New York Post

How the Nets built a superteam — then had it all fall apart in 12 turbulent months

- By BRIAN LEWIS brian.lewis@nypost.com

The answer is any and all.

While Irving will take the lion’s share of the blame — missing two-thirds of last season due to his refusal to adhere to New York City’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates starting the Nets’ downward slide — the fact is with a failure this comprehens­ive, there are slices of humble pie for everyone to choke down.

“It was three years of malfeasanc­e,” one Eastern Conference GM told The Post.

YEARS OF RED FLAGS

Those three years started when the Nets pivoted away from their hard-won culture to chase Irving and Durant in 2019. The first red flag was giving an egregious four-year, $40 million contract to DeAndre Jordan just to mollify the pair.

Granted, it wasn’t just understand­able to do whatever was needed to get Durant, it was downright necessary to have any designs on a title.

Defense wins games, but MVPs win rings. That’s why teams covet them.

Since 1990-91, a staggering 30 of the 32 NBA champs were led by a former, future or reigning MVP. The only exceptions were the 2003-04 Pistons and 2018-19 Raptors, both relying on team ethos, good fortune and great defense.

Not content to count on luck, the Nets relied on talent. They just chose the wrong talent to rely on.

Back in 2019 The Post had reported that Brooklyn had initial qualms about turning over its franchise’s culture to the notoriousl­y fickle Irving if it couldn’t get Durant along with him. It turns out the Nets weren’t nearly frightened enough.

Irving’s relationsh­ip with the Nets — moreso the front office than his teammates — deteriorat­ed over time. Now in Dallas, he admits he was already looking to bolt Brooklyn after his initial 2019-20 season.

“This was in the works like after Year 1,” Irving said. “I was unsure about whether I wanted to be in Brooklyn long term again because of things that were happening behind the scenes.”

Still, that didn’t stop Irving and Durant from recruiting Harden to Brooklyn. They played pickup together in the summer of 2020 in Los Angeles, with Harden forcing a trade from Houston in January 2021 purely to play alongside Irving and Durant.

But Brooklyn’s Big 3 was more theoretica­l than practical, playing just 16 games together thanks to Durant’s knee injury and Irving going AWOL two seasons ago and refusing to take the vaccine last season.

“There was a lot of things. A lot of dysfunctio­n, clearly. There was a lot of internal things,” Harden said. “That was one of the reasons why

I chose to make my decision. Now, fast-forward to today, I don’t look like the crazy one. I don’t look like the quitter or whatever the media want to call me.

“I knew what was going on, and I just decided I’m not built for this. I don’t want to deal with that. I want to play basketball and have fun and enjoy doing it. Fast-forward to today, they got a whole new roster.”

In all, Irving made just 29 appearance­s last season. Sources have said that lack of availabili­ty vexed Harden, who Face-Timed with Tsai two days before last year’s trade deadline and told the ecommerce billionair­e that he wanted out.

“The reason I made that decision to get out of my comfort zone — which was leave Houston and do everything I did to get out of there — was to come and play with KD and Kyrie,” Harden said. “That didn’t happen as much as I’d like to or probably the organizati­on wanted to. It was something where I knew it wasn’t going to change.”

Harden realized he couldn’t change the dysfunctio­n, so opted to change his location, demanding a trade.

And while talks between Marks and Philadelph­ia counterpar­t Daryl Morey ground to a halt, sources told The Post that Tsai personally called 76ers owner Josh Harris. But he wasn’t the only one talking to the upper level of Sixers management.

QUIET KEVIN

Durant had been loyal to a fault, never openly critiquing Irving’s lack of availabili­ty. And he has insisted he stayed in his lane and not interfered with Brooklyn’s dealings. But he’s not mute — just behind the scenes.

“I’m not KD’s boss,” Marks once said. “We’re partners in this.”

Durant tried to get Nash fired over the summer. And when the Nets parted ways with the inexperien­ced coach early this season, Durant is said to have wanted the team to hire Ime Udoka (who’d been suspended a month earlier by Boston for inappropri­ate treatment of female employees). The Udoka pursuit was an issue, with several high-ranking women in BSE — the Nets’ parent company — expressing discontent.

