NBA
NBA Daily: James Harden’s All-Around Deadly Game
“Lazy! Ballhog! Choker!”
The basketball social media universe is unforgiving for a number of players in the NBA. By scanning the timelines of many users in this world, youβll see all kinds of arguments and debatesβseriously or jokinglyβrooted in recency bias due to the 24/7 news cycle rate at which news happens in 2019. A good chunk of these are referred to as βhot takes,β a.k.a. baseless claims meant to get a rise out of people reacting in real time.
Now, the issue with those viewpoints is that once something is proclaimed, it is set in stone. Some fans wonβt bother to watch or listen when a player improves or adapts to whatever area was once a struggle. Above all else, they shudder to see success because it means theyβre wrong. And who can be wrong about something in todayβs world? Oh no, the horror.
In turn, that realization evolves into an actual hatred of a playerβs game (and in some cases personal, unfortunately), causing a domino effect throughout and gaining traction to spread that disdain.
The target most seem to go after? None other than the NBAβs reigning MVP, Houston Rockets superstar James Harden.
Letβs get this out of the way firstβyes, Harden embellishes. He does it more often than anybody in the league, probably. He’s also been given leeway on stepbacks regarding the gathers he takes. Just because thatβs true, however, does not mean that every foul committed against him isnβt one, nor is every movement he makes a travel.
With the officiating the NBA has, you have to be mindful that a more demonstrative sell job is going to get you a call. Plus, if it works to your benefit and keeps working, why stop? Nobody wants to hear that, but if you look anywhere around this game youβll recognize that plenty of players are doing the same exact thing.
That said, in the first-round series with the Utah Jazz, Harden hasnβt even been getting the number of foul calls weβre used to seeing him get anyway. If it werenβt for Game 3, heβd have been to the free throw line just eight times with only 12 personal fouls drawn. While itβs only a small sample size, to this point, his free throw rate is the lowest itβs been since last postseason.
Sure, he worked his way to the charity stripe twice as much Saturday, but thatβs because his shots were not falling, meaning he had to take matters into his own hands to attack more frequentlyβespecially with the Jazz forcing him right and going behind him defensively every possession.
Which brings us to the next point: Harden is an exceptional passer. Due to his isolation-heavy game, the common misconception is that Beard is a selfish player. That couldnβt be further from the truth.
Since heβs put up less-than-ideal scoring numbers when heβs put it on the floor against Utah, Harden has found another way to positively impact the game with his distribution. His 6.7 assists per game off drives is far and away the highest average among the rest of the league in playoff time.
The main beneficiaries of these dimes have been two guysβClint Capela and P.J. Tucker. If you want to know why Rockets head coach Mike DβAntoni constantly raves over Hardenβs playmaking ability, thereβs your reason (threes and layups!)
In forcing defenses to collapse when he takes it to the hole, it more often than not leaves that pair open. When Harden comes in, Capela clears out just long enough to create space for a quick baseline cut and easy high handoff for two points.
Capela converts on 75 percent of the passes he receives from Harden, whoβs averaged four assists per game to the big man this series. This has been one of the most deadly combinations for years, and the duoβs chemistry has only gotten stronger with more time together.
If defenses try to take away the alley-oop and crowd Harden at the point of attack, heβll send it to his guys in the short corner almost every time. During this series, that man has been Tucker. All five of his three-point makes have come off a Harden assist. Sometimes others will occupy the spot as well and just wait for that kick out.
Hardenβs also been able to locate the elbows pretty well, citing Eric Gordon and Gerald Greenβs combined five three-balls as an example of that. If an overall career-best 48.6 assist percentage to start the postseason doesnβt turn people off to the “ballhog” narrative, nothing will.
Itβd be remiss of this writer to not mention Hardenβs work on the defensive end, too. Matched up against Joe Ingles and Ricky Rubioβthe players heβs guarded mostβheβs held those players in check.
He isnβt assigned to the best offensive weapons on the teamβMitchell has had his way against himβbut Harden has limited Ingles to six points on 49 possessions and Rubio to eight points on 41 possessions, respectively. The whiff in transition with Royce OβNeale going right around him for an easy dunk looks terrible, but itβs nothing but a blip on the radar regarding the whole picture.
Cherry picking certain highlights and statistics is a common practice of the hot take culture to fit their perspective, so theyβll use that to their advantage in arguments. Donβt let it distract you from the fact that Harden is, without a shadow of a doubt, turning himself into one of the most cerebral players in the NBA.
Consider that this small stretch of elite basketball has come against a top defensive team in the league. Harden finds ways to dissect. Thereβs always the threat of a stepback threeβover eight contested attempts per game in which heβs knocked down 38.5 percent ofβgoing down. If he chooses to deliberately slow the pace down in the halfcourt, thereβs a good chance heβll zoom right by you to open up those previously mentioned options.
Going 0-for-15 to start Game 3 was historically poor, but Harden racked up seven assists and six steals during the struggles. He still proceeded to score a game-high 14 points in the fourth quarter and knock down the most critical three of the night to lead Houston to a clutch win on the road.
In the end, itβs not how you start. Itβs how you finish.
Some of Hardenβs detractors will still blind themselves of the truly special performances that are actually happening. At that point, itβd be better to admit you donβt like the guy rather than to invent reasons why heβs βoverratedβ on the floor.
While everyone has their opinion on Harden, DβAntoni has his own.
βThatβs the best offensive player Iβve ever seen,β the Rockets head coach said last March. βItβs impossible to guard him. Itβs impossible.β
DβAntoniβs been around this league for a long time.
Perhaps we shouldnβt take the opinion of a person thatβs coached Steve Nash, Kobe Bryant and Carmelo Anthony lightly.