https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MquHLLSC9EM
I am not a big NBA fan, although I did attend Monday night’s Oklahoma City Thunder playoff game, thanks to my 16-year-old son Keaton, who bought me a ticket.
I am becoming a big Kevin Durant fan.
It’s hard to witness Durant’s rare combination of extreme talent and uncommon humility and not be impressed. The latest example came Tuesday when a teary-eyed Durant won his first NBA Most Valuable Player Award and — in a speech for the sports ages — deflected the attention from himself.
Some of the Twitter reactions from my friends:
If you haven't seen @KDTrey5 's MVP acceptance speech-that was stunning. His story. Humility. What a beautiful role model for my children.
— Josh Graves (@joshgraves) May 7, 2014
Finally getting to watch video of @KDTrey5 speech at MVP ceremony today. Wow. This is the stuff of sports legend. Just amazing.
— Steve's OKC Central (@stevelackmeyer) May 7, 2014
No way to be anything but encouraged once you listen to @KDTrey5 MVP speech! True class and sportsmanship. Need more athletes like KD!
— ABaker (@BeAnEncourager) May 7, 2014
My own reaction:
Must see TV. #humility RT @ESPNNBA: For your halftime viewing, Kevin Durant's emotional MVP acceptance speech:
http://t.co/VVKINO0SOh
— Bobby Ross Jr. (@bobbyross) May 7, 2014
And yes, one friend made a specific request for this GetReligion critique:
@bobbyross How about a get religion breakdown on Kevin Durant's acceptance speech or at least the coverage of it.
— Kevin Gordon (@kgordonflash) May 7, 2014
My friend obviously noticed that Durant began — and ended — his speech by thanking God:
First off, I’d like to thank God for changing my life. (He) let me realize really what life is all about. Basketball is just a platform in order for me to inspire people, and I realize that.
At the end:
I’d just like to thank God again. You’re the first and the last. Alpha and Omega. I thank you for saving my life.
In between, Durant made a third reference to God when talking about Tony Weaver, the Thunder’s vice president and assistant general manager:
God directed our paths to work together, and it’s been everything and more.
Also in the speech:
Dad, it’s been an up-and-down road for all of us, but you’ve always been there supporting from afar, texting me Bible verses every single day. Telling me you love me every single day. That builds me up, and I thank you so much.
So God made Durant’s speech, but did God make the media reports on the speech? Not so much.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — In accepting his first MVP award, Oklahoma City’s Kevin Durant made a point of sharing the honor with those who made it possible.
In a soul-baring speech that lasted more than 25 minutes, Durant fought back tears several times while thanking each of his teammates, the coaches, support staff and team executives, and finally his family. The emotional outpouring culminated with a tribute to his mother, Wanda Pratt, and the sacrifices she made, the inspiration she provided while raising Durant and his brother in the suburbs of Washington, D.C.
“You made us believe,” Durant said to Pratt, who was at the ceremony in Edmond, Oklahoma. “Kept us off the street. Put clothes on our backs, food on the table. When you didn’t eat, you made sure we ate. You sacrificed for us. You’re the real MVP.”
How easy would it have been to slip “thanking God” right before “each of his teammates,” etc.? I mean, it certainly would have improved the accuracy and completeness of the story, right?
I read my hometown newspaper, The Oklahoman, in print replica form on my iPad. The Durant MVP story filled the entire front page — of the newspaper, not the Sports section — with the headline “Durant’s Tears of Joys.” From that story:
No one grew more emotional than Durant himself, the man who once proclaimed he was tired of finishing second and finally broke through after three second-place finishes in MVP voting in the past four seasons.
But on the day reserved for Durant to finally embrace his individual achievements, he endeared himself even more to the masses by unexpectedly displaying more humility.
In a surprising but sensational 26-minute acceptance speech, Durant took time to thank those closest to him.
Those closest to him? The story mentions his family, his friends and his teammates.
God? Nope.
