Rocket man Harden makes his point as all-time offensive weapon
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[March 07, 2019]
By Jahmal Corner
(Reuters) - James Harden is dribbling
his way to one of the most prolific offensive seasons in NBA history
but it's probably fair to say that no one saw it coming.
Not the league's helpless defenders who flail and foul him each
night, not his Houston Rockets team mates, not even the coach who
helped mold Harden as a player from his beard-less teenage years.
Scott Pera, who coached Harden at a Los Angeles area high school and
now leads the Rice University college basketball team, said he never
imagined his former player would morph into one of the all-time
great offensive weapons.
"No way humanly possible. This is not even something that enters the
realm of your brain," Pera told Reuters.
"What he's done with the Rockets is absurd. It's been incredible to
follow."
Harden has ambushed the NBA this season and is averaging 36.7 points
per game -- the highest total in 32 years and one only ever bettered
by Wilt Chamberlain and Michael Jordan.
The points have come in floods and streaks, including a run of 32
straight contests with 30 points. His current groove includes 135 in
his last three games and it is winning him plenty of admirers.
"He’s doing it easy, too," Golden State Warriors forward Kevin
Durant said earlier this season. "You know when guys step into
superstardom. He’s at the peak of his powers."
The 29-year-old's assault on this particular peak came about more
from team necessity than design.
When the Rockets pushed the champion Golden State Warriors to seven
games in last year's Western Conference Finals, it looked like
Houston had stamped itself as a title challenger.
But there were struggles at the start of the season and it was only
when injuries sidelined key players like Chris Paul and Clint Capela
that the Rockets unleashed the game's best one-on-one player.
Harden's isolation style can be polarizing, and at one point during
this year's individual assault he recorded 304 straight unassisted
points.
But there is real mastery in watching Harden dissect defenses. He
rocks back and forth with a compact dribble until he finds space for
his jump shot, an opening for a drive, or contact that draws a foul.
"It’s so hard (not to foul him)," Nuggets coach Michael Malone said
prior to a meeting with the Rockets last month.
"You have to show your hands all night long. It’s a hell of a
challenge. He’s learned to play the system very well, and you have
to give him credit for that."
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Houston Rockets guard James Harden (13) reacts after scoring a
basket during the third quarter against the Miami Heat at Toyota
Center. Troy Taormina-USA TODAY/File Photo
MENTAL GAME
Harden exploits the trends of today's NBA better than any player. In
a league where the three-pointer is king, and an easy two points is
queen, Harden rules in each facet.
Consider that he has attempted nearly 200 more three pointers than
shooting artist Stephen Curry, and shoots 11.5 free throws per game
to easily lead the NBA in both categories.
Pera, who said he follows Harden closely throughout the season and
still texts him before and after each game, told Reuters that Harden
has worked tirelessly to continually evolve.
This has been true, Pera said, at each stage of his career: from
good high school recruit to great college player, to NBA sixth man
and now future Hall of Famer.
What impresses Pera most these days, though, is Harden's mental
game.
"The speed of the game is so slow in his head," Pera said. "In his
mind, the defender in front of him does not exist – it’s the other
eight guys that he’s watching."
This year's Harden evolution includes a signature step back
three-pointer that is being emulated throughout the league.
The Rockets have also noted that Harden has put increased focus on
fitness this year by adding extra workouts and changing his diet.
Houston (39-25) is finally catching up to the pace set by their star
guard, and with improved health they have won six straight games to
climb to third in the Western Conference.
If all continues, Harden is likely to repeat as league MVP and climb
the ranks of the best players of all time.
"That’s what I put my jersey on for," Harden told the Houston
Chronicle. "What I lace my shoes up for — to be the best I can be.
When it’s all said and done, be mentioned as one of the best players
to ever touch a basketball."
(Reporting by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles, editing by Nick
Mulvenney)
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