Sunday, November 19, 2023

J-Speaks: The Thunder's Striking Four-Game Winning Streak

 

The Oklahoma City Thunder just missed making the Playoffs after they dropped their Play-In tilt at the Minnesota Timberwolves last spring. Behind their superstar lead guard and the return of their First-Round draft choice in June 2022, the Thunder have started this season with the objective of making the Playoffs this spring outright. They particularly showed that during their current winning streak, which included consecutive victories at the former NBA champions.

The Thunder (9-4) closed out this past week with a dominant 128-109 victory on Thursday night at the 2022 NBA champion Golden State Warriors on NBATV. That was followed by a comeback victory from 18 points down in the third quarter on Saturday night in their 130-123 overtime victory at the Warriors (6-8), giving the Thunder their fourth consecutive win and giving the four-time NBA champions since 2014-15 season to their sixth consecutive loss.

The Thunder also improved to an NBA-best 5-1 on the road (4-3 at home) in the early part of the 2023-24 NBA campaign.

The Thunder’s winning streak, which is a part of their string of six wins their last seven games following a 3-3 start to the 2023-24 NBA campaign began with a 111-99 victory Nov. 12 at the Phoenix Suns (6-6).

Two nights later, the Thunder ran the San Antonio Spurs (3-10) off their home floor in front of a national televised audience with a 123-87 victory on TNT.

The Thunder’s rise to being a team that has put them into the national headlines as a team that will be in the picture of making the Playoffs in a loaded Western Conference this spring is because the continued rise of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who is putting himself in the running for Kia MVP and the rising play of former No. 2 overall pick in forward/center Chet Holmgren, who missed all of his official rookie season in 2022-23 with a foot injury sustained in August 2022 during a Pro AM game in Seattle, WA.

The man affectionately called SGA so far this season this season has registered 30-plus points in eight of the Thunder’s first 13 games. That included his 40-point performance with six assists, seven rebounds, two steals, and two blocks on 18/29 shooting on Saturday night at the Warriors.

Gilgeous-Alexander’s performance came on the heels of a 24 points with seven assists on three steals on Thursday night at the Warriors, where he despite going 6/21 shooting overall from the field, went 3/7 from three-point range and made all nine of his free throw attempts.

As great as Gilgeous-Alexander was at the Warriors where he scored 10 of his 40 points in overtime, the Thunder got to OT thanks to Holmgren’s tying three-pointer at the final buzzer off an inbounds pass from Josh Giddey to close regulation to tie it 117-117.

It capped the best scoring night for the No. 2 overall pick out of Gonzaga’s unofficial first season in the NBA where he scored a career-high and rookie franchise-record 36 points with 10 rebounds, five assists, two steals and two block shots on 14/22 from the field.

This was the second straight double-double with multiple block shots for Holmgren, who had 13 points and 10 boards in the Thursday night win by the Thunder at the Warriors.  

“Ah man, it’s huge,” Holmgren, who had his fifth double-double on the season said to Bally Sports Oklahoma’s Nick Gallo about the comeback victory.

“Like you said we were down big at points but we stayed together. Really played for each other, you know? We were able to string together enough good plays to give us a chance at the end. Sent it to OT and then you know, No. 2 [Gilgeous-Alexander] took over and does what he does in OT really won us the game there.”

Holmgren’s performance along with SGA’s helped the Thunder overcome an 18-point deficit midway through the third quarter as they outscored the Warriors 66-56 in the third and fourth quarters combined and 13-6 in overtime. That came on the heels of getting outscored by the Warriors 30-18 in the second quarter to trail 61-51 at intermission.

“Yeah, he gave us a chance,” Gilgeous-Alexander said to Gallo after the win about Holmgren’s tying shot at the end of regulation to force overtime.

SGA added saying about Holmgren so far this season, “Kid’s a fighter. Every possession. Every play, he fights and he competes no matter what. And his skill set took over the fight mentality. He gave us an extra five minutes to go get the game, and fortunately enough we did.”  

The Thunder closed overtime 11-3 after the Warriors’ perennial All-Star Chris Paul hit a corner three-pointer right in front of the Thunder’s bench to put the Warriors up 120-119 with 3:27 left in overtime.

That surge was led by Gilgeous-Alexander who went from hitting a fallaway jumper to put the Thunder up 126-123 with 1:10 left in overtime. He followed that up by blocking the potential tying three-pointer by the Warriors’ two-time Kia MVP Stephen Curry, which he turned into two points on a breakaway layup over Paul that sealed the win.

The Thunder put themselves in that position to have that finishing kick by what happened before the start of overtime.

Holmgren, after tying the game with said three-pointer at the final buzzer of regulation let out a loud scream while giving high fives to a couple of his teammates. But he and the rest of head coach Mike Daigneault’s squad quickly centered themselves to take care of business in the extra five minutes, continuing their ability while being so young to flip the script and take care of the matter at hand which was complete the comeback from 18 down. 

Holmgren referenced a game last season where Gilgeous-Alexander hit a shot similar to what he did at the Warriors on Saturday night, but SGA was “ice cold,” showing no “emotion” because the game was not done. That kicked in for Holmgren after tying the game at the end of regulation with that aforementioned triple and the Thunder as just referenced put the focus back on the task at hand which was to take care of business in overtime which they did 13-6 as previously mentioned.

“After a few seconds, that kind of kicked in and I’m telling everybody like, ‘We’ve got OT.’ So we’ve still got to go win this game,” Holmgren added about that moment. “Obviously, that’s a big shot. But the game’s still going at that point. So, my mind tried to track forward to the next moment and the next play.”

The truth growth of a team that is trying to become a Playoff perennial and hopefully an NBA champion along that journey is being able to not only string together victories, especially early in the season but to register those wins against some of the best in the league, particularly in your conference.

At the start of this month the Thunder kicked of their In-Season Tournament schedule with a tough 141-139 loss versus the Warriors on Nov. 3, their second straight loss. That came on the heels of a 110-106 setback versus the New Orleans Pelicans (6-7) two nights earlier.

The Thunder since have found their groove, which began with that win at the Suns where they outscored them 31-13 in the fourth quarter where they led by as many as 12.

That was followed by a thrashing victory versus the Spurs, where the Thunder outscored their visitors from the “Alamo City” 95-62, the final three quarters, including 33-18 in the third quarter. They led by as many as 40 in the final period.

That night was centered around the matchup of No. 1 overall pick this past June in Victor Wembanyama of the Spurs and Holmgren of the Thunder.

Neither player sparkled in this first of many anticipated tilts for hopefully the next decade plus where Wembanyama had just eight points with 14 rebounds, and two blocks on 4/15 from the field. Holmgren also had just eight points with seven rebounds and two steals on just 3/10 from the floor, including 1/5 from three-point range.

“I just think we have great respect for their people, their players, their program,” Coach Daigneault said of the five-time NBA champion Spurs and Hall of Fame head coach Gregg Popovich. “It’s one game. It’s one of 82. It was our night. It wasn’t their night. But it’s zero-zero next time we play them.”

In the Thunder’s first win of their two-game set with the Warriors on Thursday night, Gilgeous-Alexander and Holmgren played well but they won the game where they led by as many as 21 points because of the play of the rest of their cast. 

Isaiah Joe, who joined the Thunder a season ago after being let go last summer by the Philadelphia 76ers scored a season-high of 23 points off the bench going a sparkling 7/7 from three-point range. He played a huge part in the Thunder shooting 50.6 percent from the field (44/87 FGs) and 19/32 from three-point range.

Josh Giddey, the third so-called part of the Thunder’s “Core 3” alongside Gilgeous-Alexander and Holmgren added 19 points with six rebounds, and two steals. Second-year forward Jalen Williams scored 16 points with five boards and two steals. Reserve rookie guard Cason Wallace chipped in with 10 points and four assists.

In the Thunder’s win on Saturday night at the Warriors, as great as Gilgeous-Alexander and Holmgren were, they got good play from the Giddey and the rest of the cast that allowed Gilgeous-Alexander and Holmgren to take of business in the fourth quarter and overtime.

