CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Browns defensive Myles Garrett blasted Warriors forward Kevin Durant on Thursday for taking the easy path to a championship.

"KD broke the league,'' Garrett told 'The Ken Carman Show with Anthony Lima' and 92.3 The Fan when asked he watched the finals.

Carman asked him to elaborate. Durant joined the Warriors in 2016 and beat they the Cavs in the NBA Finals the last two seasons.

"You hopped onto a 73-9 team and he took the easy way out in my mind," Garrett said. "It's different when LeBron left. He went to [Miami to join] Wade and Bosh but it wasn't something that was already guaranteed, something you already knew was going to have immediate success. [James] had to gel and work things into place.

"With KD, you just stick him in and he scores. You already knew what they had. They were 73-9 before and you put the second-best player in the world on an already all-time great team and of course you're going to have success, pretty easy success. Anyone can have an off night and they can still find a way to win."

Garrett continued to rip Durant for shortcutting his way to success.

"If I were him I would've never made a move like that in the first place,'' he said. "Me, I'm too competitive to try and ride on somebody's coat tails to get a W. But for him, you might as well stay at the spot you're at now. There's no point in leaving since you've already taken that moniker where he's been called the snake and cupcake and all that. You might as well stay and just keep on winning."

As for how Garrett would fix the NBA, he said, "Hard caps, got to."

Garrett was reminded that James played a big role in the super-team movement.

"He kind of did,'' said Garrett. "I guess he made his own demise or caused his own demise but at the end of the day I'd rather see hard caps. It focuses more on team play, being able to have chemistry instead of getting the big player and who's going to change the game. You can get a couple of guys like Boston, who didn't have their 2 star players and yet they went to the [conference] finals because they all gave a collective effort. Everybody pitched in and were almost successful."