Kevin Durant hears MVP chants as he powers Nets above .500 with 113-107 win over Wizards

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It felt like a game the Nets should have won handily — probably because the last time they played the Wizards, they set a new scoring record at Capital One Arena.

Kevin Durant got hot early and Joe Harris broke free from his recent cold streak. The game felt like Brooklyn’s for the taking.

Rarely, if ever, though, is anything exactly as it feels or seems at Barclays Center. On an explosive scoring night that featured MVP chants raining down on the best basketball player in the city, the Nets had to scratch and claw their way to a 113-107 victory that moves them above .500 for the first time all season.

And they didn’t truly put up a fight until the bottom of the third quarter.

“[We stayed] disciplined not giving up too many easy ones, especially down the stretch,” said Kyrie Irving. “We had a pretty decent third quarter but I felt the fourth quarter we created that separation we really needed.”

Durant scored 39 points on 13-of-20 shooting from the field. Just weeks after he broke Wizards C Daniel Gafford’s ankles with a nasty hesitation-crossover-pullup combo, he had the remainder of the Wizards’ starters on skates.

Kyle Kuzma slipped to the ground as Durant split a double. Deni Avdija stumbled a bit before fouling Durant on an and-one jump shot. It was equal opportunity employment for any defender who applied to the job of the night: slowing down one of the most vaunted scorers in NBA history.

It’s impossible. Durant’s scoring numbers border on absolute. He scored 16 points in first quarter alone.

“Sometimes I have to make sure I don’t take it for granted. The fact that he shows up every single day. He’s ready to work. He’s ready to listen, he’s ready to be a great teammate,” said head coach Jacque Vaughn. “So our group is evolving and I keep stressing the ability to be flexible with the whole idea of trying to win and Kevin has that on his mind all the time. He steps on the floor. He wants to win.”

Therein lies the roadblock for this Nets team in pursuit of an ever-so evasive NBA championship — or a deeper playoff run than their “Seven-Eleven” era best second-round exit.

Durant is an all-world talent, and Irving is a threat to go for 30 any given night. The remainder of the pieces on a stacked Nets roster are still acclimating to one another.

Case in point: As Ben Simmons (calf) and Yuta Watanabe (hamstring) project to each miss another week of action, veteran forward TJ Warren is set to rejoin the action Friday against the Toronto Raptors.

As a result, the Nets look disjointed for stretches on both ends of the floor. They are fighting to survive the limited minutes Durant needs to rest on the sidelines in order to recharge to dominate his individual matchup. Even in the minutes Durant plays, the offense sputters when the ball leaves his hands.

In the minutes he’s on the bench, it becomes the Wild Wild West.

“I think this game we actually did show some composure and poise at the end, which was great to see,” Vaughn said. “We got in our sets, we got the ball where we wanted to, made them double team us, and for the most part, we were in the right position to make the right play. So overall, good win by our guys. We’ve been grinding our guys with minutes. And these games are coming fast and furious, but they’re answering the bell and I’ll give them credit.”

After Durant played the entire first quarter, Vaughn called a timeout 33 seconds into the second after Wizards G Monte Morris got to the rack unbothered.

That happened over and over again and was Vaughn’s third timeout in the game’s opening 13 minutes. Paint defense has been an Achilles heel for a Nets team with only one true playable big man.

Simmons plays backup small ball five in spurts and has played well. Markieff Morris also plays small ball five. Backup center Day’Ron Sharpe missed the game due to a non COVID-related illness, but he rarely plays outside of garbage time.

As a result of their roster construction, the Nets play small. It doesn’t always work, especially when Simmons is out.

“[Opposing teams going big] is always going to be a problem for us and we know it,” Vaughn added. “Before the game we showed the last time they played us, how they got offensive rebounds. And we’ll continue to show our guys.”

Star guard Bradley Beal came off a screen and drove freely to the rim with a one-handed dunk. Durant flailed his hands and shook his head in frustration.

That, and his scoring, were the constant for the night.

Much of that frustration is in the team’s inconsistent ability to generate defensive stops — and if they do force a miss, the added grievance comes from this team’s inability to crash the glass. The Nets entered Wednesday night ranked second-to-last in rebounds. The Wizards won the battle on the glass, 51-35. Their 14 offensive rebounds translated into 25 second-chance points.

Nic Claxton finished with just seven points and eight rebounds. It became clear, early, he was going to struggle against the once lanky Kristaps Porzingis.

Porzingis has done what Claxton must continue: He has put on the body mass that allows him to be a force in the paint and on the glass. The ex-Knick tallied 27 points and 19 rebounds. Beal finished with 25 points on 10-of-20 shooting and Kyle Kuzma added 25 points.

A win is a win, and the Nets will take them as they come, especially after digging themselves a 2-6 hole to start the season. This season, though, is about more than beating a Washington Wizards team projected to make the playoffs for the fourth time in five seasons.

It’s about being the last team standing and going toe-to-toe with teams like the Milwaukee Bucks and Boston Celtics.

Twenty-one games in, the Nets aren’t on that level. They still have a long way to go before arriving at the destination.

“We know we have high expectations for our team, but the process is more important than an end result,” said Durant. “So each day matters like I just said, and Jacque has been preaching that since he got the job.”