The biggest prize on the NBA basketball free agent market has announced he's jumping ship, with former Most Valuable Player Kevin Durant joining the Golden State Warriors.
Durant, a four-times league scoring champion and seven-times All-Star who spent the first nine years of his career with the Oklahoma City Thunder franchise, joins a Golden State team that won the NBA title in 2015 and finished runners-up in 2016.
New Zealand's Steven Adams plays for the Thunder.
Durant's move creates an NBA super team, with the Warriors already loaded with All-Stars Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, Draymond Green and Andre Iguodala.
Durant is giving the Warriors perhaps the best consolation prize they could have hoped for after losing the NBA Finals in crushing fashion last month.
The Former Most Valuable Player's decision, which he announced in a piece posted on the Players' Tribune website, was the most highly anticipated move of the NBA's off-season and capped what he called the most challenging few weeks of his professional life.
"The primary mandate I had for myself in making this decision was to have it based on the potential for my growth as a player - as that has always steered me in the right direction," Durant wrote in a 351-word announcement called 'My Next Chapter'.
"But I am also at a point in my life where it is of equal importance to find an opportunity that encourages my evolution as a man: moving out of my comfort zone to a new city and community which offers the greatest potential for my contribution and personal growth... With this in mind, I have decided that I am going to join the Golden State Warriors."
The 27-year-old forward joins two-time reigning league MVP Stephen Curry on a Golden State team that had a remarkable NBA campaign this season, with a record 73 wins during the 82-game regular season.
The Warriors held a commanding 3-1 lead in the recent best-of-seven NBA Finals against the Cleveland Cavaliers, but unthinkably they were unable to close out the series as they became the first team to squander such a lead, missing out on a second consecutive championship.
Durant, whose former Thunder team came one win short of reaching the 2016 NBA Finals, met with the Thunder, Warriors, Los Angeles Clippers, Boston Celtics, San Antonio Spurs and Miami Heat before making his decision.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed but Durant, who won a gold medal with Team USA at the 2012 Olympics, is reportedly expected to sign a two-year, $75 million contract with the Warriors.
While playing for the Thunder, Durant appeared in four Western Conference finals and one NBA Finals, where his team lost in five games to Miami in 2012.
He averaged 27.4 points, 7 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game in his nine NBA seasons, which included being named the league's MVP for the 2013-14 season.
Durant, who was taken second overall in the 2007 NBA Draft by a Seattle SuperSonics team that relocated to Oklahoma City a year later, said the relationships he forged while playing with his former team are what made his decision so challenging.
"It really pains me to know that I will disappoint so many people with this choice, but I believe I am doing what I feel is the right thing at this point in my life and my playing career," said Durant.
"I will miss Oklahoma City, and the role I have had in building this remarkable team. I will forever cherish the relationships within the organization - the friends and teammates that I went to war with on the court for nine years, and all the fans and people of the community."
Durant move spells end for Boomers star Bogut
Australian centre Andrew Bogut appears headed to the Dallas Mavericks now, as one of the major casualties of Durant's decision on Monday to flee Oklahoma City.
The Golden State Warriors, in a move to shed salaries to make way for new All-Star recruit Durant, have agreed to trade the 31-year-old, 2.13 metre Melbourne-born centre to Dallas.
The deal will not be officially completed until after Thursday (US time), ESPN's Marc Stein reported.
Bogut will make $15 million the coming season in what was the final year of his three-year contract.
-Reuters