Kevin Durant's 2014-15 season is officially over.
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The Oklahoma City Thunder announced Friday afternoon that Durant, the league's reigning Most Valuable Player, will be shut down for the remainder of the season so that he can have another surgical procedure on his injured right foot, his third such surgery in the span of six months. He is expected to resume basketball activities in four to six months, according to Thunder general manager Sam Presti.
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Presti had announced last Friday that Durant would be "removed from basketball activities" following a setback in practice. Over the last week, which had been earmarked for "consultation and evaluation regarding the persistent soreness in his right foot," Durant and team personnel visited with a pair of specialists, according to a team statement issued Friday.
"These in-person consults were designed to further supplement the previous evaluations of Dr. Bob Anderson," Presti wrote in the team statement. "Several conference calls and discussions amongst the specialist team concluded that, while the majority of the soreness in Kevin's foot was related to the continued inflammation of the cuboid bone and would subside with rest, the evaluation process also determined that the Jones fracture of the fifth metatarsal, which had shown significant healing previously, was now demonstrating signs of regression.
"With the focus of this process being aimed entirely on Kevin's long term health and stability, it was the consensus of the specialists team, in addition to a collective decision by Kevin, his representation and the Thunder, that to address the setback of the fracture site, a bone graft procedure would be the most proactive and recommended approach," Presti added.
Such grafts are apparently standard procedure for the "5 to 8 percent" of Jones fracture surgeries that don't result in initial success. Durant will have the surgery early next week in New York.
Durant, 26, was limited to just 27 games after suffering a Jones fracture to his right foot just before the start of the 2014-15 NBA season. He returned to the Thunder lineup in early December, making nine appearances before landing back on the shelf for last two weeks of the month. After coming back on New Year's Eve with a 44-point explosion against the Phoenix Suns, Durant largely looked the fire of old, averaging 27.8 points in 36.6 minutes per game on his signature stellar shooting splits (51.1 percent from the field, 40.5 percent from 3-point land, 84.3 percent from the foul line) through the All-Star break.
The issues with Durant's surgically repaired foot never fully subsided, though, as Durant played just 10 minutes in the 2015 NBA All-Star Game and suited up for only one post-All-Star-break contest — a Feb. 19 win over the Dallas Mavericks — before exiting with just over three minutes left in the fourth quarter. Three days later, Durant underwent another procedure on the foot, this time to replace a screw in the foot that had been causing the persistent discomfort.
Durant spent the ensuing weeks continuing to rehab and work his way back to health in the hope of returning to the lineup to aid the Thunder's push for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. New concerns arose last Thursday, though, as Durant sat out Thunder practice "with another bout of soreness in his surgically repaired right foot." A day after that latest setback, Presti ruled Durant out indefinitely, saying, "He's not making the progress we had hoped."
The end of Durant's season comes as Oklahoma City continues to play without power forward and chief interior defender Serge Ibaka, who underwent surgery to "alleviate the soreness and swelling he had been experiencing" in his right knee; starting shooting guard Andre Roberson, who's sidelined for two to three weeks with a sprained right ankle; and veteran reserve Nick Collison, who's out with a sprained left ankle. The Thunder's chances of securing that eighth and final playoff spot — they enter Friday's action at 41-31, three games ahead of the ninth-place Phoenix Suns, with 10 games remaining — and springing an all-time upset of whichever top-flight squad they face (likely the Golden State Warriors, perhaps the Memphis Grizzlies or Houston Rockets) now fall squarely on the shoulders of Russell Westbrook. The All-Star guard has been sensational in carrying the Oklahoma City offense over the course of the last couple of months; he will need to be even more so to keep the Thunder from missing the playoffs for the first time since 2009, and to avoid Oklahoma City's first opening-round knockout since 2010.
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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!
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