Nets’ James Harden signed on to be part of Big 3, not be Big 1

Mets can't afford to hire wrong team president

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Back in the days when “Nets” was a synonym for “slapstick,” there was the saga of Stephon Marbury’s ankle tape. Marbury was the latest Net to discover a little too late that playing in New Jersey was only slightly more relevant than playing in Wyoming if you happened to crave New York City.

One night, he uncapped a Magic Marker.

“All,” he wrote on the tape on his left ankle.

“Alone,” he wrote on the right.

James Harden isn’t there yet. In fact, Harden wasn’t prepared to validate the report that emerged Tuesday morning that he was becoming increasingly disillusioned with the Nets, who now play in Brooklyn and are trying mightily to narrow the relevance gap with the Knicks.

Harden, reportedly, has several laments: Brooklyn itself, for starters (he’s “not enjoying it,” according to Bleacher Report). Steve Nash’s rotation is reportedly “disappointing.” And Kyrie Irving’s part-time status is allegedly “frustrating.”

Harden himself decided to rip a page out of the screenplay to “All the President’s Men” after the Nets were handily dusted at Barclays Center Tuesday night by the Lakers, 106-96. Asked about the report, Harden provided a quintessential non-denial denial.

“Did you hear that from me?” Harden asked.

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James Harden
James Harden
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

We did not. We also did not hear this from Harden: “The report is false.”

We did hear this: “Of course I’m frustrated because we’re not healthy where there’s been a lot of inconsistency for whatever reason, injuries, COVID, whatever you want to call it. I think everyone in the organization is frustrated because we’re better than what our record is.”

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