And we thought Kevin Durant refusing to meet with the Nets last summer in free agency was cold.

Durant, tired of being blamed for the lack of parity around the NBA or some teams’ inability to compete — and looking at the Nets — said it is not his fault Brooklyn traded its future away to the Celtics and, as a result, isn’t any good.

Durant has been painted as the league’s biggest villain since the day he left the Thunder for the Warriors, the team that won a record 73 games in 2015-16 and just knocked Oklahoma City out of the playoffs. But Durant, in an interview with USA Today, recently shot back at his haters and threw shade at the Nets while doing so.

“Like I’m the reason why [expletive] Orlando couldn’t make the playoffs for five, six years in a row? Am I the reason that Brooklyn gave all their picks to Boston? Like, am I the reason that they’re not that good [laughs]?” he said.

“I can’t play for every team, so the truth of the matter is I left one team. It’s one more team that you probably would’ve thought would’ve been a contender. One more team. I couldn’t have made the [entire] East better. I couldn’t have made everybody [else] in the West better.”

It’s impossible to know when the Nets’ ill-fated 2013 trade will cease to haunt the franchise, but it’s nowhere near happening.

Frankly, even if general manager Sean Marks can somehow find a way to dig the Nets out of the hole in which his predecessor, Billy King left the team, the narrative will still be about how deep the ditch was.

That deal for Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce and Jason Terry has cost the Nets (among other things) the No. 3 overall pick in the 2016 draft, the top pick in this year’s June 22 draft and their unprotected first-round selection next year as well.