On the front of the Sports section, The Oklahoman featured two more columns — one focused on Durant’s humanity and the other on his love for his mother. Any mention of God in either of those columns? Uh-uh.
I know that my friend Carla Hinton, The Oklahoman’s religion editor, is a big Thunder fan and watched the speech.
Listened to KD's remarks at the MVP event and shed a few tears. Very heartwarming speech.
— Carla Hinton (@OKRelig) May 6, 2014
Perhaps Carla called dibs on the faith angle and we can expect a follow-up? Or maybe there’s a perfectly logical reason why the leading newspaper in a state that’s supposedly at the heart of the Bible Belt can’t bring itself to mention God’s role in Durant’s life? If so, I’d love to know it.
From Twitter:
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligion/2014/05/nba-mvp-kevin-durant-thanks-god-but-media-fail-to-notice/
Twitter response to this post:
https://twitter.com/GabeStoutimore/status/464079310291468289
https://twitter.com/bobbyross/status/464079734994112512
https://twitter.com/GabeStoutimore/status/464080178814394368
Gabe seems like a fun guy.
I pray that he starts meeting more humble Christians.
But being humble is hard, as I’m sure Gabe knows…
And humility is not the same as not talking. Or speaking what you believe (in love). Or even having an opinion.
Just an FYI…
More Twitter response:
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464144185592135680
https://twitter.com/stevelackmeyer/status/464144501619974144
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464144761054838784
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464144878948331520
https://twitter.com/stevelackmeyer/status/464145239620349952
https://twitter.com/stevelackmeyer/status/464145446743453697
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464146021690671106
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464146216537047042
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464146396179087361
https://twitter.com/AlexWeintz/status/464152409044811776
https://twitter.com/AlexWeintz/status/464152755523706880
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464153081677361152
https://twitter.com/benfelder_okg/status/464153158437306368
Which is why, in a Bible Belt locale like OKC, it’s important to FOLLOW THE MONEY and report what a person like Durant does at the level of religious worship, giving and service. You know: Treat this like an actual story?
Part of what makes this silence from the Oklahoman re: KD’s religion so baffling is that the service part of how he lives out his faith was so visibly on display after last year’s tornadoes. They were certainly reminded of this by Thunder management after they called KD Mr. Unreliable during the playoffs.
That’s interesting about the $1 million he gave after the tornadoes. Did he specifically cite his faith in making that donation or in his visit with victims afterward? I did some quick Googling but couldn’t find anything.
I am reasonably certain that he did, based on interviews he gave at the time that I saw on TV, ESPN or CNN, but whether it made the print media I do not know. Perhaps another ghost?
I missed the live ESPN coverage of the ceremony, but they did at least one very lengthy replay where the references to his faith were not cut. They also mentioned that he had a tattoo, “Live By Faith Not Sight,” but that it wasn’t visible because his mother did not want him to have visible tattoos.
Particularly for local media, there is ample, easily accessible,evidence that what he said about the importance of faith in his life is not pro forma. The Oklahoman blew it.
I’ll tell you what. Find an example of an athlete who DOESN’T thank god for making him good at sportsball, and THEN you will have a story.
Ah, the famous straw man argument. Yawn.
In this specific circumstance, we have news reports on an MVP candidate thanking those that he credits, and the media specifically mention every one except God, despite the athlete thanking God at the beginning and end.
So, you want news stories of the dog bites man variety? When something happens continuously, it is not news. You might as well complain that people didn’t report on the fact that he was wearing shoes.
If the speech had been on “All those responsible for my fine taste in shoes,” and he mentioned God, his teammates, his family, his friends, and the media listed all those except God, then yes, there would be a problem. It’s a matter of accuracy and completeness.
In this case, is IS news.
How about this, I’ll find an example of an athlete that doesn’t thank God if you find an example of an athlete that doesn’t thank his teammates and family.
Hmmmmmm.
Is there a reporter who could ask how this language – if accurate – fits into his faith walk?:
https://twitter.com/anthonyVslater/status/464975515900583936