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Kevin Durant travels with Golden State Warriors to Toronto ahead of NBA finals

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Kevin Durant #35 of the Golden State Warriors handles the ball against the Philadelphia 76ers on March 2, 2019 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Image: Kevin Durant injured his right calf in Game 5 of the Western Conference finals against the Rockets

Kevin Durant is travelling with the Golden State Warriors to Toronto for the first two games of the NBA Finals, leaving open the chance he could be ready to return from a strained right calf in time for Game 2.

Durant, who has missed the past five games since getting hurt in Game 5 of the Western Conference semi-finals against Houston, has already been ruled out for Game 1 on Thursday night.

As of Monday, he had yet to do any full-speed work on the court as part of a formal practice though he had done some shooting, coach Steve Kerr said.

"If he did anything on the court, it would have been pretty light," Kerr said.

Warriors spokesman Raymond Ridder confirmed Durant was on the team plane that took off early afternoon West Coast time. The two-time defending champions held an optional practice Tuesday before travelling.

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There will be two full days off before Game 2 on Sunday, giving Durant time to get further on-court work done that the Warriors would need to see before he is medically cleared.

"We'll see where it goes from here," Kerr said. "This is where the fact that there's a lot of days in between games during the finals helps us, so we'll see."

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"This is where the fact that there's a lot of days in between games during the finals helps us, so we'll see."
Steve Kerr on Kevin Durant's availability for Game 2

Durant did not travel to Houston for Game 6 of that round or to Portland for the two road games against the Trail Blazers in the Western Conference finals. He remained in the Bay Area to rehab, and the Warriors are unbeaten without him.

An impending free agent this summer, he was hurt on May 8 when he landed awkwardly on his right foot following a baseline jumper late in the third quarter of a 104-99 victory over the Rockets at Oracle Arena. Durant is averaging 34.2 points per game this postseason.

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Warriors forward Kevin Durant limped off the court due to a right calf strain during the Golden State's game against the Houston Rockets

Kerr said Durant has been spending countless hours rehabbing to recover and the two-time reigning Finals MVP says he is pleased with his progress.

"You get that fear of missing out on stuff, like practices and shootarounds and new game plans and stuff like that," Durant said.

"That's what I miss the most, obviously, grinding on the court individually and with my team. But that's out of my hands. Out of my control.

"My task is to try to conquer this, and I think that's the journey (we're) on as basketball players. So I'm pretty much down for anything but I'm excited that I'm making progress."

DeMarcus Cousins #0 of the Golden State Warriors looks on during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers on March 2, 2019 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Image: DeMarcus Cousins is hoping to get back on the court during the NBA Finals

Center DeMarcus Cousins, out with a torn left quadriceps muscle he injured in Game 2 of the first round against the Clippers, hadn't been ruled out for Game 1 though Kerr mentioned the magnitude of coming back on the finals stage after so much missed time.

Cousins - in his first career postseason - scrimmaged Saturday and again Monday, a sign of progress he is closer to being ready.

"I feel better each and every day. That's my whole goal, to make sure I get better with each day that comes," Cousins said last week.

"Hopefully, that opportunity comes, and I'm able to get on the floor and help my team-mates and try to help them win a championship."

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