f4p wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:f4p wrote:
this just seems so completely unfounded that i really don't get it. i know you don't like harden, but what exactly did he do to engender this level of hate that it would affect his ranking? one of these years is 2021. an mvp-level season on the court where basically the only reason his team didn't win a title is because they got hurt. we've watched all manner of players without rings ask out of their teams over the last 12 years since "the decision", but harden can't ask for his first trade after year 11 and then play like an mvp for his new team without it being negative value? is 1993 barkley a bad year for asking out? 2020 AD (in a much more calculated and forced move)? seems like we're just blaming people for the initial condition of not having a ring on their original team, which pretty much always results in a trade request. at the time, i think he was literally the longest-tenured player in the league other than steph and haslem and he didn't even ask to be traded from his original team. other than lillard, who has stuck it out longer in recent years without a ring (with a ring pretty much being the only reason any of the "loyalty" guys are loyal)?
and even if you for some reason want to believe that it was harden and not the perpetually crazy kyrie irving sitting out the season that ruined things in brooklyn, i don't see how that would be negative value a whole year later for 2023 philly, where harden had another fringe all-star level season, which is hardly negative. it's not like the demand this offseason somehow retroactively ruined the 2023 season since it was based on a contract negotiation from this offseason (i.e. not some lingering issue that affected the actual 2023 season).
So, with your emphasis on hate, I feel a need to push back and say I was almost certainly cheering for Harden before you were. He's the local boy made good where I live. I know one of the coaches from his high school team. Believe me when I say I was very positive about him for a very long time.
The throughline to understand me here is that I routinely knock guys for behavior disruptive to their franchises and so any assumption that I'm only knocking Harden for this is something you should just remove from your list of thoughts. Honestly, in this day and age, there's absolutely no reason to think that when someone gets knocked for this that they are being singled out in a way that others aren't. Of course, Harden now has one of the worst track records in history at this, which honestly really makes me sad in a way it doesn't with other players with a similar mentality, because of my local connection.
Re: 2021 an MVP level season. You mean a season where he forced a trade by sabotaging the team that had always given everything he wanted, and then after that mid-season trade played really well with a positive attitude for a few months which culminated in a 1st round series victory? Not what I'd call an MVP level season. And yes, injuries suck, but that's how it goes sometimes.
i realize you probably won't respond to this since this thread is over, but you seem to be conflating a lot of different things that misrepresent the situation. it's important for evaluations to not do this. like harden's eventual injury apparently retroactively makes his disruptive behavior worse somehow because it keeps it from being a full mvp level season. as far as sabotaging, it's not even clear what you mean. russell westbrook had already asked out and left. d'antoni either didn't want to come back or the owner didn't want him. the long-serving GM quit to "spend time with his family" before immediately taking another job with a different owner. and i think you would agree morey didn't quit because of harden because he traded for him as soon as he could at his next stop. saying harden sabotaged the rockets would be like calling it sabotage to punch a hole in the Titanic while it's on the ocean floor. harden didn't torpedo the boat and leave everyone else to deal with it, he literally grabbed the last life raft after everyone else got away. there was nothing to sabotage.
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I mean, Harden's '20-21 campaign was not seen as a major regular season MVP candidate campaign nor a major all-season POY candidate candidate campaign. Those are just facts. If you want to say that when he was 100% healthy and engaged he was playing at an MVP level, cool, but there's really nothing in the accolades that indicates he was seen as such for the season.
And why? Well, the events at the start of the year, and the events at the end of the year, are both essential things to note to understand why. Again, just facts of what actually happened. I can understand why you'd want to distinguish between the types of negative action, but in life, the fact that you failed to do more for two different reasons at two different times only matters if those who you are justifying yourself to don't care first and foremost for results.
Re: sabotaging. Harden a) publicly demanded a trade, b) showed up out of shape, c) played poorly, d) and made a point of ignoring NBA safety protocols. He was very clearly souring the milk to make the Rockets trade him. To say otherwise is to underestimate his intelligence.
None of this has anything to do with Westbrook. That was just plain incompetent team building by all involved who thought Westbrook would make things better instead of worse, when it was crystal clear what would happen ahead of time, and while I believe Harden absolutely is among the group who deserves to get criticized for this, I don't think he actually thought life would be worse with Westbrook instead of Paul.
f4p wrote:you've already agreed that relying on chris paul's health doesn't make much sense. so at that point, who else are you really trading him for? russ and cp3 were both point guards with the same (terrible) contract. it was the easiest, cleanest, highest upside trade. the other trades would have been for role players and harden+role players isn't winning a title. you're basically blaming harden for having like 3 bad options and then choosing one you didn't personally like. of course, part of the reason you don't like it is again because of injuries which can't be controlled, where the oft-injured cp3 stays healthy for the playoffs (well, for 7 games) and the iron man westbrook who played 81/80/81/73 games the previous 4 seasons, gets hurt and basically misses the playoffs.
