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Knicks HC Mike Brown explains James Harden defensive strategy
New York Knicks head coach Mike Brown. Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Count the dribbles: Knicks HC Mike Brown explains defensive strategy on James Harden

Mike Brown got plenty of experience going up against James Harden in the playoffs as a Golden State Warriors assistant. That informed how Brown's New York Knicks defended — and exhausted — Harden in their Game 1 win.

In frank comments to the media, the Knicks head coach admitted that his players were consciously going after Harden on defense in the fourth quarter as they made up a 22-point deficit to force overtime. The result was 15 points from Jalen Brunson in the final period while Harden shot 1-for-6 in the 115-104 Cleveland Cavaliers loss.

James Harden's ball dominance can exhaust him

When Brown was a Warriors assistant, the team faced Harden's Houston Rockets in two tight playoff series in 2018 and 2019. Harden was at his peak then, winning MVP in 2018, so the Warriors needed to slow him down by any means possible.

"We counted Harden's dribbles," Brown told reporters, about his old team's approach. "He's dribbling 1,000 times a game. [Warriors forward Kevin Durant] was at 300 or right below, so keep picking him up at full speed. Because at the end of series, at the end of games, it'll wear him down. Did it? Probably not. But you say stuff like that to give your guys a psychological advantage."

The Knicks leaned on their large group of guards to harass Harden all game, giving 57 minutes to four different backup guards in Game 1. Then in the fourth quarter, Brunson repeatedly forced the Cavaliers to switch Harden onto him, and shot 7-for-9 in the quarter. For the game, Brunson went 7-for-11 with the 36-year-old Harden defending him and 8-for-18 against everyone else.

Kenny Atkinson needs to give Cleveland Cavaliers guards rest

Did targeting James Harden on both ends tire him out? Brown isn't sure, but he believes that the concept gave his players a "psychological advantage" against Harden, especially with the Cavaliers coming off a seven-game series that only ended two days before the Eastern Conference Finals.

At the same time, Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson seemed baffled by the idea that Harden and his other players would be tired. Harden came in at the end of the third quarter and never sat in the 4th quarter or overtime. Donovan Mitchell played the final 17 minutes without a break.

Keeping stars in the game is at least defensible. But Atkinson also refused to use timeouts, taking one only when the Knicks had gone on a 16-1 run to get back into the game. The Cavaliers ended regulation with two timeouts remaining in a game where their players were obviously gassed.

Atkinson clearly doesn't trust his backup guards, with Keon Ellis playing only five minutes, Jaylen Tyson and Craig Porter, Jr. out of the rotation and Dennis Schroder shooting 1-for-9 in Game 1. He's going to have to find a way to rest Harden or the Knicks will keep exhausting him late in games.

Sean Keane

Sean Keane is a sportswriter and a comedian based in Oakland, California, with experience covering the NBA, MLB, NFL and Ice Cube’s three-on-three basketball league, The Big 3. He’s written for Comedy Central’s “Another Period,” ESPN the Magazine, and Audible. com

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