Williams scored 22 points with six rebounds on 8/16 from the field. Giddey added 11 points with five boards and two blocks. Joe scored 10 off the bench going 2/4 from three-point range.

Thunder’s 6-1 mark since Nov. 6 is tied with the Miami Heat, Minnesota Timberwolves,  and New York Knicks for the best mark in the NBA. The Thunder’s plus-12 point differential in this span is tops in the league. Their 49.6 field goal percentage and 40.3 percent from three-point range during this span is ranked No. 6 and No. 7 in “The Association” respectably.

How the Thunder’s dynamic duo finished was impressive against a Warriors squad that got back their top scoring ace in Curry, who had 25 points with seven boards on 5/11 from three-point range in his return from a two-game absence because of a sore knee.

“It’s impressive,” Gilgeous-Alexander said to Gallo about the Thunder sweeping the two-game set at the Warriors. “It’s a really good basketball team. Everybody knows that. They know how to win basketball games. They were a little short-handed the first game. Their desperate obviously with their losing streak. We knew that they were going to play hard, play together and it’s going to be a 48-minute game. Well in this case it was 53 [minutes].”

“But we knew that we were going to have to fight. We were going to have to compete the whole game if we wanted to get a W [Win]. And we did enough for two nights to get two w’s against a really good team.”

Last season, the Oklahoma City Thunder just missed making the 2023 Playoffs falling dropping their Western Conference Play-In tilt at the Minnesota Timberwolves, who claimed the No. 8 and final Playoff spot.

The Thunder’s start to this season, which includes their two wins at the Golden State Warriors as part of their four-game winning streak has shown they want to be in prime position this spring to earn outright their first Playoff berth since 2020.

If they continue to get the performances they have gotten from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, a legitimate Kia MVP candidate and Chet Holmgren, a top candidate for Kia Rookie of the Year, the Thunder will be in 2024 Playoffs as long as they remain healthy and hungry like they were in their two wins at the Warriors.  

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 11/18/2023 7:30 p.m. NBATV “Pregame,” presented by Carmax With Nabil Karim Greg Anthony, and Bredan Haywood’ 11/18/2023 8:30 p.m. “Thunder versus Warriors,” Bally Sports Oklahoma With Chris Fisher, Michael Cage, Nick Gallo and Paris Lawson; https://www.nba.com/game/okc-vs-gsw-0022300207/boxscore; https://www.nba.com/stats/teams/traditional; https://www.espn.com/nba/standings; https://www.espn.com/nba/team/schedule/_/name/okc/oklahoma-city-thunder; https://www.espn.com/nba/game/_/gameid/401584813; https://www.espn.com/nba/recap/_/gameid/401584109; https://www.espn.com/nba/boxscore/_/gameid/401584109; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/4278073/shai-gilgeous-alexander; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/stats/_/id/4395702; and https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/4433255/chet-holmgren.           

Friday, November 17, 2023

J-Speaks: The Passing Of Suns Legend And All-Time Leading Scorer

 He first made a name for himself on the hardwood playing at Chapel Hill for its late Hall of Fame head coach. That led him to becoming one of the NBA’s top scoring guards for 15 seasons, first in the “Valley of the Sun.” Then in the “Colorado Rockies,” and for a cup of coffee in “Rip City.” Following his playing career, this said player became a broadcaster for the boys from the “Colorado Rockies.” He then became a pro basketball scout in D.C. Three Thursdays ago, the NBA and basketball world said goodbye to this dynamic scoring guard.

On Thursday, Nov. 2, Walter Davis, who played 15 seasons in the NBA with the Phoenix Suns, Denver Nuggets, and the Portland Trail Blazers passed away from natural causes in Charlotte, NC. He was 69 years old.   

Davis was a six-time All-Star (1978-81, 1984, & 1987) and two-time All-NBA Second Team selection (1978, & 1979) in his 15 NBA season, where he averaged 18.9 points on 51.1 percent shooting in 1,033 games played (373 starts). He is also part of the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame and was named in 2002 to the Atlantic Coastal Conference (ACC) Anniversary squad.   

Today, Davis is the Suns all-time leading scorer at 15,666 points.

                    Suns All-Time Leading Scorer  *Hall Of Famer                   
1) Walter Davis    15,666      6) Dick Van Arsdale      12,060
2) Alvan Adams   13,910      7) Amar’e Stoudemire   11,035
3) Devin Booker   12,782      8) *Steve Nash               10,172
4) Kevin Johson   12,747      9) *Paul Westphal           9,564
5) Shawn Marion 12,134    10) Larry Nance, Sr.         8,430

In a statement via social media (X; formerly Twitter), the Suns (@Suns) said, “We are heartbroken by the passing of Suns legend Walter Davis, the franchise’s all-time leading scorer and a member of our Ring of Honor.”  

Born in Pineville, NC on Sept. 9, 1954, the youngest of 13 children born between 1937 and 1954, Davis basketball journey began at South Mecklenburg High School in Charlotte, NC where he led the Sabres to three state titles and lost only four games along the way.

Davis following high school starred at Chapel Hill for the North Carolina Tar Heels under the late Hall of Fame head coach Dean Smith.

He made his mark as a collegiate early on as a freshmen where he hit a buzzer-beating jumper against Atlantic, Coastal Conference (ACC) rival, the Duke University Blue Devils that sent the game in overtime.  

In college, Davis, who was affectionately called “Sweet D” for his effortless, smooth style of play ability was an unstoppable scoring force as the head of the snake of one of the top collegiate basketball programs in the nation at the time.

Davis registered 1,863 points, 670 rebounds, and 409 assists in his career at North Carolina on his way to being a two-time All-ACC honoree as a junior (1976) and senior (1977).

In between his junior and senior seasons at UNC, Davis helped to lead the 1976 USA Men’s Basketball squad to the Gold Medal at the 1976 Olympic games in Montreal, Quebec.

As a senior, Davis helped to lead the Tar Heels to the ACC Tournament title and a berth in the 1977 NCAA Tournament title game, where they lost 67-59 to the Marquette University Golden Eagles.

At the conclusion of his four-year career with the Tar Heels, Davis scored in double-figures in 106 games for the Tar Heels, ranking fourth on the school’s all-time list. That trails only former teammate Phil Ford, Sam Perkins, and Tyler Hansbrough.

Ford said that he and Davis were the best of friends going back five decades to their late high school years in North Carolina to their time as teammates at UNC, up to the passing of Davis.  

Ford said recently that it was Davis, Tommy LaGarde, and current General Manager and President of Basketball Operations for the Charlotte Hornets Mitch Kupchak that hosted him on his recruiting trip at North Carolina and they all became “great friends.”

“When we were in school together, he [Davis] and I were best friends. He was the best man at my wedding and I was the best man at his,” Ford said in a statement.

“Throughout the last 50 years, we’ve remained in contact with each other and were best friends to each other. He loved me and I loved him. He was a great, great, great, guy that happened to be a great basketball player. I’ve always said he could have been selected MVP in the 1975 ACC Tournament just as much as I was. ”

“I am going to miss him dearly. I’m happy I got to see him a couple of weeks ago in Chapel Hill, but this is very hard. I would like to believe he’s in a better place right now but I’m going to dearly miss my friend….I’m getting calls from people all around the country-John Lucas, Scott May, Quinn Buckner, David Thompson. Everybody thought the world about Walt, just like all of us Carolina players and fans did.”

“I’m blessed we were teammates and friends, and I thank God I had him in my life all these years.”  

Davis, who is No. 10 on the Tar Heels’ all-time scoring list led North Carolina to the 1977 NCAA Championship game, where they lost to the Marquette University Golden Eagles.

“This is a sad, said day with the passing of Walter Davis, one of our all-time great basketball players and even nicer person,” former Tar Heels head coach (2003-21) and Kansas University head coach (1988-2003) and Hall of Famer Roy Williams, who was Smith’s assistant (1978-88) said in a statement on Nov. 2. 

The three-time NCAA champion also said about Davis, “Coach [Dean] Smith and Coach [Bill] Guthridge used to rave about how much fun it was to coach Walter. I got to watch him as a fan and loved getting to know him later. The big shot to end the ‘eight points in 17 seconds game against Duke will stay with us forever, as will many other fantastic moments. Walter was a truly great Tar Heel.”

