The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nets’ trades of big stars signal end of empty era

- By Brian Mahoney

James Harden arrived in Brooklyn and predicted his partnershi­p with Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving would be “scary hours.”

It was over in a New York minute.

Not just that trio, but an entire era in Brooklyn.

It ended so quickly, in fact, that when Harden returns to Brooklyn today, barely a year after he was traded to Philadelph­ia, he won’t find either Durant or Irving waiting.

Now they’re gone. Three superstars came, then one by one asked to be traded.

“So it didn’t work,” general manager Sean Marks said. “Some of that is through things we can control and that we can’t control.”

Durant was the last to leave, traded to Phoenix on Thursday. Irving was dealt to Dallas just days earlier.

Those two friends had decided to come to Brooklyn together in 2019. Harden joined them early in the 2020-21 season after a trade.

Durant and Harden had combined for seven scoring titles. All three were perennial All-stars. The Nets were favored to finally win the championsh­ip they’ve been chasing since joining the NBA.

“We had James and we were supposed to be this super team,” Irving said. “We played very limited time together and there were a lot of injuries and things that took place. I would have liked to see that work for the long term, but there are no mistakes, no coincidenc­es.”

Nor was there anything close to a championsh­ip.

There were illnesses and injuries, so sometimes they just couldn’t play.

In Irving’s case, sometimes he just wouldn’t.

The bottom line is Durant, Irving and Harden played just 16 games together, winning one playoff series.

“We’ve had a lot of frustratio­n here with not being able to get that group on the court consistent­ly and seeing what it really looks like,” Marks said. “I think that’s one of the biggest frustratio­ns, where we really didn’t see them and what they could look like.”

They looked awesome at their peak. The Nets beat the Celtics in five games in the first round of the 2021 playoffs and overpowere­d Milwaukee in the first two games of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

But Harden strained his hamstring early in that series and Irving sprained his ankle in Game 4. The Bucks would rally to win the series with an overtime victory in Game 7 in Brooklyn and go on to win the championsh­ip.

The Nets figured to be favorites again in 2021-22, but the season was derailed right from the preseason when Irving refused to get vaccinated against the coronaviru­s. That meant he was ineligible to play in home games, and the Nets initially said he wouldn’t play at all until he could play in all their games.

Eventually, they brought him back in January to play on the road, but by then

Harden had become disillusio­ned. He asked out and the Nets sent him to the 76ers in a deal that brought back Ben Simmons on Feb. 10, 2022.

After they were swept in the first round by the Celtics, Durant asked to be traded, frustrated in part by the Nets’ 5-16 record while he was sidelined by a sprained knee ligament. Around the same time, the Nets were refusing to give Irving a contract extension, having grown to question his reliabilit­y and forcing him to opt into the final year of his deal.

Durant eventually withdrew that, but they couldn’t convince him to stay once Irving asked to be traded last week and the Nets quickly accommodat­ed the point guard. Marks didn’t want to say if Durant’s desire to leave was due to Irving’s departure.

“I don’t want to speak for the guys that are no longer here and why they left,” Marks said.

The Nets still have a chance to be a playoff team. But it almost always takes having superstars on the roster to win an NBA title. The Nets had three.

“They’re taking their talents elsewhere,” Marks said, “and like all other basketball fans, we’ll be watching from afar. But our focus now is the guys in the locker room.”

 ?? COREY SIPKIN/ AP 2021 ?? In better days, Nets forward Kevin Durant (left) and guard Kyrie Irving celebrate a playoff victory over the Celtics in 2021.
COREY SIPKIN/ AP 2021 In better days, Nets forward Kevin Durant (left) and guard Kyrie Irving celebrate a playoff victory over the Celtics in 2021.

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