Westbrook's ego didn't lose them that series.
Westbrook's 7 game performance was
1: 27/6/12 with 3 turnovers on 33% from the field.
2: 16/1/12 with 3 turnovers on 36% from the field.
3: 30/8/12 with 4 turnovers on 53% from the field.
4: 36/11/11 with 6 turnovers on 44% from the field.
5: 31/7/8 with 7 turnovers on 39% from the field.
6: 28/9/11 with 5 turnovers on 37% from the field.
7: 19/7/13 with 3 turnovers on 33% from the field.
Durant's was:
1: 26/10/3 with 5 turnovers on 33% from the field.
2: 29/6/1 with 8 turnovers on 61% from the field.
3: 33/8/2 with 1 turnover on 67% from the field.
4: 26/11/4 with 3 turnovers on 33% from the field.
5: 40/7/4 with 3 turnovers on 38% from the field (12 of 31 wow)
6: 29/7/3 with 3 turnovers on 32% from the field.
7: 27/7/3 with 2 turnovers and 52% from the field.
What does that tell you? It tells you that Russ was inefficient and turnover prone the entire series: even when they were winning, he was throwing the ball away and shooting bricks. That's the nature of Russell Westbrook. I'm not condoning it, but it's who he is.
Durant, on the other hand. He completely vanished. He shot under 40% 4 times! When does he ever do that? He had games with 8 and 5 turnovers, when does he every do that? It wasn't Russell Westbrook's ego that lost them that series, it was Kevin Durant's Amazing Vanishing Act. He was bricking so hard he made Westbrook look like a sharpshooter at times. And we all know why: Draymond straight up admitted it, Golden State had been courting Durant all year. He gave up, he sucked, because he already knew where he was going in the off-season, and it wasn't back to Oklahoma.