re one of the few people in the world other than me that would take Durant #1. Not to knock Oden – I think he’s great. He’s got a good post game already with those hook shots, and he’s gonna be an incredible defender, but I think Durant is too enticing. Only freshman ever to clean up on all the National Player of the Year Awards, and he’s only 18!! If he’s the McGrady/Garnett combo that people think he is, he’s just too good to pass up. Plus, now that we know the order, I think Aldridge is gonna be a pretty good center, and Portland could take Durant and play him at the three along with Randolph and Lamarcus. That frontline would be sick.

  • Stuie

    I told every one in an earlier coment that he would be a more likely pick than oden. Now this just backs it up. for the same reasons as before i would pick him over oden. the main one being the fact that portland already has 5 big guys. now you have this the tbs got to take kd. he just fits better. more proof towards the fact ill be laughing when kd is picked first. plus oden is a better fit for the sonics. but since he is a better fit for the sonics the tbs might just screw it up for the sonics and pick oden cause you cant rule anything out.

  • Schade

    Pick Oden first. People are seriously underestimating the results of those agility/speed/strength drills.

    The NBA is full of big, strong, fast people. Now, fine, Durant isn’t strong, it’s not needed for a perimeter player… but he *MUST* be faster and quicker than that.

    There are a ton of guys outside of the NBA who can shoot… but they can’t make it in the NBA because they can’t deal with the physical play.

    How will Durant take getting hit by guys who are 220 pounds plus? How will he get off his shot against guys who are simply quicker?

    A guy who can shoot but is not athletic enough… you might as well be Steve Kerr or Robert Horry (no knock on them, but they’re not superstars).

    Look, Rip Hamilton can shoot… but the only reason he can score so consistently is that he is fast, and his killer stamina lets him move continuously, getting space using screens. If Durant is not athletic enough, he will not be able to be a star in the NBA no matter how well he shoots.

    Oden is big, crazy athletic, and has a sound work ethic. Even if he is never able to develop a great bank shot like Duncan, Oden’s physical talent alone, combined with work ethic, can enable him to be a truly dominating big man on defense. With that kind of quickness, he is at *WORST* a taller Ben Wallace… and at best he could develop into the most terrifying of prospects – a faster footed Tim Duncan.

    Durant may very well end up a better player, but for now, there’s now way I’d take him at 1. Because at worst, he might develop into just a spot-up shooter. It takes athleticism to become an NBA star – even skill guys like Allen and Redd are fast. If Durant is starting that low on the scale of athleticism, it will take a lot of work for him to improve enough to become a Michael Redd, Rip Hamilton or Kobe Bryant – I mean A LOT of work in the gym.

    In contrast, Greg Oden only needs a little bit of conditioning work, and can more fully concentrate on improving his skills.

    In the NBA, guys who start out super athletic but need some time to develop their skills have usually ended up better off than guys who started out very skilled but physically mediocre.

  • willis

    whos in the slamups this ish

  • http://Slamonline adelpho3

    True is it does’nt matter who goes # 1,after the draft and there NBA careers play out,the draft rankings wont ever matter then so why are we blowing it up now,have’nt we learnt as sports fans and as fans of the game of Basketball that we need to now wait and see what these kids can do in the pros,things have change,remember when players got the big contracts after they prove that they could win games and a championship,nowadaysall you have to do is look like you could do it and they’ll pay you,watch the monsters the NBA will creat when they continue this pattern,high paid players with now heart,you cant give a kid a million dollars and then get mad when they don’t come through,2 words for this,Kevin Garnett

  • Robert

    I would take Oden with out question. Looking back at recent history only 2 players, Duncan and Shaq, have turned their team into champions and consistent winners. Durant is much like McGrady or Kobe. He is very exciting but without a big man he will be unable to to turn you to a champion.

    If you combine Oden with an already strong supporting cast in Portland you have the making of a great team like San Antonio has been for the last ten years.

  • lone jazz

    Adelpho3, three things for you
    A)your an idiot
    B)your name is f*ckin gay
    C)you are the biggest f*cking retard ever, No. 1 pick gives you respect and all media attention, What happen to your f*ckin head? draft rankings will always matter

  • lone jazz

    Adelfaggot
    what the hell is your F*cking problem with KG?

  • bee

    Salute to slam! Great idea!I can’t wait to get my hands on this issue.

  • DEVILb0y

    durant cause he has more skills and not lacking in height either…oden would be more dikembe like IMO…

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