ATLANTA
— "Is there water in my beard?"
James Harden fluffed his beard, the shorthand
symbol of his identity, as he prepared to speak to a collection of media that
reached legitimate throng status. The beard is the easy signifier, a Halloween
prop come to life. You see a guy rocking a beard the size of a cafeteria
tray, you figure he's a clown, a throwback to Dennis Rodman and other stars
whose flash overwhelmed their substance.
And then he takes the court, and you start to
rethink your opinion. Harden, in the first games of his fourth year, is on the
very edge of superstar status, and he's looking like he's ready to assume the
role.
This time last year, Harden was a role player on
an ascending Oklahoma City team. But a breakout
playoff performance, a Sixth
Man award and an Olympic gold medal (plus a little notoriety at
the elbow of Metta World Peace) and Harden solidified his credentials
enough that the Thunder decided he'd be better off as trade asset than
employee. So Harden packed his bags and his beard and journeyed about 500 miles
down Interstate 45.
Harden thus gave Houston its second straight
meteor hit, following the Rockets' summer signing of instant phenom Jeremy Lin. And with Harden
and Lin, the Rockets now have — hey, why not call it like it is? — the finest
backcourt in the NBA.
Granted, two games is not exactly a
representative sample size. But in their first 96 minutes together, Harden and
Lin have exceeded every expectation, forming a no-look, pick-and-rolling
machine that's accounting for the overwhelming majority of Houston's points.
They've got youth and an array of skills, facets that other top duos (Kobe/Nash
in L.A., Manu/Parker in San Antonio, Deron/Joe Johnson in Brooklyn) just can't
match. Not yet, anyway.
On Friday night, in a thorough 109-102
dismantling of the Atlanta Hawks, Harden and Lin demonstrated that they
deserve every bit of the praise ladled on them. Harden scored 45 points on
14-of-19 shooting. Lin came within three assists of a triple-double, posting a
21-10-7 line. And while both of them have their quirks — Harden dribbles like
the floor is sticky, Lin sometimes takes on the fling-up-everything role of a
rec league ballhog — the bottom line is that these two have the kind of
complementary games that could make Houston a very tough opponent, at least in
two positions.
The media loves to saddle players with ready-made
storylines, to reduce every guy dribbling a ball to a one-word characteristic:
ASCENSION. DOMINATION. REDEMPTION. For Harden and Lin, the prepackaged
storyline is REVENGE. Lin's gonna want revenge on the New York Knicks for
letting him twist in the wind! Harden's gonna tear the Oklahoma City Thunder a
new one for shipping him out of town!
If that's the storyline, someone needs to slip
Lin and Harden a script. Neither one seems particularly interested in the
vendetta concept. Hell, these guys have had just three practices together;
they're probably more concerned with remembering each other's roles in the
playbook.
"I go from coming off the bench to having
the offense run through me," Harden said. "It's an adjustment. But
it's my job. I'll be fine."
If anything, they're focused on how to lead a
very young team.
"You saw our youth today," Lin said,
talking about the 14-point lead that the Rockets let vanish. "We got leads
and we gave them back. Great teams don't do that. I'm just glad we stuck it out
... Sometimes you've got to win ugly, and that's what we did tonight."
As the media surrounded first Harden and then Lin
in Philips Arena's tiny locker room, Houston's Royce White looked around, shook
his head and said, "Wow." But he had no doubts about the value of the
media circus that he'll see at every road stop.
"It's good for our organization, it's good
for Houston, it's good for the team," he said. "Everybody's young.
James is playing like a veteran even though it's only his fourth year. Lin is
playing really well. That young factor helps them gel really well."
They're also happy to heap praise like
Thanksgiving seconds. "He does a great job of creating and making
plays, both for me and for himself," Harden said of Lin. "He can get
me the ball where I need it. That's what makes us so good together."
"I can't say enough about him," Lin
said. "It's not just me (he helps). He frees everyone up." Lin paused
and smiled a grateful smile. "We're just thankful he showed up."

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