When the
Houston Rockets traded for James Harden this weekend, there was some
question as to what kind of player they were getting. While all agreed that
Harden was a very good player and one of the best shooting guards in the
league, it was unclear if (and how quickly) he could acclimate himself to being
a clear-cut first option after spending his first three NBA seasons with Kevin Durant and Russell
Westbrook.
On Wednesday night, in his Rockets debut at the Detroit Pistons, Harden
answered those questions by scoring 37 points on 14-of-25 shooting, dishing out
12 assists, and playing 44 minutes in a 105-96 win.
Harden was particularly impressive in the fourth quarter, leading Houston to a
33-15 advantage to take control of the game.
Those marks set
a number of notable milestones, including the second-most points in NBA
history for a player in his first game after changing teams. Harden also became
only the fourth player in the past 25 seasons to tally at least 37 points, 12
assists, six rebounds, four steals, and a block. The other three are pretty
good company: Michael Jordan, Larry Bird, and Dwyane Wade. Counting the official
completion of his
five-year, $80-million contract extension, I'd say Harden had a pretty good
day.
As evidenced in the highlight video above, Harden didn't look especially
different from the player we saw in Oklahoma City. He hit jumpers, slashed to
the lane, moved in transition, and did virtually everything else we know him to
be capable of doing. What was different is that he was asked to do more of it
and didn't suffer whatsoever. The quality of play wasn't different, but the
responsibilities were.
The Pistons are not a particularly good team, and the fact that Harden had
to play 44 minutes against them suggests rest might be at a premium for the
Rockets star this season. But, no matter how much we equivocate, Harden proved
that he can lead an offense. Guys don't score 37 points on efficient
shooting and find their teammates for good shots just because they had a
good matchup. It was a dominant performance.
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