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Brooklyn’s balancing act: Nets didn’t just trade James Harden for Ben Simmons at deadline, they diversified
Published
1 year agoon

That the Brooklyn Nets even entertained the idea of trading James Harden is remarkable. They traded several players, including the homegrown Jarrett Allen and Caris LeVert, plus three first-round picks and four pick swaps to acquire Harden 13 months ago. The Nets barely got to unleash their three-headed monster last season, but scored the most points per possession of any team in NBA history anyway. In the 15 games that Harden played with Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving (including five first-round playoff games), they made the analysts who had fretted about the fit — “there’s only one ball!” — look foolish.
For all the rumors, leverage plays and misdirection surrounding their standoff with the Philadelphia 76ers, the basic terms were simple: Harden had not committed to Brooklyn beyond this season, and the Nets sent the message that they were willing to live with that … unless Philadelphia could make it worth their while to trade him. That meant that Ben Simmons was not enough. Brooklyn needed to get Simmons — a superb but peculiar player, a three-time All-Star, just 25 years old, brilliant passer, superstar on the fast break, one of the best defenders on the planet, the guy who didn’t want to get fouled in last year’s playoffs — and it needed other stuff, too, so the front office could put Simmons and his new teammates in position to contend for championships. Plural.
To make Thursday’s blockbuster happen, the Sixers surrendered Simmons, Seth Curry, Andre Drummond and two first-round picks. This is not the kind of trade that the Nets would have been looking to make if Harden were not reportedly hoping to flee for Philly, if Irving were not unvaccinated and ineligible to play home games and if Joe Harris were not sidelined with an ankle injury that might require a second surgery. Now that Harden is gone, Brooklyn might not feel as good about its championship odds as it did eight months ago, before Harden hurt his hamstring in the opening minute of its second-round series. But there was no guarantee that it would ever feel that way again with Harden on the roster. Instead of holding onto an unhappy Harden and betting — actually, hoping might be more accurate — that they could still win this year’s championship the way they envisioned it, the Nets have chosen to diversify.
In Curry, Brooklyn has acquired one of the best complementary players in the NBA and one of the best shooters who has ever lived. He doesn’t have the size or defensive versatility of Harris, who also fits that description, but he’s more comfortable running pick-and-rolls and has preexisting chemistry with Simmons. The two of them spent the 2020-21 season destroying defenses with dribble-handoffs.
The threat of Curry’s shooting supercharges any offense, and his basketball IQ will make him particularly valuable to Steve Nash’s coaching staff. The Nets have desperately missed Harris’ movement and quick decision-making, a needed counterbalance to the isolation prowess of their stars. Curry solves that problem in the short term, but Brooklyn will have to accept that playoff opponents will target him for the same reasons they’ll target Irving and Patty Mills. The way Harden defended this season, though, Curry isn’t exactly a downgrade, and now the Nets have Simmons to clean things up.
Simmons and Harden are both “point guards,” I guess, but they’re about as similar as Logan Roy and Logan Paul. Offensively, Simmons is at his best zooming from end to end in transition, where his turbo button works better than anybody else’s. Harden prefers to pound the ball into the ground and lull defenses to sleep, and his signature skill is literally slowing down. Harden’s ability to dominate one-on-one on the perimeter is perhaps unmatched, while Simmons’ shortcomings as an isolation scorer are so widely understood as to be unworthy of wasting words on them here.
To introduce either one of them to a new team is to fundamentally change it. Harden’s presence in Brooklyn pushed the team to fully embrace switching, just like the Houston Rockets did, and to relieve Irving of his point-guard responsibilities. Even though they hardly played together, the Nets’ formula for winning a championship with Harden, Durant and Irving was easy to discern: Absolutely annihilate everybody with the best halfcourt offense imaginable, try to build a decent defense, try not to get killed on the glass. At close to full strength, when they were locked in defensively and moving the ball, they looked unstoppable. If opponents allowed them to find transition 3s, it was over. Brooklyn’s new constellation of stars will brew a different concoction of strengths and weaknesses. The Nets no longer employ three of the sport’s most proficient one-on-one scorers, an arrangement that forced defenses to make impossible decisions, but they will be even more terrifying in transition. They can aim higher defensively, and they can turn rebounding into a strength.