I mean, what I would have suggested was that the best move was to be grateful for Paul's presence, hope that he got healthier again, and continued as best as possible to keep trying to contend. And given that Paul would literally get MVP candidate talk in the time since, none of this was actually far-fetched.
Further, while it makes sense for a younger alpha to think that an older beta is pointless because he won't be around in the long-term, when you're talking about a guy who would soon enough be jumping ship yearly while Paul was still helping contenders, the logic falls flat.
If Harden had been committed to staying with Houston for another half-decade it would have been different. As it was, he was thinking short-term, and doing so with poor evaluation of the situation for reasons that clearly had to do with his emotions.
Re: 1992-93 Barkley a bad year for asking out? Timeline is off. Barkley didn't get traded in June of 1992 because Barkley wanted out in 1992, he got traded because he got acquitted in his trial. Everything about Barkley's questionable behavior that's relevant here happened in previous seasons...which would typically be seen as relatively bad years for Barkley.
Re: 2019-20 Davis? Similar story. '18-19 is the year where Davis hurt his franchise not '19-20.
Re: just blaming people for initial conditions. I'm evaluating the effect they had, for good and for ill. There's certainly luck involved in where you start out, but it hardly makes sense to ignore destructive behavior simply because their situation wasn't perfect.
f4p wrote:yeah, but you're just calling wanting out of a bad situation destructive behavior. literally, if you don't stay forever on your original team, you end up calling at least one season "destructive behavior" (also, how did davis not hurt the pelicans in 19-20?). it seems important to realize this doesn't really make sense. there's no "non-destructive" behavior that gets you out of a bad situation. it's not like the pelicans or 76ers are going to go "well, we sure did screw up a lot the last decade, so out of the goodness of our hearts, we will let AD/barkley go to help them out, instead of keeping them around and hoping that eventually we don't screw up and we save our jobs." the team will always be perfectly content to keep their star and keep screwing up. surely you would agree. there is no "good" way out. with this rubric, you're basically just praising people like curry/duncan/magic for the NBA equivalent of being "born rich" and penalizing others.
If you're not seeing how Harden has had negative impact to the Rockets and Nets on his way out, then you have your eyes closed.
Re: doesn't make sense to call all behavior when trying to make your franchise be wiling to trade you "destructive". Sure it does. The fact that it's now normal doesn't change what it is.
Re: no way out but destructive behavior! Literally all you have to do is wait until you're a free agent. That's what free agency is for.
Now, in practice there's reason to expect that negotiations with your existing team will reach a breaking point before then, but this has been a norm for considerably longer than the Player Empowerment Era. Simply having internal negotiations is not what I'm talking about.
f4p wrote:Re: among longest tenured during Houston. Yup, many, many great years where I rank him highly. Doesn't mean I ignore what he actually did in '20-21.
again, unless you stay around forever, you are destructive. that's a weird bar to set that just rewards luck and i don't understand why anyone would reward luck in a ranking like this.
I've been very clear that I'm using a criteria based on actual accomplishment, and accomplishment in life always involves contextual luck. Me using this scheme has everything to do with why I was, say, lower on Garnett this time around.
As I've also said, I'm not forcing anyone else to use this criteria...but if you can't understand why using accomplishment to evaluate the greatest careers makes sense, I think you need to take a step back and consider what kinds of assumptions you've been making about this project.
f4p wrote:Re: even if not blame Kyrie. Again, it makes no sense for you to assume that I'm letting everyone else off the hook simply because I knock Harden for his bad behavior. I'm very critical of Durant, Irving & Harden for their destructive behavior.
ok, but what was harden's actual bad behavior? it seems pretty clear kyrie sitting out is the problem so why would you want to blame them all other than convenience of narrative? it's not like harden woke up one morning and said "we have to start playing iso-ball again or i'm out".
Kyrie was THE problem until Harden got irritated with it and began the process of forcing his way out. Then he became a major problem too. I mean c'mon dude. Obviously you think Harden is great. Would you have traded Harden-at-his-best for Ben "I'm too afraid to get back on the court" Simmons? Of course you wouldn't. The Nets made the trade because Harden twisted their arm until they felt they had no choice but to make a mid-season trade.
Honestly man, it just seems like you're not looking at Harden like you would if he were a co-worker acting this way and f-ing you over. You're looking at why Harden was frustrated, seeing that frustration as understandable, and then ignoring everything he does after that frustration point...when the reality is that it's only after the frustration point that such bad behavior was ever going to emerge.