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Author: Jack Gordon


It’s clear that James Harden has forgotten how to play basketball.


Hear me out - this is not to mean that he isn't still great at basketball, nor is it to mean that he suddenly is not one of the best players in the league. This is a discussion of the new rule changes in the NBA this year, and how they have affected Harden up to this point - It’s not that he can’t play good basketball, it’s that he’s literally forgotten how.


Harden arrived in Houston in 2012 right as advanced analytics were completely transforming the game. In just a few years, Steph Curry up in Golden State would rain threes from all over the court en route to his first MVP and NBA Championship, officially ushering in the three-point revolution. What we learned in almost the blink of an eye was simple: threes and free throws, threes and free throws, threes, and free throws. If it wasn’t a three-pointer or a dunk, analytics said not to do it. The mid-range shot became like an old legend of past inefficiencies. Think about how the players who only shot long twos - the LaMarcus Aldridge, Demar Derozan, even Dwyane Wade types - suddenly made less sense until they adapted their games.


Enter the James Harden era in Houston. With the league frantically looking to copy the Warriors amidst the analytics movement, a coach in Mike D’Antoni who was all about offensive firepower and efficiency, a GM in Darryl Morey who was truly ahead of the curve and cared about analytics, combined with a generational offensive talent in Harden, a basketball specimen was created.


Harden learned how to take advantage of the NBA’s rules in a way that nobody else had before. He figured out how to contort his body to get the foul call almost every single time he drove to the basket. It was simple: after breaking down his defender, he would take a dribble towards the basket, at which point he would extend both his arms with the ball out. By getting his arms out and low and driving them up, he was sure to make contact with the defender's arms. At other times he would even employ the infamous arm-lock, quickly and expertly wrapping his off-arm around the defender’s arm and going up with the shot to make it look like he got tangled up. This, combined with his instinctual move to cock his head back, was a guaranteed trip to the line.


That wasn’t even all, and there were a million other ways that he took advantage of the game. For years, the NBA has had an incredibly strange aversion to enforcing traveling violations (something which is, by contrast, enforced at even the second-grade level). What resulted after a few years was Harden’s stepback, one of the most unguardable moves in the history of the sport.


He transformed into a model of the theory of basketball thinking at the time. He avoided the mid-range area like it was the plague, and yet he still racked up scoring titles. It was really strange to watch.


But it worked. Harden averaged 36.1 PPG in the 2019 season, and 34.3 PPG in the 2020 season, among countless other 25+ PPG scoring seasons. He was absolutely unstoppable, and the crazy part? In those two seasons, nearly 70 percent of all of his points came from either three-pointers or free throws. He completely wired himself how to play in this new style, and it was almost like a cheat code; he was a basketball robot that figured out the league.


So, in its infinite wisdom, the NBA finally decided this season that they should change some of the rules that allowed players to take advantage of the refs so easily. No more lunging into the defender after a pump fake, no more ball-handlers stopping after a screen and letting the defender run into them, and no more of everything Trae Young and James Harden do.


The result? Harden is attempting 6.8 free throws per game, his lowest since playing with OKC 12 seasons ago.


Let’s get the obvious out of the way. He is out of shape, potentially still dealing with a hamstring injury (aka the longest-lasting hamstring injury ever), and the refs are just calling fewer fouls than they used to overall.


But Harden, in particular, has been affected by these rule changes. Watching him, it's clear that he hasn’t been able to adjust (yet) to how the game is now officiated. For years in Houston, he was a robot that knew exactly what buttons to push to get what he wanted. Now, it’s like a robot that has grown a consciousness for the first time and is second-guessing each decision in a way that it didn’t before.


When he goes into the paint, Harden’s initial instinct and priority is to try and draw a foul - it is NOT to just finish at the rim. But now, as he gets to the rim, and as he starts to lean sideways like he’s always done, he remembers the new rules. He hesitates, and that hesitation forces him to either go up passively or just dribble or kick it out. He’s less quick than he used to be, and so when he’s breaking someone down on the perimeter, he does a stepback but then remembers that he can’t jump forward anymore to draw the foul.