The basketball legacy of Davis’s family at North Carolina has continued under current head coach in his nephew Hubert Davis, who played 12 seasons in the NBA (1992-2004) for the New York Knicks Toronto Raptors, Dallas Mavericks, Washington Wizards, Detroit Pistons, and then New Jersey (now Brooklyn) Nets.

Hubert, after nine seasons as an assistant at North Carolina on Williams’ staff, is now in his third season as the Tar Heels head coach.

The basketball journey Davis continue in the NBA, first with the Phoenix Suns, who drafted him No. 5 overall in the 1977 NBA Draft.

Davis made an immediate impact for then late head coach John MacLeod where he averaged 24.2 points and six rebounds on 52.6 percent from the field in 81 games played (all starts). Those stats earned Davis the 1977-78 Rookie of the Year and made the All-Rookie First Team.

In was the first of three straight seasons and one of six seasons where Davis averaged over 20 points per game. He averaged 23.6 points in 1978-79 and 1986-87; 21.5 points in 1979-80; 20 points in 1983-84; and 21.8 points in 1985-86.

On Feb. 25, 1983, Davis set an NBA-record where he scored his first 34 points on perfect shooting of 15/15 from the floor and 4/4 at the free throw line before he missed a jumper with under a minute left in the game.

Davis surpassed the previous record holder of Hall of Famer Larry Costello, who made all of his scoring attempts on his way to 32 points in a game for the then Syracuse Nationals (now the Philadelphia 76ers).

When came to team success, Davis helped the Suns get back to the Western Conference Finals in his second NBA season of 1978-79, but they lost in seven games to the then Seattle Supersonics (now Oklahoma City Thunder). It was their first appearance since 1976, falling 4-2 in the NBA Finals to the NBA champion Boston Celtics.

After three straight setbacks in the West Semifinals, two of those to the eventual five-time NBA champion “Showtime” Los Angeles Lakers of the 1980s, the Suns led by Davis got back to the West Finals in 1984, but once again were up ended by the Lakers in six games.

Davis in the 1984 postseason averaged 24.9 points and 6.4 assists on 53.5 percent shooting.

“I tried to do everything that I can that will help the team win and that’s playing the way I was taught how to play,” Davis said back in 1984.   

During his time with the Suns, Davis earned the nickname “The Greyhound” for his speedy style and sleek physique. Now retired longtime play-by-play broadcaster Al McCoy had many nicknames for Davis that ranged from “The Candyman,” his aforementioned collegiate nickname “Sweet D,” and “The Man with the Velvet Touch.”

“Walter Davis was and always will be to me the man with the ‘Velvet Touch,’” Mr. McCoy, the Hall of Famer said. “He was ‘Mr. Smooth.’ He was ‘Satin.’ He was ‘Silk,’ and that was how he played the game.”  

Following that run to the West Finals in 1983-84, the Suns lost in the First-Round 3-0 to the eventual NBA champion Lakers again 3-0 and missed the Playoffs for the next three springs.

A major part of the Suns’ decline was behind the recurring back problems of Davis and an ugly drug scandal, where he was called to testify on illegal drug use by his Suns teammates in exchange for immunity from being prosecuted. On two occasions, Davis entered rehab to deal with cocaine addiction.

At age 33 and at the conclusion of his contract at the end of the 1987-88 NBA campaign, the Suns attempted to bring back Davis on a one-year deal at half of his salary.

Davis decided to take his talents elsewhere and signed a two-year, $1.35 million deal with the Nuggets.

In his first two seasons with the boys from the “Colorado Rockies,” Davis played well averaging 15.6 points and 49.8 percent from the field and 17.5 points on 48.1 percent from the floor in 1988-89 and 1989-90 respectably off the bench.

Unfortunately, those productive seasons by Davis playing alongside Hall of Famer Alex English, Lafayette “Fat” Lever, Blair Rassmussen, Dan Schayes, and Joe Barry Carroll, and coached by first Nuggets legend Doug Moe and then Paul Westhead.

Davis got out of the blocks well in 1990-91 averaging 18.7 points on 47.4 percent from the floor in 39 games played (13 starts). In the early part of that season, Davis was part of a three-team deal that sent him to the Trail Blazers, teaming up with a championship caliber squad of Hall of Famer Clyde Drexler, Terry Porter, Bucks Williams, the late Kevin Duckworth, and the late Jerome Kersey, the late Clifford Robinson, and Hall of Fame head coach Rick Adelman.

Davis averaged 6.1 points on 44.6 percent shooting in 32 games in the regular season off the bench for the Trail Blazers. The Trail Blazers that season made the Playoffs as the No. 1 Seed in the Western Conference but lost 4-2 in the Western Conference Finals to the Lakers. Davis only averaged just 3.3 points in 13 postseason games in 1991.

Davis closed his 15-year career back with the Nuggets in 1991-92 where he averaged 9.9 points on 45.9 percent shooting in 46 games played off the bench.

In the years that followed his playing days, Davis became a broadcaster for the Nuggets alongside one of the legendary Albert brothers Al Albert.

Davis then became a professional scout for the then Washington Bullets (now Wizards). 

There was also a repairing of the fractured relationship between Davis and the Suns and in 1994, the Suns retired his No. 6 jersey and enshrined him in their “Ring of Honor” a decade later.

On the night of the Suns 126-104 victory versus the Utah Jazz on Oct. 28, 2023, they reintroduced Davis and gifted him a commemorative watch from new owner Mat Ishbia in celebration of the team’s revamped version of their “Ring of Honor.”

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 11/2/2023 www.nba.com story “Suns Legend, 6-Time All-Star Walter Davis Dies At 69,” from “The Associated Press;” 11/3/2023 1 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” presented by Kia With Matt Winer, Greg Anthony, and Channing Frye;  11/14/2023 6 p.m. “NBA Action,” on NBATV with Ian Eagle; 11/15/2023 www.rdnews.com story, “Walter Davis, Five-Time NBA All-Star And North Carolina Standout, Dies,” By Harold Valetine of “The Associated Press;” The Sporting News “Official 2006-07 NBA Guide;” https://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/PHO/leaders_career.html; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Williams_(basketball_coach);  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Phoenix_Suns_seasons; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Phoenix_Suns_head_coaches; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Davis _(basketball). 

Monday, November 13, 2023

J-Speaks: Historic Scoring Night By 76ers' Possible Next All-Star

 

When the 2023-24 season for the National Basketball Association (NBA) began, the Philadelphia 76ers entered the campaign with a major question of what they were going to do with their disgruntled half of their starting backcourt? Well they answered that question at the start of this month when they dealt said disgruntled star guard to the West Coast back home to L.A.’s other NBA squad. That decision now looks like a stroke of genius, especially because of the emergence of the other half of backcourt. That said rising star made that decision even better by his career-high and historic scoring performance on Sunday night.

Behind the career-high performance of 50 points on 20/32 from the floor, including 7/11 from three-point range by starting lead guard Tyrese Maxey to go along with five assists, seven rebounds and three block shots, the Eastern Conference leading 76ers (8-1) were victorious 137-126 on Sunday night versus the Indiana Pacers (6-4).

Maxey’s previous career-high was 44 points on Oct. 28, 2022 against the Toronto Raptors.  

Tyrese Maxey By       1st  QTR:  8 Points, 3/5 FGs, 2/3 3-Pt.
Quarter Versus          2nd QTR:  17 Points, 7/11 FGs, 2/4 3-Pt.
The Pacers                 3rd QTR:  9 Points, 3/5 FGs,
                                    4th QTR:  16 Points, 7/11 FGs, 2/2 3-Pt.

Reigning Kia MVP Joel Embiid, who had a remarkable performance himself with 37 points, 13 rebounds, and seven assists on 12/26 from the field and 12/14 at the free throw line assisted on Maxey’s final basket, a 32-foot step-back triple with 1:05 left in the game to cap his 50-point performance.