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Simmons is not some kind of liability in the halfcourt, at least in the regular season, but he’s obviously not the kind of creator Harden is. If this trade turns out to be a home run for Brooklyn, it will be because of everything else it allows the team to do. Despite Nash’s stated distaste for my-turn-your-turn basketball, they have been prone to stagnating against switching defenses and they’ve been overly reliant on pull-up jumpers. Harden is not much of an off-ball mover and does not love to take catch-and-shoot 3s. These problems can be disguised by incredible shot-making, and they largely were in Brooklyn, until it was shorthanded in a grueling playoff series. Provided that the Nets can give him enough space, Simmons can put pressure on the rim off of DHOs, as a roll man and off the dribble. He can initiate actions, but Brooklyn’s offense will come alive when he attacks an already compromised defense after Durant or Irving has created an advantage.
In terms of sheer bucket-getting, the way-too-brief partnership between Harden, Durant and Irving was something the NBA had never seen. Any time an organization invests so much in three players, though, it becomes a challenge to fill in the gaps around them. Within the constraints of the salary cap, Brooklyn found hidden gems (Bruce Brown, then DeAndre’ Bembry), convinced veterans (Jeff Green, then Blake Griffin and LaMarcus Aldridge, then Mills and Paul Millsap and Aldridge again) and drafted well (Nicolas Claxton, Cam Thomas, Kessler Edwards, Day’Ron Sharpe). Green left for more money last offseason, though, and Harden in particular missed the spacing that both he and Landry Shamet (traded to Phoenix) provided. Brooklyn would still be near the top of the standings if not for injuries, Irving’s part-time status and Griffin’s poor shooting, but, year after year, the Harden-Durant-Irving trio would have forced Sean Marks’ front office to try to find low-cost, low-usage role players who can switch and shoot 3s — and likely settle for players who almost fit that description.
The new Nets can now have Durant and Simmons guard opposing bigs. They can play multiple ways defensively, and they can more naturally run an offense that jibes with the way Nash sees the game. It’s unclear what exactly their ideal rotation will look like — the frontcourt is just as crowded with Drummond in Millsap’s place — and whether or not they will ever be fully whole this season, but, over the next few years, the two extra first-round picks will make it much easier for Marks to find pieces that fit. So will the fact that the Simmons-Durant-Irving triptych is much more balanced than the previous one.
As crazy as it sounds, trading for Ben Simmons, an absolute basketball weirdo, has not only relieved Brooklyn’s short-term tension and given it more of a runway to win big. It has made the Nets more conventional.
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Should Celtics run it back or move on from Tatum & Brown duo? | THE HERD
Published
51 seconds agoon
June 6, 2023
Jim Jackson joins Colin Cowherd to discuss the latest in sports including the state of the Boston Celtics after their elimination in the Eastern Conference Finals.
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Steve Kerr Gives High Praise To The Miami Heat Players
Published
5 mins agoon
June 6, 2023
The Miami Heat have done something this postseason that no one thought was possible.
They entered the Eastern Conference playoffs as the eighth seed and have made it to the NBA Finals.
Despite the Heat not having the most talented roster in the league, they play well together.
Every man understands his role and does it to the best of his ability.
That is the sign of a great team.
Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr had high praise for this Heat team.
According to NBACentral, via Draymond Green’s podcast, Kerr said that no one is complaining about their role, “They’re just all about winning.”
Steve Kerr applauds the players on the Miami Heat for accepting their roles
“None of those guys on Miami are sitting there saying, ‘Well I didn’t play’ or ‘Man, they put in so and so.’ They’re just all about winning.”