Just watch him play closely, and this will all be apparent. There is something off about his game. He is clearly thrown off of his rhythm, unable to just play within the flow of the game instead of hunting for fouls. Everywhere on the floor, especially when he has the ball in the paint, there are slight hesitations, slight movements that he begins, and quick stops, like he has something in the back of his mind.


The point is that the NBA’s rule changes have not only affected James Harden because they stopped calling as many fouls. That was how it started, and Harden’s numbers were down. But after a number of games, when he realized that the refs weren’t calling what they used to, the psychological aspect kicked in. It’s not only that the foul won’t be called, but it’s that Harden knows the foul won’t be called, so he plays differently.


After years as a Houston Rocket, Harden can’t remember how to play like a normal basketball player. He can’t remember how to move off-ball, how to attack the basket with the intent to score, and most of all, how to play within the rhythm of the game.


This is not to say, of course, that he won’t be able to figure it out. James Harden is an incredible basketball player, and truly great players should be able to succeed no matter what the conditions are. In fact, the reason this article is being written at all is because of how shocking the extent to which Harden has struggled so far. Maybe it's more about his injury or that he hasn’t played himself into shape yet, but he definitely has been thrown off.


It seems unlikely that he won’t be able to adjust his game as the season rolls around. And for the Brooklyn Nets sake, it’s important that he does. With Kyrie Irving out indefinitely, and with diminishing returns from some of the veterans, the ceiling of the team will be determined by Harden’s contribution to the team. Harden needs to get comfortable, and get comfortable quickly - the Nets’ season depends on it.


SPORTS ARE OUR UNIVERSE



  • Writer: Brian Symons
    Brian Symons
  • Jun 19, 2021

Author: Jack Gordon

Editor: Mark Awadallah

It’s crazy how quickly and how often narratives can change with the benefit of only a few days’ distance.Before the conference semifinals began, this article was meant to be a look into the Bucks-Nets series, in anticipation of a heavy-hitter matchup that appeared to be a de facto NBA finals matchup… And then Brooklyn absolutely crushed the first two games and I decided to change the theme to discuss Brooklyn’s guaranteed championship… And now I don’t know what to think. So, I’ll take you back in time to look through some of the things I had written before the series started, after the Nets went up 2-0, and finish with my thoughts now that the series is tied at 3-3.


Prior to the series:


“Whenever a team or a player has never made it to the mountaintop before, people get skeptical real quick. After two straight disappointing playoff losses, Giannis and the Bucks were a team that nobody cared about in the regular season. Even worse, they headed into a first round matchup against a Miami team that embarrassed them in the bubble last season. Lots of people were pushing the underdog Miami pick in this series, assuming that history would repeat itself. Fortunately for the Bucks, things were not the same. The Jrue Holiday piece (not surprisingly) turned out to be an incredible upgrade over Eric Bledsoe. Coupled with a stifling Milwaukee defense and a Miami offense that had nothing to speak of, the series ended in a decisive sweep.


The Bucks looked really, really good in this series. It can be hard to judge a series sometimes when the opponent isn’t very good, but it was just obvious that the defense of players like Giannis and Holiday, in particular, in combination with great team defensive principles and the size of the roster, made them a formidable contender.


The first round series for the Nets didn’t really mean much. It’s hard to imagine that a single soul would’ve picked an injured Celtics squad to win any games, much less drag the series to five games like they did.


In the regular season, the Nets’ big three of Harden, Kyrie and Durant played less than 10 games together. Blake Griffin could barely move in Detroit before he was bought out. Even though everyone expected them to win against the Celtics, there is just no precedent for a team that has played together as little as this Brooklyn team to actually stay healthy and figure it out in the playoffs. After an entire season of these dudes being injured, do we just expect them to be fully healthy as the playoffs continue?


With this being said, when they are healthy, this Nets team has the greatest trio of offensive talent the league has ever seen, and has the potential to be absolutely dominant in every single game.


