The recruitment of Kevin Durant to the Golden State Warriors may have happened sooner than anyone realized.
Draymond Green began recruiting Kevin Durant to the Warriors from the parking lot after their gut-wrenching Game 7 loss in 2016
The Warriors' recruitment of Kevin Durant began almost immediately after last year's NBA Finals ended.
Several reports have indicated that the Warriors had their eyes on Durant for years and wanted to target him in free agency in 2016.
But amid swirling rumors that there was serious interest between both parties last season, Draymond Green got things started almost immediately after the season ended.
According to ESPN's Zach Lowe, moments after the Warriors lost a gut-wrenching Game 7 to the Cleveland Cavaliers, blowing a 3-1 lead, Green reached out to Warriors GM Bob Myers and told him what he had to do. Then, from the Warriors parking lot, reached out to the prized free agent himself.
"Green was already working on that as he left Oracle Arena after that gutting Game 7 loss. Green sat in his car in the parking lot and called Myers, telling him he had to sign Durant. 'It's on you,' Green told Myers.
"Green hung up, stayed in the parking lot, and made another call -- to Durant. 'That was my very next call,' Green said. Two weeks later, Durant signed a maximum contract that put him in a Golden State uniform for at least one season, with several more seasons likely to come."
Green told Lowe that he's "99 percent sure" that the Warriors wouldn't have gotten Durant if they had won the championship last season. Of course, part of the reason the Warriors didn't win is because Green lost his temper in Game 4, hit LeBron James in the groin, earning a flagrant foul and one-game suspension. The momentum in the series shifted, and the Cavs won the next three games.
Green told Lowe he doesn't regret the play, and according to Lowe, everyone on the Warriors quickly forgave Green for losing his cool. After all, they still had two more chances to close it out with Green.