(Via The Draymond Green Show / h/t @NBCSWarriors ) pic.twitter.com/4URMUyTmG2
— NBACentral (@TheNBACentral) June 6, 2023
Miami deploys a rotation of four undrafted players.
Each has played a significant role in the playoffs and continues to play well when called upon.
Kerr knows what it takes to be a championship team.
He has won nine rings combined as a player and coach.
While many of these teams he was a part of had superstar players, the Heat’s style of play is refreshing.
Also, many fans think these comments by Kerr were a subtle message to some of the players on the Warriors.
There were a few Warriors players who were upset with their role this past season.
That could be one of the reasons why they are not still playing.
Winning a championship in the NBA is hard, you need everyone to be bought in.
It is clear the Heat are bought in and now they head home for a crucial Game 3 where they can take the series lead.
The post Steve Kerr Gives High Praise To The Miami Heat Players appeared first on The Cold Wire.
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Once teammates with Keith, Alex Pietrangelo now battling Matthew Tkachuk in Final
Published
9 mins agoon
June 6, 2023
LAS VEGAS — When he was just starting his National Hockey League career in St. Louis, Alex Pietrangelo spent part of a summer house-sitting for one of his original teammates.
Pietrangelo discovered in the basement of the home the little mini-sticks rink that Keith Tkachuk had set up for his boys, Matthew and Brady. There were lots of scuffs on the walls. Apparently, the games were rambunctious.
It turned out, so were the boys.
Now 33, Pietrangelo remembers Tkachuk bringing his sons to the rink in St. Louis, and Matthew and Brady bombing around the Blues’ dressing room. Reflecting on it this week, Pietrangelo smiled, mentioning how his own kids now visit the Vegas Golden Knights dressing room.
“I would have been what, 18, 19 years old, so they were just little guys,” Pietrangelo said Sunday between games in the Stanley Cup Final. “I’m nine years older than Matthew, so he was, what, 10 at the time. It’s just funny how things come back.”
Keith Tkachuk retired after the 2009-10 season, but the family stayed in St. Louis and Matthew and Brady eventually became part of the same training group that Pietrangelo still skates with in the summer — even after he left the Blues in 2020 for a stunning $61.6-million free-agent contract in Las Vegas.
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The scuff marks Matthew Tkachuk is making in the Stanley Cup Final are mostly on Pietrangelo, who seems to be the Florida Panthers‘ primary target, especially after whistles. During scrums in Games 1 and 2, which the Golden Knights easily swept to get halfway to their first Stanley Cup, Tkachuk took advantage of the chaos to punch Pietrangelo in the head.
“Yeah, multiple times,” the Knights’ No. 1 defenceman told Sportsnet. “He comes as advertised. That’s OK, I can take it.”
Asked Friday on media day about skating with the Tkachuks in the summer, Pietrangelo said: “I mean, there’s a lot of guys who skate with other guys. (Matthew) is a good player. They both are. They’re both big bodies, big boys. I skate with Brady, too, and I also played with their dad. That sounds a little weird sometimes.
“I stayed at their house one summer. They were out of town, but I stayed at their house with another guy. I still remember they had a little hockey rink in the basement. And here they are. Time flies.”
Like a rabbit punch in a scrum.
The Tkachuk boys have grown into NHL stars themselves and Pietrangelo is finishing his 13th full season in the league — most of them as one of the game’s top-10 blueliners.
The defenceman from King City, Ont., has finished fourth in Norris Trophy balloting a couple of times, including during his final season in St. Louis, which was the year after Pietrangelo helped the Blues cap a storybook run to the Stanley Cup.
“The first time, it’s a big deal obviously,” Pietrangelo said. “You work your whole life to get there, and I think you’re a little more calm the second time around because you know what to expect. You’ve been there. You certainly try to enjoy it a bit more because you never know when it’s going to happen again, right? You think it’s going to happen but it’s harder than you think.”