What I am trying to say here is that these two teams are the best teams remaining in the playoffs this year, and this means that this second round matchup in the Eastern Conference is actually the NBA finals. It is more than likely that these two teams will be duking it out for the right to win the championship.”


After the Nets went up 2-0:


“It’s currently the conference semifinals, aka the second round, of the NBA playoffs. At this point, not only are we potentially watching the finals matchup already, but we may actually be watching a team win the NBA championship in the second round.


It seems as if the Brooklyn Nets will sleepwalk into a championship, leaving a highly anticipated series against the Milwaukee Bucks in the dust.


This was supposed to be an incredible matchup. As scared as people were of the Nets and their big three, watching the Bucks destroy Miami in the first round made it seem like Milwaukee had a real chance to grind out a series against Brooklyn and make it to the finals.


It became even more interesting in the first few minutes of Game 1 when Harden got injured and the Bucks’ size looked unstoppable. By the way, it shouldn’t be shocking that Harden got injured in that first game, simply because he hasn’t been in shape all year.


So with this being said, it really felt like the second round matchup between these two teams was a toss up.


And then the Nets dominated the first two games, and for anybody who hadn’t already, it was time to face a reality: this series is the NBA finals, and the Brooklyn Nets might win the championship in the second round.”


Am I exposing myself for being guilty of overreacting by doing this? Indeed I am. But the point is this: When healthy, it is painfully obvious that the Brooklyn Nets are the better team, yet the series is now tied 3-3. And through all of this, my main ideas before this series, and really before the playoffs even started, still hold. The first is that I still believe this may be the NBA finals. Despite the, at times, perplexing and ugly Milwaukee offense at the end of games, their stifling defense in conjunction with their top pieces (assuming Holiday can play a little better) means that if they can perform exceptionally well this series, they can still make it through an untrustworthy 76ers (or Atlanta) team and through to the finals.


Thinking about the Western Conference--Clippers, Suns, Jazz--as weird as it is, one of those teams is going to be in the NBA finals (Sorry Denver fans). All three teams are pretty good but none of those teams were also overwhelming favorites at any time. The Jazz were a somewhat uninspiring number one seed, and who even knows what to think about a Clippers team that nearly choked in the first round. Even the Phoenix Suns, who actually look scary and are poised to make a real run at a title, in reality would probably not have made it out of the first round had it not been for Anthony Davis’ injury. None of these teams are absolute juggernauts, and none of them are likely favored to beat either a healthy Nets or Bucks squad.


The second point that I had felt passionately about during the regular season is about the health of the Nets. The big three have basically never played together, and there was always at least somebody that wasn’t playing on any given night. Kevin Durant couldn’t put together 10 straight games, Harden was getting injured and was out of shape, and Kyrie Irving was straight up just missing games because he felt like it. Why on Earth were people assuming that on day one of playoff basketball that everybody would just be ready? I just felt like that isn’t how it works, and it is not shocking to me that both Harden and Kyrie have gotten injured now in the second round, completely turning around the series.


The scary part was watching those first two games in this series and realizing that the Nets might be able to just coast to a title, even without all their players. It was scary because it would mean that a team that barely even tried to play together in a regular season just knew they would be better than everybody else, and would just win--rewriting and potentially altering how teams approach the regular season, and threatening to ruin the NBA regular season for good.


But who knows now? With both Harden and Kyrie out, the Bucks just have to win two out of the next three games. Maybe this will be an unlucky year for Steve Nash and the Nets, and will give fans some hope that the regular season still matters. Maybe Kevin Durant will be so good that he carries them through the series by himself regardless of who else is on the floor. After these two rounds, it is hard to pinpoint what the Milwaukee Bucks are. Sometimes they look like a team that doesn’t deserve to win at all, and is banging their head on the ceiling of a superstar in Giannis that can’t contribute in crunch time. No matter what, it has become clear that these playoffs are just an extension of what has been a really weird season in totality.


