Westbrook trolls Beverley, points to Harden’s 47

NBA

HOUSTON — Notorious pest Patrick Beverley‘s reputation as an elite defender isn’t accurate, according to Russell Westbrook, who cited James Harden‘s 47-point performance in the Houston Rockets‘ 102-93 win Wednesday over the LA Clippers as proof.

“Pat Bev trick y’all, man, like he playing defense,” Westbrook said. “He don’t guard nobody, man. It’s just running around, doing nothing. … All that commotion to get 47.”

Westbrook and Beverley have a long-running feud, dating to the Houston-Oklahoma City series in the first round of the 2013 playoffs. Westbrook suffered a torn meniscus in his right knee that required multiple surgeries when Beverley, then Harden’s backcourt mate for the Rockets, collided with Westbrook a split-second after the Thunder called a timeout in Game 2 of the series.

Westbrook and Beverley have had several confrontations in the seasons since. However, there were no incidents between them during the game at the Toyota Center on Wednesday, when Beverley’s primary responsibility was to harass Harden before fouling out with 1 minute, 57 seconds remaining and the Clippers trailing by two points.

Westbrook celebrated Beverley’s sixth foul with a mocking wave, but they did not exchange words. Beverley wanted no part of a postgame back-and-forth via the media, declining to respond to Westbrook’s verbal jab.

“Don’t start that, don’t start that,” Beverley told ESPN as he exited the Clippers’ locker room. “I don’t care about that.”

Several minutes earlier, Beverley expressed displeasure with the officiating. He was particularly perturbed about his sixth foul — a call made when he bumped chests with Harden away from the ball and about 30 feet from the basket — and a technical foul he received from the bench with 1:31 remaining.

“I got a technical foul because I looked at the ref, I guess, too long, and I guess you can’t look at people in this league now,” Beverley said. “I don’t know. I don’t feel like that’s fair. As a unit we work too hard — coaches work too hard, players work too hard, staff work too hard — to prepare for each game, and to let a game come down to referees and free throws I don’t think is fair. I think we deserved better, I think fans deserved better, and the people who paid their hard-earned money to watch us play, both teams, I think they deserved better, also.”

Harden scored 10 of his 17 fourth-quarter points after Beverley fouled out, going 7-of-7 from the free throw line and swishing a pull-up 3-pointer. The 3 put the Rockets up seven points immediately before Beverley’s technical fouls, which was followed by Clippers coach Doc Rivers receiving two technical fouls and being ejected.

Harden, who leads the NBA in scoring, was 12-of-26 from the floor, 7-of-13 from 3-point range and 16-of-17 from the line in the win. The 47 points were Harden’s second-highest total of the season.

However, contrary to Westbrook’s implication, Harden did not have much success against Beverley, a two-time All-Defensive selection. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Harden was 0-of-6 from the floor when defended by Beverley, who was Harden’s teammate in Houston for five seasons before being shipped to the Clippers as part of the Chris Paul trade.

“I was on his ass,” Beverley said of his defense on Harden. “I don’t know, I’m locked in defensively in our team concepts trying to do anything to get a win.”

Rockets coach Mike D’Antoni acknowledged that Beverley fouling out was a key moment in the game.

“Big, big. At least James could take the coat off of him,” D’Antoni said. “He was bugging the hell out of him. James was swatting, like, ‘Get out of here.’ Patrick’s one of my favorite players. He’s all in it for the right reasons. He’s what you want on your team. If you want to win, you get guys like that.”

Beverley regularly got tangled up with Harden and frequently picked him up full court, making it difficult for Harden to even get the ball. They had several verbal exchanges, including one while Beverley was on the bench in the third quarter. That started when Harden walked over after drawing a foul and continued on the court during the ensuing timeout. It ended with Harden smiling and Beverley scowling and nodding his head.

“We all know what Pat does,” Harden said. “He’s great at trying to get in your head and being aggressive, so I didn’t try to focus on that. I tried to execute and get to my spots where I wanted to get my shots off. But we all know how great [Beverley is]. If you let him get into your head and to the body, he can be a pest.”

D’Antoni said Beverley “can tick you off” but deserves respect.

“He’s earned every cent they give him, and I love him,” D’Antoni said of Beverley, who re-signed with the Clippers in July for $40 million over three seasons. “He plays hard.”

Even Westbrook wouldn’t dispute that Beverley gives great effort.

“That’s good to play hard,” said Westbrook, who had 17 points on 6-of-20 shooting in the win. “Playing hard is a part of the game. For people like me, I play hard every night, as well as he does, and that’s a part of the game. He plays hard, that’s it. There’s nothing else to it.

“He plays hard, and that’s good, but he doesn’t make great decisions. Sometimes he does a good job defensively, but tonight James took advantage of him and got what he wanted.”

Products You May Like

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *