Doc Rivers and James Harden Scott Wachter-USA TODAY Sports

Doc Rivers was fired by the Philadelphia 76ers this offseason following three decent, albeit somewhat underwhelming, years with the organization.

Philly failed to reach the Eastern Conference Finals in any of those seasons.

One of the key problems that the Sixers faced during Rivers’ reign was a continual inability for the coach to get on the same page as star guard James Harden.

The pair bumped heads early and often – culminating in Harden essentially signing Rivers’ firing warrant with his comments following this year’s playoffs.

Harden's role in Rivers’ firing has been covered ad nauseam at this point.

During a recent appearance on media personality Bill Simmons’ podcast, Rivers broke down in great detail why he and Harden simply couldn’t see eye-to-eye.

“It was challenging,” Rivers admitted.

“More because we were fighting two things … and not like visually fighting. It’s that James is so good at playing one way and the way I believe you have to play to win, in some ways, is different because it’s a lot of giving up the ball, moving the ball and coming back to the ball.

“I would’ve loved to have him younger, when that was easier for him, because giving up the ball and coming back to it is hard. It’s physical and it’s exhausting.”

As far as Rivers is concerned, if Harden had continued playing in the second half of the season the way he did in the first, things might have turned out differently.

“I thought the first half of the year we were the best team in the game,” Rivers continued.

“I thought James was playing perfect basketball … he was a point guard of the team, he was still scoring — but he was doing more playmaking and scoring. And then the second half he started scoring more and I thought we got more stagnant at times. I thought we changed.”

Harden and Rivers both come with a certain amount of baggage.

Both have proven that much during their stops with other teams.

Will either man be able to find a winning situation going forward now that they don’t have to deal with each other anymore? Time will tell.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Historic NCAA settlement reached allowing schools to pay players
Celtics dominate Pacers in Game 2, take 2-0 ECF lead
Cavaliers fire head coach J.B. Bickerstaff
Connor McDavid's 2OT goal gives Oilers win over Stars in Game 1
Rob Manfred hints at big change coming to MLB
Scottie Scheffler arrest case takes another weird turn with new video
QB Russell Wilson believes Steelers can 'do something special'
Pacers star suffers injury in ugly Game 2 loss
Watch: Jaylen Brown's big second quarter lifts Celtics to halftime lead
Broncos HC Sean Payton raves about one QB's progress at OTAs
North Carolina basketball snags instant-impact player via transfer portal
Rams GM shares details about Stetson Bennett’s absence
Perpetual Bulls trade candidate once more hitting the rumor mill
MLB announces host venues for 2026 World Baseball Classic
Knicks marquee trade acquisition could bolt in free agency
Pistons make decision on new president of basketball operations
ESPN and longtime NFL reporter are parting ways
If Lions HC Dan Campbell's assessment of WR is accurate it could mean trouble for opponents
NBA closes investigation into embattled Thunder guard
NFL reporter predicts Cowboys' plan for QB Dak Prescott

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.