In Maxey’s postgame interview with NBC Sports Philadelphia’s sideline reporter Taryn Hatcher, Embiid was waiving his arms up-and-down trying to cool off Maxey as he was getting a celebratory water bottle shower from teammate Patrick Beverly

“Joel wanted me to get 50 more than even I did,” Maxey said after the win. “When he gave me the ball, he said, ‘You are going to shoot this basketball.’ And that’s why I appreciate my teammates, my coaches, and the fans. It was a great night and we got the win, which is what matters most.”

To put into context what Maxey did on Sunday night, he became just the ninth player in the 78-year history of the 76ers to score 50-plus points, joining Hall of Famers in the late Wilt Chamberlin (11 times), Hal Greer, Moses Malone, Dolph Schayes, and Allen Iverson (10 times), Embiid (5 times), Willie Burton, and Dana Barros.  

Maxey’s 50-point performance versus the Pacers were the most by a Sixers’ guard since Iverson in 2005. Maxey became the second youngest player to score 50 in 76ers’ history at age 23, behind Iverson, who did it at age 21.

In fact the past 15 50-point performances by a 76er were either by Embiid, who did it the previous five times or Iverson, who did it the prior 10. 

“I mean that feels great,” Maxey said to ESPN’s Malika Andrews on Monday’s edition of “NBA Today” of being in the same conversation with his performance like Iverson did. “That’s a great feeling, you know? What makes it even better that we won the game.”  

Most Points By A Duo In A     1966 *Wilt Chamberlin & *Chet Walker 89 Points
Game In 76ers Franchise        2023  Joel Embiid & Tyrese Maxey
History *Hall Of Famer          1967 *Wilt Chamberlin & Wali Jones
(Elias Sports Bureau)

Maxey, the Sixers First-Round draft choice (No. 21 overall) out of University of Kentucky in 2020 had everything working on this night.

He did it defensively turning one of his three block shots on the evening that he had on the Pacers second-year scoring sensation Bennedict Mathurin and raced to the other end for a scoring layup on Pacers’ All-Star guard Tyrese Haliburton.

Another score came in the third quarter where Embiid passed him the ball out of double-team from Bruce Brown and scored on a drive to the hoop in the halfcourt.

About nearly halfway through the fourth quarter off a screen from new teammate Nicolas Batum, Maxey hit a step-back three-pointer. He followed that by taking pass off a double of Tobias Harris and driving down the lane again for another hoop.

The ability to score in so many ways is how the player Embiid tagged “The Franchise” in past interviews in referencing Maxey how he has averaged 28.6 points, 7.2 assists, and 5.4 rebounds on 50.5 percent from the field, 43.1 percent from three-point range, and 93 percent at the foul line the first nine games of this season. That is up from averages of 15.4 points, 3.3 assists, and 2.7 rebounds per game his first three NBA seasons.

Since registering 18 points on 7/16 from the floor, including 0/3 from three in the aforementioned season-opening loss at the Bucks, Maxey has raised his point production from 22 the next two games, to 25, 29, to his 50-point performance on Sunday evening.

“Trying to be aggressive. Trying to be aggressive and do it the right way, you know,” Maxey said of his performance.

It was the eighth consecutive win by the Sixers following their opening night loss (118-117) on Oct 26 at the Milwaukee Bucks (5-4) on TNT. The Sixers 8-1 start is their best after nine games since 2000-01, where they began 9-0 and reached The Finals led by then league MVP  in Hall of Famer Allen Iverson, where they lost to fellow Hall of Famers in now Turner Sports studio analyst Shaquille O’Neal, the late Kobe Bryant, and head coach Phil Jackson and the Los Angeles Lakers 4-1.   

The Sixers latest hot streaks comes in the wake of them trading 10-time All-Star James Harden on Nov. 1 back to his hometown of Los Angeles, CA to play for the Clippers in the wake of this past offseason where after opting into his $35.6 million salary in the final year of his two-year, $65.6 million deal and the Sixers front office and President of Basketball Operations Daryl Morey not trading him.

Things got so bad between Harden and Morey, who was behind the deal that brought Harden to the Houston Rockets back in the early 2010s where he had a historic eight seasons and then acquired him back in February 2021 over the summer called Morey “a liar.”

This had a dark cloud over the Sixers, who are under a new head coach this season in former sideline leader of the Toronto Raptors Nick Nurse throughout the offseason and the start of Training Camp back at the start of October.

Harden did not show up for Media Day and missed the start of Sixers’ Training Camp in Colorado.

There was hope that Harden and Sixers front office could come to some resolution. But that never took place and after a few days at Training Camp, Harden left suddenly for Houston and never returned until the season got underway.

The Sixers were at a crossroads and they decided that it was time for them to get out of the Harden business and they dealt him to the Clippers along with veteran forward/center P.J. Tucker and forward/center Filip Petrusev in exchange for Batum, Marcus Morris, Sr., Robert Covington, and youngster Kenyon Martin “KJ,” Jr.

The Sixers also acquired from the Clippers a 2024 and 2028 First-Round pick; a 2026 First-round pick from the Oklahoma City Thunder; 2029 protected First-Round pick swap from the Clippers along with a 2029 Second-Round pick and cash considerations.

The Thunder in the deal acquired 2027 First-Round pick swap from the Clippers along with cash considerations.

While the Sixers got some major compensation from the Clippers in solid veteran players, who are on the last year of their deals and draft compensation the question now was who was going to rise up and be the Robin to Embiid as Batman in terms of scoring.

Maxey has taken on that role and the now 23-year-old from Texas has flourished in his new role so far as a scorer and facilitator and understands how important he has become to the Sixers’ hopes of winning the franchise’s first title since 1983.

Maxey told Andrews when it came to Embiid posting a picture of the two of them on his social media calling them “The Franchise,” he called it “great.” 

“Joel has been like a big brother to me since Day One,” Maxey added. “He’s had this confidence in me that I think nobody else probably had in around town. But for the MVP to have confidence in you and want you to go out there and be successful and he has the ultimate faith in my abilities, it just makes me go out there and be the best version of myself honestly.”

Along with the phrase that he got from Embiid, Maxey also shared with Andrews that he got a message from his former college coach in John Calipari, who asked how many points did he score, 45? Maxey said he laughed at the message.

The other message that he got was from his mother and his twin nieces who watched the game on Sunday night, a day before their birthdays. Maxey said in a video that was sent to him showed his mother, grandmother, sister, and aforementioned twin nieces were all hyped. But his father in the video was sitting with his arms crossed with no smile.

“I mean, honestly it’s just he believes in me,” Maxey said of that moment from his dad after scoring 50 versus the Pacers. “He expects it of me and I work extremely hard every single day, whether its summertime or in-season time. So, I love them and I appreciate their support.”  

As great as he and Embiid were versus the Pacers, Harris played well also with 18 points and nine rebounds on 9/20 shooting. Melton added 10 points and six assists.  

“It comes with great responsibility,” Maxey said of his new role this season with the Sixers. “Having that freedom. Being able to shoot and being able to kind of get up shots when you want to.”

“I still try to get guys open. Still try to get guys great shots. Tobias [Harris], Melt [De’Anthony Melton]. Shout out to them. They were great tonight as well. And that’s what I’ve been trying to do and the balance is hard but it’s a part of it. I appreciate my teammates, the organization, and the coaching staff, being patient with me. So, I just go out there and try my best to help us win games.”

Getting to this point as Maxey said has not been easy. It has taken a lot of work and dedication to his craft to reach this point at least to start this season to where the Sixers rely on his production alongside Embiid to win games.

As a rookie, Maxey averaged eight points on 46.2 percent shooting as a rookie in 2020-21 on 30.1 percent from three (31/103 3-Pt.) in 61 games played, starting eight of those contest. He rose that to 17.5 points, going 48.5 percent from the field and 42.7 percent from three-point range (132/309 3-Pt.) in 2021-22 in 75 games played, starting in 74 of those games. In 2022-23, Maxey despite playing on 60 games due to injury early last season averaged a career-high 20.3 points on 48.1 percent shooting, including 43.4 percent (160/369 3-Pt.) on his triple tries.

