Andre Iguodala shared his thoughts on Kevin Durant's tragic Achilles injury in Game 5 of the NBA Finals, one which was met with plenty of blame for the Golden State Warriors after he was deemed able to return from a previous calf injury.

Durant played 12 of the first 14 minutes of Game 5, looking like his old self despite having a 32-day layoff from what the organization deemed a “mild” calf strain.

Iguodala told The Breakfast Club podcast that Durant's Achilles injury was more of “an act of God,” than a kinetic consequence of his calf not being properly healed.

“I don't think his [Achilles] injury was the reason because of his other injury [calf] because the way the body is set up, the calf should have gone first before the Achilles,” said Iguodala on Tuesday's interview. “That was like an act of God, like the Achilles was gonna go out whether he was injured before that or not.”

The kinetic chain, which ties all the muscles in the body together as one working organism, suggests there are direct ties between the calf and the Achilles. Yet Iguodala, who has dealt with his share of calf injuries in this very past postseason as well, would know the stages and the potential risk for re-aggravating the injury or hurting a different part of the body.

It's more likely that Durant's long layoff and lack of several practice sessions played more of a part in his injury than his calf, but the Warriors were put in a crucial spot, giving him the very minimum clearance to step out on the floor, and unaware of the potential freak injury risk he had going into this high stakes game without the proper conditioning.