Houston Chronicle

COUSINS: ANTICS WERE ANNOYING.

Cousins calls out Harden for ‘antics’ that began with late arrival and continued until trade

- By Jonthan Feigen STAFF WRITER jonathan.feigen@chron.com twitter.com/jonathan_feigen

“The disrespect started way before any interview. Just the approach to training camp, showing up the way he did, his antics off the court, the disrespect started way before. This isn’t something that all of a sudden happened last night.”

DEMARCUS COUSINS

As the Rockets finalized Wednesday’s trade of James Harden to the Brooklyn Nets, completing the talks while the team he would leave practiced without him, teammates made it clear they’d had enough.

Harden lit the match long before he declared Tuesday that the Rockets were “just not good enough.” But with that, the bridge was finally burned beyond repair.

Labeling Harden’s comments and “antics” disrespect­ful, veteran center DeMarcus Cousins called out the three-time NBA scoring champion for his position regarding the Rockets and his role in a “nasty breakup.”

“The disrespect started way before any interview,” Cousins said of Harden’s remarks after Tuesday’s loss to the Lakers. “Just the approach to training camp, showing up the way he did, his antics off the court, the disrespect started way before. This isn’t something that all of a sudden happened last night.

“It’s a way about having business. He can feel however he wants to feel about the organizati­on, whatever his past situation is. The other 14 guys in the locker room have done nothing to him. For us to be on the receiving end of some of the disrespect­ful comments and the antics, it is completely unfair to us. We showed up to work. It’s completely unfair to the rest of the guys in the locker room.”

Harden missed the first week of training camp when he instead traveled to Atlanta and Las Vegas for several parties. That kept him out of the first two preseason games. He was sent into quarantine and fined $50,000 after participat­ing in a social event in Houston, forcing him to miss another stretch of practices and for the NBA to postpone the Rockets’ scheduled season opener.

“This has been going on since training camp, I guess you could say,” Rockets center Christian Wood said. “It’s kind of been spots here and there. I’ve kind of been the middle man of things, being the big man between John (Wall) and James. It’s kind of both sides. But we’re together. The team’s together.”

The night before, when Wall was asked about Harden’s comments after a loss to the Lakers, he said Harden had competed and practiced profession­ally. But he also seemed to indicate there had been issues.

“When you have certain guys in the mix that don’t want to buy in all as one, it’s going to be hard to do anything special, do anything good as a basketball team,” Wall said. “I’ve been on those teams … it was all about ‘me, me, me, me.’ That hurts, and it brings everybody down.”

Asked shortly before Harden would be traded to the Nets if he could play with the former MVP again, Cousins said, “I don’t know. Quite honestly, don’t care.”

By then, Harden’s relationsh­ip with the Rockets did not seem salvageabl­e, with even the consistent­ly optimistic Stephen Silas saying he did not know if it could be repaired.

“You want everybody to be on the same page,” the first-year coach said. “You want everybody to be committed to each other and the team. How things have gone the last few days, actually for a while, I’m not sure.

“It’s just a crazy NBA situation. It’s really just one of those all-around messed up situations.”

Harden said after Tuesday’s loss — a second consecutiv­e blowout at the hands of the Lakers — that he thought the Rockets did not have enough chemistry or talent and that he did not believe the situation could be remedied.

“Obviously, it’s disrespect­ful but everybody has words to their opinion,” Cousins said. “We feel a certain type of way about some of his actions. This is the nasty part of the business that kind of gets swept under the rug. You deal with these types of things when guys are in positions of being franchise players or whatever the case may be. It’s sometimes a nasty breakup.”

Cousins, who signed with the Rockets as a free agent, said he did not feel betrayed, because he joined the team to partner with his former Kentucky teammate and longtime friend John Wall, not Harden.

“I don’t feel betrayed at all,” Cousins said. “My interest was in John Wall, to be brutally honest.”

Cousins, however, said he still believed in the Rockets’ potential.

“It’s all about us buying in,” he said. “The guys we have in the locker room, I believe, are more than capable.

“I’m not happy with the drama at all. I don’t think anybody wants to deal with the drama. I’m here to play basketball.”

An hour later, the drama ended with a big finish. The damage had already been done.

“You deal with these types of things when guys are in positions of being franchise players or whatever the case may be. It’s sometimes a nasty breakup.” DEMARCUS COUSINS

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 ?? Photos by Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er ?? James Harden and DeMarcus Cousins have an animated conversati­on during Tuesday’s game in a prelude to Harden’s post-game remarks, Cousins’ strong reaction to his behavior and then Wednesday’s trade.
Photos by Mark Mulligan / Staff photograph­er James Harden and DeMarcus Cousins have an animated conversati­on during Tuesday’s game in a prelude to Harden’s post-game remarks, Cousins’ strong reaction to his behavior and then Wednesday’s trade.

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