Along with increasing his scoring, Maxey has improved as a facilitator registering four double-doubles already this season after registering just one double-double entering this campaign, which he had in 2021-22.

What the emergence of Maxey has done alongside Embiid along with the rest of the 76ers cast has given them is more cohesiveness that many felt was going to be a struggle entering this season.

The subtraction of Harden has provided more clarity for the Sixers’ top players. They have needed Embiid to remain healthy and productive, he has risen to the task where he could win a second straight league MVP.

Maxey, as previously mentioned, has taken on the role as this team’s second scoring option as well as being their point guard and it has worked. In the first nine games of this season, Maxey has totaled 65 assists and just 10 turnovers.

Harris has stepped to be the third option where he has mixed up his game to where he scores from the perimeter as well as inside as opposed to the previous year-plus where he was basically a standstill jump shooter, especially from three-point range when Harden was in the fold.

One player that played a major role in the Sixers’ red-hot start to this season was Kelly Oubre, Jr., who the Sixers signed late in free agency to be a major contributor off the bench. With Harden being out, Oubre, Jr. stepped up as a starter for the Sixers and was averaging 16.3 points and 5.1 boards on 50 percent from the floor and 37.8 percent from three-point range.

The Sixers were without Oubre, Jr. on Sunday night versus the Pacers after suffering a fractured rib along with injuries to his right hip and right leg due to getting hit by a car in a hit-and-run incident on a street in Center City Philadelphia, PA on Saturday night at 7 p.m. according to ABC affiliate 6ABC in Philadelphia.

It was also reported by 6ABC that police say that it was a silver vehicle that fled the scene after the incident with Oubre, Jr. and the investigation is still active.

Oubre, Jr. was taken to Jefferson Hospital where 76ers representatives, including Morey. He will be re-evaluated in a week and will be out for “significant period of time,” with the hope he can return before the conclusion of this season.

In a tweet @Bleacher Report, ESPN’s Senior NBA Insider Adrian Wojnarowski said that while Oubre, Jr. was released from Jefferson Hospital on the same night, Oubre, Jr. “will work closely with the 76ers medical staff on treatment and care for his injuries.”   

After the Sixers’ win versus the Pacers, Oubre’s teammates sent him a video of their post-game locker room celebration after not being able to get him off of FaceTime. 

“The game today, I’m sure Tyrese was thinking about it and we were all thinking about it,” Embiid said about Oubre, Jr’s absence. “We just want him to take his time, recover and know that we have his back. He’s needed because he’s a big part of us. We missed him tonight, but he should take his time.”  

Maxey added to that by saying in his postgame interview with Hatcher on Oubre, Jr. that his 50-point night “had nothing to do” with him. That it was all about Oubre, Jr.

“We’re praying for him, man. Love my dog, man. I just met him but I love him…, and I hope he gets well soon.”

Perhaps the most important thing that Maxey’s emergence has done for the Sixers has made them more attractive for players who are unhappy with their current situation and wanting to be part of a team that has the makings of winning a title this spring.

The have the expiring contracts of Batum, Covington, and Morris, Sr., and they have pool of draft picks, and First and Second Rounders. So, if they want to go out and fortify their bench or add another player who can be their fifth starter possibly, they can On top of that, they have the guy in the front office in Morey who has shown in his time with the Rockets and the 76ers that if there is a move that will add more talent to a team, he is not afraid to go and get that player or players.

When the 2023-24 NBA season began, many experts had the Milwaukee Bucks and the Boston Celtics as the teams to play in the Eastern Conference Finals this spring. The Philadelphia 76ers were a distant third in the Conference because of the James Harden cloud.

The trade of Harden to the Los Angeles Clippers and the players and draft capital they got in return. The play of Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey and the start the Sixers have gotten off to has them a top the East right now.

How Sixers’ President Daryl Morey can turn that draft capital and possibly the expiring contracts into additional depth to the roster. The healthy and continued strong play from Embiid and Maxey, and Tobias Harris will be the keys for the 76ers in their quest to win their first NBA title since 1983.

Maxey said to Andrews following the 76ers 106-103 victory versus the Celtics last Wednesday night that Coach Nurse said something what he called “very enlightened,” when asked after that win, “everyone wants to know if we’re for real?”

Coach Nurse said, “win, lose or draw, we’re serious.”

Maxey also said that since the first day Coach Nurse became the 76ers head coach he has implemented a serious approach to everything the team does to get to that championship level. 

“Training Camp for us was very serious and every single day that we [have] come in, guys have taken every drill. Every single film session. Every single workout. Guys that are playing are extremely serious out there on the court. And we have a goal in mind, and we go out there, and we compete every single night.”

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 8/2/2023 https://sixerswire.usatoday.com story, “Every Philadelphia 76ers Player Who Has Scored 50 Points In A Game,” By Ky Carlin; 11/12/2023 1 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” presented by Kia With Chris Miles and Dennis Scott; 11/13/2023 1 a.m. NBATV’s “Gametime,” With Stephanie Ready, Steve Smith, and Greg Anthony; 11/13/2023 3 p.m. ESPN 2’s edition “NBA Today,” With Malika Andrews, Ramona Shelburne, Ros Gold-Onwude, Zach Lowe, and Kendrick Perkins; https://www.nba.com/game/ind-vs-phi-0022300180; https://statsmz.nba.com/20231112_INDPHI_book.pdf; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/stats/_/id/4431678/tyrese-maxey; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023-24_Los_Angeles_Clippers_season#Transactions; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia_76ers.  

Friday, November 10, 2023

J-Speaks: Sixers Finally Trade Their Disgruntled All-Star Guard


For second time in the last three off-seasons, the Philadelphia 76ers dealt with a disgruntled co-star next to their perennial All-Star and reigning Kia MVP center. Their latest unhappy co-star had opted into the final year of his current deal hoping to be traded to L.A.’s other NBA squad. Nothing took place during the offseason, which led him to act irrational and call the Sixers’ President of Basketball Operations “a liar.” That said second star player missed Media Day at the start of October and the start of Training Camp and missed the start of this season in late October. The question now was how were the Sixers going to deal with this? They decided that now was the time to get what they could for said player and they did that at the start of this month.

In the early part of the morning of Nov. 1 according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, the 76ers (6-1) dealt 10-time All-Star guard James Harden along with veteran forward/center P.J. Tucker, and forward Filip Petrusev to the Los Angeles Clippers in exchange for veteran forward Marcus Morris, Sr., Robert Covington, and Nicolas Batum, and youngster KJ Martin (Kenyon Martin, Jr.). The Sixers also acquired a 2028 unprotected First-Round pick; the Clippers 2024 and 2029 Second-Round picks, and a 2029 pick swap and a 2026 First-Round pick from the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Clippers in this deal are sending a 2027 First-Round pick swap to the Thunder, which cleared the way for the Thunder to move said 2026 First-Round pick to Sixers, a source close to this deal told ESPN.

To make the deal work in their favor, the Sixers waived veteran forward Danny Green that cleared a roster spot.

The fact that this blockbuster trade happen where Harden was dealt is not a shock because the 10-time All-Star and 2017-18 Kia MVP opted into his $35.6 million salary in the final year of his two-year, $65.6 million that he signed with the Sixers in summer of 2022, a day before the start of free agency. Harden then requested for the Sixers to trade him, specifically to the Clippers to team up with fellow perennial All-Stars in two-time Finals MVP (2014 & 2019) Kawhi Leonard, Paul George, and 2017 Kia MVP Russell Westbrook.

This marks the fourth time since the 2020-21 seasons that Harden has been traded, tying him with Westbrook, and Hall of Famers in the late Moses Malone and Bob McAdoo for the most times a former Kia MVP has been dealt in NBA history.

The Sixers front office from the ownership group led by Josh Harris and David Blizter, General Manager Elton Brand, and President of Basketball Operations Daryl Morey tried over the summer to see about getting the proper return for a deal for Harden.

Nothing came to fruition because the Clippers were the only team that was only interested in acquiring Harden, which led the Sixers to take their time and wait for the right deal to come their way from the Clippers or another team that became interested in acquiring Harden.

