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Durant has accomplished a lot, but his work is not done

OKLAHOMA CITY - Win or lose, Kevin Durant can be found after just about any game talking about the need to keep working and getting better.

It was his approach when the Oklahoma City Thunder were 3-29 and the laughingstock of the league. It’s the same now that he has led the team to the NBA Finals just three years later.

Durant has never been about glitz and glamour. His winning combination has been humility and hard work, and it may soon pay off. The Thunder need four more wins to win a championship in only their fourth season in Oklahoma City and fulfill Durant’s ultimate goal.

“There’s always another level you can go to,’’ said Durant after practice Saturday. “In basketball, you always can be better at something, I think.

“I haven’t seen a guy that totally dominates the game in every aspect. He can’t make every shot, he can’t get every rebound, he can’t get every assist, so I think you can get better. That’s the mind-set I take.’’

Durant has gotten his fair share in each of those categories, particularly this season. He became the seventh player in league history to win three straight scoring titles - averaging 28 points per game - and set career highs in shooting percentage, 3-point shooting, rebounding, assists, and blocks.

And yet he’s still driven to want more.

“I wouldn’t say I’m satisfied,’’ Durant said. “I’m happy that I progressed a little bit. I have a long ways to go and I think that if I continue to just keep getting better at the mental part of the game - watching film and knowing where the defense is going to play, knowing where my teammates are going to be - then I can get better.

“I’ve just got to keep improving.’’

As Durant approached his first chance to leave - even as a restricted free agent - there became growing concern about whether a budding superstar would want to remain in one of the league’s smallest markets without as many opportunities to make money and promote himself outside of the game.

Instead, he even skipped the chance to put an opt-out clause in his maximum contract to stay five more years in Oklahoma City.

“My job is to come in here and get better every day as a basketball player, and being here provides me the best opportunity to do so,’’ Durant said. “The city is just so laid-back and quiet, and that’s the type of person I am and it fits me well.

“It’s just a perfect place to be.’’

Durant isn’t about all the extracurricular activities that can come with being in the NBA. He filmed a movie (due out later this year) but said it was the kind of thing he probably wouldn’t do again.

Beyond turning in some of the best clutch performances this postseason, his image during the playoffs has been the kid who toted a backpack to the podium for his postgame comments and created his biggest controversy by perhaps hugging his mom too early to celebrate his first trip to the NBA Finals.

Even his jersey number is a tribute to his AAU coach, Charles Craig, who was shot to death in Maryland in 2005 at age 35.

He may choose to never play anywhere but Oklahoma City, especially if the Thunder are able to take the final step.

“All I’m about is playing basketball and playing better. It really doesn’t matter where,’’ Durant said.

“I wasn’t a guy that was looking forward to being in a bigger city or to getting more off-the-court dollars. I wasn’t into that.

“I was just all about playing ball and being on the right team to play ball. That’s what it’s about.’’