New York Post

Harden still keeping his gaze set on getting first ring

- Steve Serby Steve.serby@nypost.com

THERE was this one possession early in the second quarter Monday night when James Harden found himself doubleteam­ed on the right side by a pair of Spurs, and nonchalant­ly delivered a behind-the-back pass underneath to Nic Clayton for the gimme.

Harden makes the game look so easy it is so easy to imagine what the Nets can be if Kevin Durant can get his hamstring right after the All-Star break and join the party they plan on throwing in Brooklyn, especially if a star is being born in young Claxton (17 points in 17 minutes).

“When James is being James,” Kyrie Irving said, “it makes all our jobs a lot easier.”

There is no guarantee, of course, that too many cooks won’t spoil the Brooklyn broth when the heat gets hot in the playoff kitchen, but as the All-Star break nears, as his revenge game against the Rockets looms Wednesday night in Houston, James Harden has shown himself to be a model teammate, seamlessly Eurosteppi­ng on the notion that one ball would never be enough for Durant, Irving and him.

“Honestly I just try to find ways to impact the game,” Harden said, “and not just score the basketball.”

He is a man on a mission, his seventh tripledoub­le (30 points, 20 in the fourth quarter and OT, 14 rebounds, 15 assists, 0 turnovers) leading the Nets’ to a 124-113 victory, their first in San Antonio since 2002, only after they had let the Spurs score the last 10 points in the last two minutes of regulation.

The Nets’ three amigos all bring their own unique motivation­s to the table, but no one more than Harden.

For one: He’s 31 years old and hasn’t won an NBA championsh­ip.

Durant has two rings.

Irving has one ring.

Harden has learned the hard way that there are no medals for trying.

“It’s not a guarantee to me coming to Brooklyn is guaranteei­ng a title,” Harden said at his introducto­ry press conference. “But I think for me, giving myself a chance is very, very important ... younger, wanting to get paid and wanting to take care of my family was very, very important to me. Now ... giving myself a chance to do something that I haven’t accomplish­ed in this league.”

For two: He appears determined to change the narrative that followed him to Brooklyn.

Harden couldn’t play nice with Russell Westbrook or Chris Paul or John Wall, and so there were eyebrows raised when Nets GM Sean Marks pulled the trigger on a championsh­ip-or-bust move that would shine an even brighter spotlight on whether his rookie head coach, Steve Nash, could communicat­e and collaborat­e effectivel­y with three stars with Empire State Building-sized egos.

It was, and is, a leap of faith that Nash could grow quickly enough to be Steve Kerr, who won the NBA championsh­ip as a rookie coach with the Warriors.

Just as it was, and is, a leap of faith that the Nets’ Big Three could replicate Steph Curry and

Klay Thompson and Durant in 2018 with the Warriors and LeBron James and Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh with the Heat before that.

The Rockets’ empowermen­t of Harden towards the end of his eight All-Star seasons in Houston resulted in a toxic environmen­t that left Harden marching to his own drummer and singing for a divorce.

The Nets’ bold gamble will have a chance as long as The Beard continues to accept that he is no longer The Straw That Stirred The Drink, simply one of three straws that stir the drink.

The Beard is hair for his ring.

The change of scenery and environmen­t appear to have rejuvenate­d Harden. He can score at will. He has willingly assumed the role of selfless facilitato­r/distributo­r, gifted as he is with an uncanny court vision and knack for knowing how to play the game. He helps on the glass. He is an All-Star for the ninth consecutiv­e season. “He literally can do almost everything there is to do out there,” Nash said, “and he’s been a great leader for us.”

Harden is a maestro with the basketball in his hand, dictating the terms of engagement on nights when Irving defers or needs a breather.

Harden rebelled at the end of his daze in Houston — violating the NBA’s COVID-19 protocols, maskless inside a club and attending rapper Lil Baby’s birthday party and frequentin­g Las Vegas clubs during his holdout at the beginning of training camp.

But with the Nets, he has been a primetime rebel with a cause ... and the cause is that elusive NBA championsh­ip.

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