This did not appease Harden, who grew more disgruntled as the offseason wore on, especially with Morey, who acquired him from the Thunder to the Houston Rockets 11 off-seasons back.

To put into context of how bad things got between Harden and Morey, back in August after not getting dealt to the Clippers during the offseason or getting a long-term deal that he was reportedly promised in the summer of 2022, Harden at an Adidas event in China in front of a bunch of reporters said, “Daryl Morey is ‘a liar’ and I will never be a part off an organization that he’s a part of.”

To make sure that Harden was very clear of what he said, he repeated what he said about Morey by saying, “Let me say that again: Daryl Morey is a liar and I will never be a part of an organization that he’s a part of.”

Harden also at that even at China to claim that the 76ers never really wanted him in the first place when they acquired him at the Feb. 2021 NBA trade deadline from the Brooklyn Nets for three-time All-Star Ben Simmons, now Mavericks guard Seth Curry; now Bulls reserve center Andre Drummond, a 2022 unprotected First-Round pick and a 2027 protected First-Round pick.

Morey, when Simmons asked to be dealt two seasons back held onto him until the right deal came where the Sixers acquired a perennial star player. They got that star in Harden.

To show how much Morey and the Sixers valued Harden, they gave then head coach Glenn “Doc” Rivers the boot over the summer after three seasons and hired new head coach Nick Nurse, who was fired by the Raptors after five seasons, including leading them to their first title in 2019.  

On the Nov. 1 edition of ESPN’s “NBA Today,” Wojnarowski reported that the Sixers and Clippers engaged in talks again over the past weekend that brought a “sense of inevitability” that they were going to execute a deal.

From a position standpoint and who was available to acquire on the trade market, Harden fit a positional need for the Clippers at the lead guard spot. On top of that, this would give the Clippers and head coach Tyronn Lue time to make the fit of Harden, Leonard, George, and Westbrook work as well as they could with 70-plus games left this season instead of doing this at the February trade deadline with at or over 25 games left.

What made this deal good for the Clippers is that they kept their own two First-Round picks as well as reserve guard Terance Mann.

For the Sixers, it was the Clippers that were the only team in the NBA that expressed “significant” interest in Harden.

For both the Sixers and Clippers, the thought of having this deal hanging out there into February 2024 did make “a lot of sense.”  

In his one-plus seasons with the Sixers, Harden, a seven-time All-NBA selection seemed the perfect fit, especially alongside reigning Kia MVP Joel Embiid.

Haren adjusted his game to fit alongside Embiid where Harden became more of a facilitator instead of the prolific scorer that he was for eight seasons with the Rockets (2012-21), including leading the NBA in scoring for three straight seasons (2017-20).

Harden in his 21 games after being acquired from the Nets two seasons back averaged 21.0 points, 10.5 assists, and 7.1 rebounds, even though he shot just 40.2 percent from the floor and 32.6 percent from three-point range.

In his first full season with the Sixers a season ago also averaged 21.0 points, a league-leading 10.7 assists, and 6.1 boards. It was the third season of his career where Harden averaged 20-plus points, 10-plus assists, and five-plus rebounds.

Along with sacrificing shot attempts, Harden also sacrificed money, taking a major pay cut two off-seasons back for the 76ers to add more talent via free agency and trades like the aforementioned Tucker, De’Anthony Melton, and Danuel House, Jr.

Harden had hoped this past summer after making that sacrifice that he would be rewarded with a big pay day of his own.

Coupled with his performance in the 2023 Playoffs, where he averaged 20.3 points, 8.3 assists, and 6.2 rebounds on 38.8 percent from the field and 39.3 percent from three-point range and the fact that the Sixers wanted to keep their payroll clean for the summer of 2024, Harden did not get his big pay day back in the offseason.

The final nail in the coffin for Harden occurred in their 112-88 loss in Game 7 of the 2023 East Semifinals at the East runner-up Boston Celtics, Harden had just nine points, seven assists, and six rebounds on 3/11 shooting and five turnovers. That included going just 1/5 from three-point range.

To put into context how ups-and-downs of Harden in his two postseasons with the 76ers, setting aside Game 4 of 2022 East Semis versus the eventual East runner-up Miami Heat and Games 1 and 4 of the 2023 East Semis against the Celtics, Harden in the other 10 games averaged 14.5 points on just 32 percent from the field and 22 percent from three-point range.

Just from this Harris and the Sixers ownership group did not have the stomach to offer a serious long-term deal to Harden. Harden’s attitude along with his performance also soured the other 28 NBA teams of bringing in Harden, who would be considered a rental because if said team acquired him, he would just leave in free agency.

What should also be taken into context is that Harden has left money on the table in his previous stops. 

Back in the middle of November of 2020, Harden turned down a two-year, $103 million extension, that would have been added to the remaining three years and $133 million left on his current deal at that time. Harden was offered that deal in the state of Texas with no state income tax and he missed out on becoming the first $50 million per year player in NBA history.

When Morey and the Rockets acquired Harden in the summer of 2012, he viewed the perennial All-Star better than Michael Jordan in terms of his ability to score so easily.

“It’s just factual that James Harden is a better scorer than Michael Jordan,” Morey said back in the early 2010s on his belief that Harden was the greatest scorer in NBA history.

Morey in constructing everything around Harden during his time with the Rockets first paired him Hall of Famer Kevin McHale as the Rockets head coach (2011-15) and eight-time All-Star Dwight Howard (2013-16).

That trio only got as far as the Western Conference Finals in 2015, where they lost to the eventual NBA champion Golden State Warriors 4-1.

The Rockets then tried the pairing of head coach Mike D’Antoni (2016-20) and now Warriors perennial All-Star guard Chris Paul (2017-19) alongside Harden in their pursuit of their third title in franchise history.

In 2017-18 led by their All-Star backcourt and coach D’Antoni, the Rockets set a franchise record with 65 regular-season wins and made it to the West Finals. But they lost again to the Warriors 4-3. They also lost to the Warriors in the 2019 West Semifinals 4-2.

After the Harden/Paul pairing ran it course, Morey dealt Paul to the Thunder in the summer of 2019 for Westbrook.

That pairing only lasted one season where after winning 44 games in the 2019-20 season, that was restarted in Orlando, FL because of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Global Pandemic and lost in the 2020 West Semis to the eventual NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers 4-1.

Things for the Rockets changed after that postseason as Morey left the front office. Coach D’Antoni’s contract was not renewed and he moved on. Westbrook was dealt to the Wizards in exchange for five-time All-Star guard John Wall, in a deal that was made by the Rockets’ new front office leader Rafael Stone.

The Rockets got off to a rough start in 2020-21, which prompted Harden to express his true feelings about his current situation following a blowout loss versus the Lakers.

“We’re just not good enough, you know? Obviously, chemistry. Talent wise. Just everything,” Harden said.

“I love this city [Houston, TX]. I’ve literally done everything I can, you know? I mean, this situation is crazy. It’s something I don’t think can be fix.”

It was at this time that Harden’s main goal was to be a part of a team that had a legitimate shot at competing for an NBA title.

That opportunity for Harden came, or so it seemed in the middle of January 2021 when he was dealt to the Nets teaming up with fellow perennial All-Stars and NBA champions Kevin Durant, his former teammate with the Thunder and Kyrie Irving in a four-team deal involving the Cleveland Cavaliers and Indiana Pacers.

While the trio of Durant, Irving, and Harden had some good moments in 2020-21, injuries and the inability for their star trio to establish a strong pecking order led to them never coming close to dominating the Eastern Conference.

There was the feeling that Harden quit on the Nets when things got tough and then there was vaccination situation with Irving who went from missing the start of the season to being a part-time player because he did not want to follow the New York City mandated vaccination policy.

This soured Harden so much that in late October 2021 turned down a three-year, $161.1 million extension.

What made with what happened with the Nets an even tougher pill to swallow is during that time, the Eastern Conference was wide open because the Boston Celtics and the Milwaukee Bucks were not the powerhouses that they are now.

When Harden was dealt to the Sixers as previously mentioned, he was reunited with Morey and teamed up with Embiid, who was just equally as hungry to win a title.

