Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Welcome to ‘Hard Knocks: Brooklyn’: The Nets have some decisions to make

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NEW YORK — Three months ago, the Brooklyn Nets were swept out of the Orlando bubble.

The long road from pretending to contending begins now.

The doors are ajar at the HSS Training Facility in Industry City, where the Nets have kicked off their socially distant 2020 training camp.

The Nets hope camp means camaraderi­e and continuity. Make no mistake — it unequivoca­lly means competitio­n.

There are 21 players vying for 20 training camp invitation­s, which will be whittled down to 17 total players for the 2020-21 season: 15 guaranteed contracts plus two additional players on two-way hybrid GLeague deals, to be exact.

In Brooklyn, it boils down to the facts: There are not enough seats for everyone to ride — and Nets GM Sean Marks is unsure whether his pieces fit the NBA’s championsh­ip puzzle.

“We’re going to have to be fluid with our roster,” Marks told reporters in a conference call on Tuesday. “I look forward to getting with the coaches and with our front office and really debating as we go through training camp and see where we need to make changes - whether it’s on the periphery of the roster, or we make some bigger moves.”

Welcome to “Hard Knocks: Brooklyn” — and the Nets have decisions to make.

Two (rehabbed) superstars, a rookie head coach, a risk-taking general manager, and a hodgepodge roster of ill-fitting, yet talented players. Oh, James Harden, where art thou?

Therein lies the question of the hour, the day, the season, the three-year championsh­ip window to build a contender around Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving.

If The Beard isn’t eurosteppi­ng through those open HSS doors, who is? The Nets can’t just add “a piece,” even if the need is glaring. ***

For Durant, basketball is pretty simple.

The NBA is a copycat league, and teams usually run similar sets with different names. That simplicity allowed Durant, who missed all of last season rehabbing his ruptured Achilles tendon, to imagine: How exactly can this team function once he and Irving finally take the court together?

“Being around the league for so long, you kind of see how things can work from the outside,” he told reporters in a conference call on Tuesday. “But it’s different when you get on the floor and you see guys’ tendencies, and how they play when they’re tired, or see how they play with different ball handlers on the floor and they’ve gotta stay in the corner. So I think it’s a matter of us adjusting to each other and growing with each other on a day to day, but we have high IQ guys who know how to mesh well with anyone.”

Here is the only answer: The team will function the best way it can around its superstars’ gifts and talents.

Irving is the ankle bully, one of the greatest ballhandle­rs and finishers in NBA history who doubles as a crunch time shot taker and maker. Durant is one of the all-around greatest scorers of all time — a twotime NBA Finals MVP whose ascent atop the league’s totem pole was derailed by a debilitati­ng Achilles rupture.

The offense will run primarily through them, which means a hefty dose of sacrifice for everyone else.

Then there’s the elephant in the room:

Championsh­ip rotations traditiona­lly run eight or nine deep, max, as evidenced by the Lakers, who won last year’s NBA Finals on the back of a nine-man unit. The Nets currently have 16 players who can command legitimate playing time on any other team: two bona fide superstars, three fresh, emerging talents and a fleet of role players, both young and old.

It’s simple math: The Nets have 240 minutes to go around, and most nights Durant and Irving will account for 60.

That means 180 minutes left over — to feed 13 more players. Nine guards, six forwards and two big men who believe they can start.

One thing is clear: There aren’t nearly enough minutes to split. There must have been an oversight. Something didn’t go as planned.

Even if it fits, is it enough to overcome LeBron James, Anthony Davis and the reigning, re-tooled champion Los Angeles Lakers? Is it enough to supplant twotime MVP Giannis Antetokoun­mpo and his Milwaukee Bucks, or overcome any other potential Eastern Conference roadblocks?

Or do the Nets have to move to consolidat­e assets, and turn their logjam into a third star?

*** Durant says it’s a lie. The media made it up. It never actually happened.

Harden may indeed want a trade to Brooklyn, but a deal does not appear imminent. Initial reports indicated Harden and Durant had conversati­ons about teaming up while working out together in California. Durant denied that idea wholeheart­edly.

“I don’t know where you’re making these stories up, that me and James talked about any of this at a workout,” Durant responded when asked about the reports. “I don’t know where that came from. James is a friend of mine, but I let the front office handle all of that stuff. I was just so focused on working out.

”I heard all the noise that James potentiall­y wanted to come to the Nets, but anyone can make up stories, anyone can write a story and it gets some traction. Nothing’s ever set in stone until it’s set in stone. So I’ve never thought too much about it, just focused on myself, and my teammates probably did the same thing, and we just move forward.”

There are two issues with that statement: For one thing, Marks said upon acquiring his stars that he would lean on Durant and Irving for decisions made about the team’s roster. More importantl­y, Durant also worked out with both Landry Shamet and Bruce Brown in California at the former Mamba Sports Academy during the offseason.

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