The "breaking up the young brothers" narrative only works if Harden cannot be replaced by another brother of the same sort. Ibaka, Lamb, PJIII and any other young gun they can grab with their new lottery picks can be a replacement character in the narrative. Oh, and by the way Bill Simmons, just who the **** do you think evaluated KD, Westbrook, Harden, and Ibaka? You think Presti just all of the sudden lost the ability to perceive what young talent has the chance to become an all-star? He knows what he's giving up, and he knows what he's bringing in. He's batting 1.000 on his Top 20 draft picks:
2007: Kevin Durant
2008: Russell Westbrook
2009: James Harden
2010: Eric Bledsoe
Also, Harden is great, but calling him a definite Top 20 player coming off the bench is borderline insane. Put anybody with unique talent on a squad with KD and Westbrook and send him against the league's 2nd team and you're likely going to get this kind of production. And maybe he develops into that...but he has yet to make an all-star roster.
Perhaps the worst part of Simmons article is his inability to understand the predicament the Thunder are in off the court as well as on the court.
On the court OKC doesn't need the offense of Harden expressly...why would they when they have the best scorer in basketball and possibly the history thereof. They need a system that makes the best use of their players by creating easy shots, something they don't have right now. They also need defense that is more effective and allows them to get out into transition quicker. Harden isn't a particularly great defender. Simmons supremely undervalues the importance of Ibaka to this team, and does not realize that OKC has far more potential keeping Ibaka than keeping Harden. He also doesn't understand just how young Ibaka is as a basketball player and how quickly he has progressed. I also think he failed to read the Zach Lowe article by saying that Ibaka only had a puncher's chance of reaching the level he needs to reach for the Thunder to make a serious run at Miami. I think it is very reasonable to assume that Ibaka will make it there in the next few years (incidentally, when Durant and Westbrook are gearing up for their prime years).
Off the court, Simmons is simply wrong. OKC can't afford the high-end luxury tax
over the long term. People are looking at this year and maybe next year. Presti is looking at the next 10 years. He also knows as long as he has KD and Westbrook and the flexibility to put the pieces in place around those two (which he would not have sniffed if he gave Harden a max contract), OKC will be in contention to play for and win NBA titles. Simmons doesn't realize how important the 4th - 8th best players on your roster are and how expensive they can be. Sefolosha is not affordable with Harden/Westbrook/Durant, neither is Maynor, not to mention the lack of flexibility with the reality that in '15/'16, OKC would have been ~ $2.5M under $70M with just FOUR PLAYERS...you can't afford that.
My final point to Simmons's argument: It was never just the Big 3 in OKC. It has always been the Big 4. Anything else is revisionist history. Turns out, the Big 4 is unaffordable for a small-market team and likely unsustainable for any NBA team. Presti hitched his wagon to Ibaka instead of Harden. He hitched his wagon to defense with Scott Brooks as coach. And he hitched it in mid-August. He's had 2 months to realize who Presti deemed more important. This really isn't that shocking.
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