Those championship dreams came to a crashing halt in six games in the 2022 East Semis to the eventual Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat.

In his postgame presser following the series loss, Embiid said that he and the Sixers when they acquired did not expect him to be the prolific scorer that he was with the Rockets.

“Ever since we got him, everybody expected the Houston James Harden but that’s not who he is anymore,” Embiid said.

Last summer as mentioned, Harden in wanting to help the Sixers to be in position to be an NBA champion took a major pay cut going from signing a possible four-year, $227 million deal elsewhere signed a two-year, $65.6 million deal, which included a player-option in the final year of the deal.

Little did anyone know that this was going to be the point of contention between Harden and Morey.

While Harden eventually showed up for Sixers Training Camp in Colorado after missing Media Day at the start of October, he made it clear that he still wanted to be traded to the Clippers and that his relationship with Morey was damaged beyond repair.

“When you lose trust in someone, it’s like a marriage…you lose trust in someone, you know what I mean? It’s pretty simple,” Harden said in his first Media availability of 2023-24.

“Me and the front office had a very, very good relationship for a decade. There was constant communication. There was no communication once we lost.”

“When I got traded here, my whole thing was I wanted to retire a Sixer. I wanted to be here and retire a Sixer and the front office didn’t have that in their future plans.”

After being in camp for a few days, Harden disappeared and flew back to Houston, TX where he was for 10 days without even telling the Sixers.”

The Sixers did not fine Harden for his unexcused absence or did not take any of his salary where half of said $35.6 million was already paid to Harden.

They did not even fine Harden for missing any of their four preseason games, which they could have up to $389,082 for each of those games according to ESPN’s NBA Front Office Insider Bobby Marks. Harden also avoided $2,500 in fines for each practice he missed out on during 76ers Training Camp.

Harden last appearance with now his former team in the 76ers (6-1) was in their 126-98 victory in their home opener versus the Portland Trail Blazers (3-5).

As Harden’s next chapter his NBA career takes him as previously mentioned back home to L.A. with the Clippers, who on paper with him, Leonard, George, and Westbrook had all the makings of a team if healthy could win the West.

Since the Clippers brought Leonard and George in summer of 2019, they have only been on the doorstep of a title just once, falling in their first appearance in the West Finals in their history in 2021, falling in six games to the Phoenix Suns.

Injuries to Leonard and George coupled with not having a true point guard has played a major role in the Clippers coming up short in the postseason, which included missing the Playoffs in 2021-22.

Among those that tried to man the lead guard spot for the Clippers during this time were journeyman Reggie Jackson and Wall.

Jackson was great in 2021 during the Clippers’ run to the West Finals, but eventually flamed out and was dealt last season to the Hornets, who bought him out of his deal and he joined the eventual NBA champion Nuggets.

The Wall experiment only lasted for half of 2022-23 and he was traded last February to the Rockets, who eventually waived him.

The Clippers hoped the acquisition of Harden is their long-awaited answer at the lead guard spot. 

In his first presser as a member of the Clippers on Nov. 3, Harden in reflecting on his time with the Sixers “changed” his role, “knowing” that he can give more on the floor but felt like he was “on a leash” in terms of how he was utilized.

“When I’m on a leash, I’m not just shooting the basketball every time,” Harden added. “I meant like I think the game. I’m a creator on the court…So, if I have a voice where I can, ‘Hey, coach I see. What you think about this?’ Someone that trust me. That believes in me. That understands me. I’m not a system player. I am a system.”

In the previous three seasons, Harden has been credited with 350 uncontested shots off of his passes, according to Second Spectrum. In that same period, Leonard and George combined to only registered 133 uncontested shots.     

What the Clippers have now with the acquisition of Harden are now four All-Stars in their starting five with the 10 by Harden. The nine All-Star selections by Westbrook, eight by George, and five by Leonard. Ivica Zubac, the Clippers’ starting center is the only one that has yet to appear in an All-Star game.

Two games into the Harden era though have not panned out in the win column for the Clippers (3-4) falling in Harden’s debut 111-97 on Monday night at the Knicks (4-4). They fell two nights later 100-93 at the Nets (4-4) on Wednesday night in the third stop on their four-game road trip.

In the Clippers setback at the Knicks, they were tied 76-76 after three quarters but were outscored 35-21 in the fourth period. While they shot 49.3 percent from the field (36/73 FGs), the Clippers shot just 11/32 from three-point range. Were outrebounded 48-31, including 18-7 on the offensive glass. Had just 21 assists compared to a season-high 22 turnovers that led to 35 Knicks points.

Clippers All-Star       Kawhi Leonard      18 Points, Five Rebounds, 8/16 FGs 32 Minutes
Foursome In At         Russell Westbrook 17 Points, Four Assists, Four Rebounds, Four
The Knicks                                                 Turnovers, 8/13 FGs
                                    James Harden        17 Points, Six Assists, 6/9 FGs, 2/4 3-Pt., 3/3 FTs
                                                                     31 Minutes
                                    Paul George            10 Points, Seven Rebounds, Three Steals, Four
                                                                     Turnovers, 2/11 FGs, 1/6 3-Pt. 34 Minutes

“Felt kind of weird out there. But, you know, not really having a preseason game or an opportunity to participate in a full training camp or none of that. I was out there just basically winging it,” Harden, who had nine points, three assists, three boards in the first half said after the loss. “But I tried to go with my basketball instincts and what I’ve been doing for the last few years and whatnot, and just going out there and playing and thinking the game and trying to make the game easier for everybody else.”

“First couple of minutes, I was tired. It went fast. But I got adjusted to it. It’s going to take me a few games to kind of get used to the pace. But other than that, it was still basketball at the end of the day.”  

The Clippers had their chances at the Nets 48 hours later but after leading 21-13 after the opening period were outscored 87-72 the final three quarters, including 54-44 in the second half. 

The Clippers in their defeat at the Nets shot just 39.6 percent (36/91 FGs), including a dismal 8/36 from three-point range. While they outrebounded the Nets 51-49, they were outrebounded 14-11 on the offensive glass; had just 22 assists compared to 16 turnovers that led to 16 Nets points.

Clippers All-Star                   Paul George 24 Points, Seven Rebounds, Three Steals
Foursome At The                  7/20 FGs, 2/10 3-Pt., 8/8 FTs 39 Minutes
Nets                                         Kawhi Leonard 17 Points, Six Rebounds, Two Steals                                                                   7/16 FGs, 1/6 3-Pt., 36 Minutes
                                                Russell Westbrook 13 Points, Eight Assists, Seven Rebounds
                                                6/18 FGs, 1/5 3-Pt., 31 Minutes
                                                James Harden 12 Points, Eight Rebounds, Five Assists Two
                                                Steals, 4/9 FGs, 2/5 3-Pt. Five Turnovers, 36 Minutes.

“Well, I’m just working my way in. Trying to figure it out,” Harden said postgame about how his first two games have gone with the Clippers. “It’s okay. Two games. I’ll figure it out.”

“I just want to win…As long as we can figure it to where we are all competing. We’re all playing at the highest level and we’re all winning games, that’s all that matters.

For the Sixers (6-1), they have been rolling with six consecutive victories since dropping their season opener (118-117) Oct. 26 at the Milwaukee Bucks (5-3) on TNT.

To put how solid the Sixers have been to start this season, four of their six victories have come by double-digits. Their latest victory came against the Celtics (106-103) on Wednesday night.

While Embiid has been at his reigning MVP best with averages of 31/7 points, 10.9 boards, 5.9 assists, and 2.3 blocks on 53 percent shooting to begin 2023-24, it has been the play of his teammates that has allowed the Sixers to put the short era of Harden in the rearview mirror.

Embiid was exceptional in the Sixers 146-128 triumph on Monday night versus the Washington Wizards (2-5), where he scored 48 points with 11 rebounds and six assists on 17/25 from the field and 14/14 at the charity stripe.

Embiid was astonishing in the third quarter of that contest scoring a franchise record of 29 points in the third quarter on a perfect 10/10 from the field and 9/9 from the charity stripe. 