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Before the Knights’ 7-2 blowout win on Monday, he explained: “Relaxed isn’t the right word, but you almost feel a little bit less pressure because you’ve been through it before. I think these whole playoffs in general, going on this run, for me, it’s felt a little bit less tense. I’ve played 115 or 120 playoff games [129 actually], and as you keep going you get that feeling. But I feel like our group, the way we are as a group in the locker room, I think we’re enjoying this process.
“St. Louis, there was so much going on that year — the coach [getting fired] and all that stuff, and then (Jordan) Binnington comes up, it was a different kind of ride. But I feel like we’ve been a good team all year. We’ve earned the right to be in this spot. So there’s a sense of confidence that we carried going into this. But the reality is there’s a lot of guys that were… three wins away from winning it last time [for Vegas in 2018] who haven’t won it. So we have a good balance of experience and hunger.”
And the Knights have outstanding lineup balance, too, and all these things have made the series a mismatch so far.
Game 3 is Thursday in Sunrise, Fla. (Sportsnet and SN NOW).
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Just as Pietrangelo said Tkachuk has come as advertised, so has Pietrangelo.
Except for a moment of madness in the second round, when Pietrangelo uncharacteristically chopped down on the wrists of Edmonton Oilers star Leon Draisaitl and was lucky to escape with a one-game suspension, the big defenceman has played the steady, dependable, superior hockey that led the Knights to blitz him in free agency.
The Knights already had an elite defenceman in Shea Theodore. But general manager Kelly McCrimmon, backed by team president George McPhee and owner Bill Foley, believed Vegas needed a “true No. 1 defenceman” like Pietrangelo.
Among the NHL’s top blue-liners, Pietrangelo’s game is one of the quietest. He isn’t dynamic like Cale Makar and Quinn Hughes, doesn’t pile up points like Erik Karlsson and Roman Josi, and isn’t as physically imposing as Victor Hedman.
But night after night, Pietrangelo plays a strong two-way game, making plays with the puck, using his size to protect the Vegas net and his positioning and smarts to disrupt the opposition. He and teammate Alec Martinez lead the playoffs in blocked shots with 48, and only Knights forward Mark Stone and his magic stick have more takeaways than Pietrangelo’s 22.
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After a 54-point regular season that tied a career-high (but was only 15th in scoring among NHL defencemen), Pietrangelo has one goal and nine points (and a plus-10 goal differential at five-on-five) in 18 playoff games.
You can argue whether all that is worth $8.8-million a season, but the Knights have gotten exactly what they wanted with Pietrangelo. Well, they will get it as long as Vegas wins two more games against Florida.
“He’s a high-effort player,” Knights coach Bruce Cassidy said during his media availability on Sunday. “He’s certainly got skill and makes his plays, he’s got a good shot and good nose for the net. But I think his effort to block shots, to defend hard, clear the front of the net — those are some things I guess I’ve learned about Alex. I thought he was a little more the offensive-tilted guy, but he’s a full 200-foot guy. A harder player, I guess, than maybe I would have suspected watching him.”
“This was a good team before I got here,” Pietrangelo said. “Kelly and George have added some pieces, myself and a few other guys along the way they felt would give the team an even better opportunity. But credit to the guys who have been here, the guys who have been here from the start. They’ve been successful since Day 1. And there’s a reason why.
“We’re confident in what we do as a group. I wouldn’t say that you sit there and you say: ‘Oh, we have a chance to win (the Stanley Cup).’ I don’t think that was ever really the thought process. The thing about our group is we kind of go every single day, and then worry about what the next day is. We’ve dealt with the emotions of the playoffs really well because of that.”
And the emotions of the first two games of the Stanley Cup Final, when the Panthers have failed to goad the Knights into a street fight and Tkachuk, their best player, has been ineffective.
“You’ve got to worry about who you’re playing and where you are right now,” Pietrangelo said. “Experience helps, but I think sometimes you can overthink that experience because you’ve still got to go out and play the game. Because for all of us who are experienced, there’s guys who have never won it before and are just as hungry to win for the first time, right? But, you know, when you win it once, you want to win it again.”
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