And sources told The Post that Durant personally spoke with the upper echelons of 76ers management amidst the Harden-Ben Simmons trade talks.

While Harden’s time in Brooklyn had clearly run it’s course, many around the league would say the trade return is the problem.

“It wasn’t the first Harden trade that was the problem; it was the second,” the Eastern Conference GM said. “Taking back Simmons was the killer.”

Clearly so, Simmons struggling and benched despite a huge contract that is among the most onerous in the entire league. Brooklyn had other trade partners for Harden, and may have chosen the wrong one — or at least the wrong pieces.

The Sixers had been shopping Simmons, and had engaged with Sacramento about Tyrese Haliburton. But when they asked for De’Aaron Fox as well, talks broke down. Haliburton got dealt to Indiana, for whom the 22-year-old just earned his first All-Star berth. The executive cited that as a lost opportunit­y for Brooklyn, suggesting a three-way deal looping the Kings into the mix would’ve been better.

“If I was the Nets, I would’ve rather had Haliburton,” the GM said. “Simmons could be the worst contract in the league.”

Simmons — just halfway through a fiveyear, $177 million contract — didn’t play a second last season, and has played poorly this season. He’s lost his starting job and seen his minutes slashed precipitou­sly.

With Harden traded and Simmons not producing like a star, Durant was left with just the unreliable Irving as a running mate in a fluid situation.

Turns out that fluid was gas, and Irving threw a match on it.

Feeling disrespect­ed by the Nets — who’d temporaril­y banned him from road games last season while unvaccinat­ed, and suspended him this season for promoting an anti-Semitic movie — Irving rejected a three-year deal that had protection­s in the final season. He and agent Shetellia Riley Irving bided their time until his solid play gave them leverage.

Irving demanded a trade on Feb. 3, and was dealt two days later.

“When things start to change and you’re not given transparen­cy and honesty from people in the front office or people around you — I don’t know what person feels comfortabl­e or confident in that type of environmen­t,” Irving said.

END OF AN ERROR

From that point, the Durant move became a fait accompli.

Durant had requested a trade in the summer, but been convinced to stay by Tsai and Marks. But now he had no interest in being the last star standing, and told the Nets as much last Monday, the day after the Irving deal. He and agent Rich Kleiman told Marks he wanted a move to Phoenix.

Outgoing Suns owner Robert Sarver had refused to include Mikal Bridges in trade packages for Durant last summer. But incoming owner Mat Ishbia — who’d been mentored by Tsai, according to ESPN — had his takeover accelerate­d and rubber-stamped the deal. And drove a stake through the Nets’ title window.

“I’m just glad that he got out of there,” said Irving.

Brooklyn essentiall­y brought back Bridges, Cam Johnson, Spencer Dinwiddie and Dorian Finney-Smith for Durant and Irving, along with five first-round picks, another first-round swap and four seconds.

Sources told The Post that multiple teams offered two firsts for Finney-Smith, and HoopsHype reported they rejected Memphis’ offer of four firsts for Bridges.

The Nets have assets, but few playmakers and no closers.

Sixers coach Doc Rivers — the beneficiar­y of one of those closers — likened them to his 2018-19 Clippers team that went 48-34, the year after the final deconstruc­tion of their Jordan-Chris Paul-Blake Griffin-JJ Redick core.

“They remind me of my team with the Clippers when we had lost everybody and still made the playoffs,” Rivers said. “We always laughed we’re good until the last minute-and-a half. And that’s when closers close.”

 ?? ?? SHARE THE BLAME: The Nets built arguably the best Big 3 in NBA history with Kevin Durant, James Harden and Kyrie Irving. But a year after building it, it crumpled to the ground with the players getting the lion’s share of the blame, though the leadership of (from left) owner Joe Tsai, GM Sean Marks and since-fired coach Steve Nash deserves plenty, too.
SHARE THE BLAME: The Nets built arguably the best Big 3 in NBA history with Kevin Durant, James Harden and Kyrie Irving. But a year after building it, it crumpled to the ground with the players getting the lion’s share of the blame, though the leadership of (from left) owner Joe Tsai, GM Sean Marks and since-fired coach Steve Nash deserves plenty, too.

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