          Most Points ON 100 Percent Shooting In A Quarter The Last 25 Seasons                      
2015 Klay Thompson (GS) 37 Points 13/13 FGs 3rd QTR
2006 Kobe Bryant   (LAL) 30 Points 3rd QTR
2023 Joel Embiid      (PHI) 29 Points 3rd QTR

        Most Made Field Goals Without A Miss In A Single Quarter Last 25 Seasons                 
2015 Klay Thompson (GS) 13/13 FGs Versus Sacramento Kings
2023 Joel Embiid (PHI)      10/10 FGs Versus Washington Wizards
2008 LeBron James (LAL) 101/10 FGs With Cleveland Cavaliers versus Chicago Bulls

Tyrese Maxey, who did not get his rookie extension over the offseason has responded with incredible stats of 25.4 points, seven assists, and 5.1 rebounds on 48.1 percent from the field and 40.7 percent from three-point range to open 2023-24.

Teammates To Average                     2018-19: Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant
25 Points, Five Rebounds,                With The Golden State Warriors
And Five Assists First Seven
Games Of A Season In                      2023-24: Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey With
NBA History                                      Philadelphia 76ers

Tobias Harris, who last season was the team’s four offensive option has come out of the gates strong to begin 2023-24 with averages of 19.3 points and 6.4 rebounds on 60 percent shooting, including 37.5 percent from three-point range.

Along with the play of Maxey and Harris, the Sixers newest addition of Kelly Oubre, Jr, who got really no traction on the free agent market over the summer was signed by the boys from the “City of Brotherly” love and has been a real steal so far behind averages of 17.4 points and 4.7 rebounds on 51.8 percent from the floor and 41.2 percent from three-point range.                                   

While this great start by the Sixers might have gotten them past the Harden saga for now, they are still on the clock to put a team around Embiid that can help him accomplish his main goal of winning a championship, especially now that at the start of this season was the first of four-year, $213 million supermax deal he signed in the summer of 2021 that last through the 2026-27 season.

Back in the summer at an event in Las Vegas, NV during NBA Summer League with LeBron James’ friend and one of his business associates Maverick Carter, Embiid said, “I just want to win a championship. Whatever it takes.”

“I don’t know where that’s going to be. Whether it’s in Philly or anywhere else. I just want to have a chance to accomplish that. I want to see what it feels like to win that first one and then you can think about the next one.”

Embiid said at Media Day that he hoped the Sixers and Harden could find a resolution to their contentious squabble but that “doesn’t change” the main goal of this season in Embiid’s mind, to “win a championship.”

While the acquisitions of the aforementioned Batum, Covington, Morris, Sr., and Martin, Jr. add quality players that can help the Sixers at least this season with their ability to shoot and defend, they are not the kind of moves that have the Sixers in a position to win it all in the spring of 2024.

What the Sixers do have in their favor are those draft picks they acquired from the Clippers, bringing their total to three First-Round picks; three First-Round pick swaps; six Second-Round picks; and $105 million in expiring contracts. Those expiring contracts also keep the Sixers on track to potentially have close to $50 to $65 million in salary cap space for next summer.

The Sixers also have the right person in the front office in Morey, who when he has the chance to acquire talent that will put his team in position to compete in the postseason, he has shown no hesitation to be aggressive in doing so.

All of this depends on how patient Embiid is willing to be with the Sixers and their ability to put a championship cast around him.

At least for now, Embiid is on board with what the Sixers are doing and how they have maintained themselves during the Harden saga.

“I think it’s a lot of credit to the culture that we have,” Embiid said following his performance of 27 points, 10 rebounds, and four block shots in the Sixers 106-103 win versus the Celtics (5-2) on Wednesday night.

“No one has an ego on this team. We have new guys. We took them in. We’ve go them up to speed and I think guys want to play with each other and they like being around each other.”  

Nearly two seasons back, the 76ers acquired James Harden in hopes that him pairing with Joel Embiid would lead them to their first NBA title since 1983. It did not workout and now leads both star players as well as their respective teams with high expectations and a lot of questions not just this season but in the future.

In the case of Harden, he got traded to the team he wanted to go to again in the Clippers as he did in joining the Rockets, and Nets.

The Clippers have his so called “Larry Bird rights,” meaning if the Clippers re-signed Harden in the summer of 2024 exceeding their salary cap.

“No matter what you want to say about his tactics, he [Harden] has delivered what he’s wanted,” ESPN’s Senior NBA Insider Brian Windhorst said on the Oct. 31 edition of “NBA Today,” about Harden getting dealt to the team he wanted to be traded to.

“He’s undefeated in four trades in his career...When James Harden’s career is over, he should open a consultancy where he advises players on how to get traded because he’s untouchable. And I’m not just saying this tongue and cheek. He gets exactly what he wants under his terms. Victory today for James Harden.”

The question now is, will the addition of Harden get the Clippers over the hump of reaching The Finals for the first time in franchise history in a very stacked Western Conference this spring?

Along with having to decide to bring back Harden, the Clippers have to deal with the possibility of having to re-sign Leonard and George, who have player options for 2024-25 season, which they can opt out of and be unrestricted free agents this summer. Westbrook is on the Clippers’ book at $4 million for next season.  

The other significance of all of this for the Clippers is they are set to move into their new home, the Intuit Dome next season and they want to do that hopefully Harden, but Leonard and George will still be with the team along with Westbrook.

That means Coach Lue and his coaching staff have to find a way to make the foursome of Leonard, George, Westbrook, and Harden to work.

Coach Lue said he wants to give this 10 games to see if this works and hopefully it will go a lot better than it has the first two games at the Knicks and Nets, both losses.

As far as the Sixers, them keeping Embiid for the remainder of his prime will depend on what he does leading up to this February’s trade deadline and this summer in continuing to add to this supporting cast.

The Sixers know if they do not deliver, Embiid will be looking to win that elusive title elsewhere and they will a plethora of teams lined up to take advantage.

“Any team that I’m on, I’m still gonna believe I have a chance to win. No matter whose on the roster, and we’ve got a lot of great players,” Embiid said at Media Day.

Embiid added to that saying in the team’s first game without Harden in their 114-99 win versus the Toronto Raptors on Nov. 2 following his performance of 28 points, 13 rebounds, and seven assists, “The only thing I care about is winning. That’s my focus, you know.”

“I hope that we’re all on the same page. That’s what I want and the moment we’re not on the same page, you know, then we need to have a discussion. But I think these guys want to win and we’re going to do our best.”  

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy;https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021-22_Los_Angeles_Clippers_seasonwww.espn.com; of 10/19/2021 www.nypost.com story, “James Harden Declining Nets Extension Is A $227 Million Bet,” By Brian Lewis; 1/14/2021 www.nba.com story, “Nets Acquire James Harden In Blockbuster Trade,” With Information from “The Associated Press;” 10/21/2022 www.nba.com story, “Nets Trade James Harden To Sixers For Ben Simmons,” With Information from “The Associated Press;” 10/31/2023 www.espn.com story, “Sources: Clippers Land James Harden In Blockbuster 76ers Trade,” By Adrian Wojnarowski; 11/1/2023 www.nba.com story, “Reports: Sixers Trade James Harden To LA Clippers;” With Information from “The Associated Press;” 10/17/2023 3 p.m. ESPN’s “NBA Today,” With Malika Andrews, Ramona Shelburne, Richard Jefferson, Brian Windhorst, Kendrick Perkins, and Adrian Wojnarowski; 11/3/2023 3 p.m. ESPN’s “NBA Today,” With Malika Andrews, Chiney Ogwumike, Kendrick Perkins, Zach Lowe, and Adrian Wojnarowski 11/6/2023 11:25 p.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter With Scott Van Pelt” From Washington, D.C.; 11/7/2023 3 p.m. ESPN’s “NBA Today,” With Malika Andrews, Chiney Ogwumike, Richard Jefferson, Zach Lowe, and Adrian Wojnarowski; and 11/9/2023 3 p.m. ESPN’s “NBA Today” With Malika Andrews, Brian Windhorst, Kendrick Perkins, Austin Rivers, and Erin Dolan.