Two years ago, Kevin Durant changed the landscape of the NBA forever when he decided to leave the Oklahoma City Thunder and instigate his move to the Golden State Warriors through free agency.

Durant showed that players still have the power to decide their own fate in the NBA and if they want to chase championships they can certainly do so, and it has definitely paid off for him so far.

Since joining the Warriors, KD has won two NBA Championships as well as two NBA Finals MVP awards. However, a lot of people have criticized him for unbalancing the league.

His move to Golden State helped them form a superteam of Durant, Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, and Draymond Green which has been unstoppable in the NBA, as they have made four consecutive NBA Finals appearances, winning the title in three of those finals.

KD ruined NBA?

Durant spoke to Michael Lee of Yahoo Sports about the issue on Saturday and said that his responsibility is himself and not the league. He said that he hasn't ruined the NBA, but if he has, he should be paid more money.

He said: "My responsibility is to my skills. My responsibility is to myself. I'm not worried about the NBA. That's their job. They make too much money. They ain't paying me enough to dictate the NBA. I should be making more money if all that's on me. My responsibility is to whatever team I play for. All that other stuff, that's on y'all."

Adding a former MVP to a squad that had three All-Stars and set an NBA record for the most wins in a season made Golden State seem unbeatable, and over the past two years, this definitely appears to be the case.

The only team that has come close to beating the Warriors is the Houston Rockets, but even they struggled to get anything after Chris Paul went down with an injury. Any team that has any hope of dethroning the Warriors would have to build a superteam themselves to match the superteam they have.

There may be a lot of fans that are annoyed with Durant for helping the Warriors become more powerful than what they already are, but then again, it's not his fault that the rest of the NBA hasn't been able to match what Golden State is able to produce on the court.

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