SPORTS ARE OUR UNIVERSE

  • Writer: Brian Symons
    Brian Symons
  • Jan 27, 2021

Author: Daniel Gardner

Editor: Aaron Mesco

Kyrie Irving and James Harden have both caused quite the PR disaster for the NBA this year. Irving stopped showing up for team events (including practices and games) and declined to communicate with anyone within the Nets organization. Harden, on the other hand, showed up to Rockets camp out of shape and disinterested, and then publicly declared his Rockets career over before a trade was actually in place. Although these two Brooklyn stars had very different reasons for their actions, some more valid than others, it does not change the fact that neither of these events were good press for the NBA. These are not isolated incidents and are both symptomatic of a larger problem that persists in the modern NBA: the stars have far too much power.

Kyrie Irving not showing up to work was an odd move by him, but not surprising to anyone who has followed him closely through the years. He has a long history of bizarre behavior that has a negative effect on his teammates. In Boston, he publicly blamed young stars on the team for being the reason they were losing games. He made waves earlier this offseason when he told reporters “I don't really see us having a head coach. You know what I mean? KD could be a head coach. I could be a head coach. It’s a collaborative effort”. As so often with Irving, his latest episode was filled with good intentions, but executed in the worst way possible. He stepped back from basketball to make light of social inequalities in our society, which is a worthy cause. But by not telling the public, nor anyone on his team why he wasn’t playing, he put everyone else in a position to answer for his actions.

James Harden, on the other hand, has thoroughly disgraced himself with his actions this season. Houston has enabled Harden throughout his entire tenure with the team. Putting up with his infamous party habits, getting players he asked to play with, and bringing in a coach that allowed Harden to play a style that was great for his stats but grating for other stars. No star in the league was allowed more leeway than Harden, and it showed. When Russell Westbrook got to Houston last year, he was reportedly appalled by the lack of accountability in that organization. Even after being granted his every last wish, Harden still wanted out and showed it in the least professional way possible. He did not go to training camp this year despite having an entire new cast of teammates, showed up wildly out of shape, and displayed a remarkable lack of effort on the court to the point where his teammates were forced called him out after he famously said he was done with the team following a blowout loss to the Lakers. Harden has acted like a spoiled, entitled brat. Although many will forgive him if he wins a title in Brooklyn this year, I hope Houston fans don’t, because I certainly wouldn’t.

Irving coming back to the team with essentially no repercussions and Harden being granted his trade request to Brooklyn is an issue for the NBA. The players should not be rewarded for doing things that hurt the image and turn off the actual fans of the league. These are not isolated occurrences. Last year, Anthony Davis quit on the Pelicans and demanded to be traded to the Lakers. Where did he go? The Lakers. Harden quit on Houston and demanded a trade to Brooklyn. Where did he go? Brooklyn. A few years ago, Kawhi just stopped playing for San Antonio and no one talked about it because no one talks about Kawhi. Players quitting on their franchises so they can get traded to the team of their choice for a king’s ransom is awful for the league. While it may be great for the casual fan to watch the drama unfold, it hurts the die-hard fan. Nets fans loved the D-Lo-led team that went to the playoffs back in 2019, and now nearly everyone that made that team fun is gone. If the Nets win a title with this team, their fans will enjoy it, but it won’t be the same as a homegrown team winning the title. Part of what makes winning so fun is watching the team grow and develop, and that doesn’t happen if the team signs a bunch of hired guns. What separates sports from other entertainment is the passion it evokes from its fans. If the NBA continues down this route, it will become just a more lazy form of entertainment.

The players have no reason to look out for the long-term interest of the league, and many don’t. Their only focus is on what’s best for them. This is why stars act out to team up with other stars in big markets. Who cares if this hurts the fanbase as long as it’s good for them? This is precisely why the players having as much power as they do is bad for the health of the league. The power should not reside with people who have no interest in what goes on after they’re gone. It is the owner’s responsibility to reclaim some of this power, because the repercussions could be disastrous if they don’t.


SPORTS ARE OUR UNIVERSE

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