1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

  2. LIVE WATCH EVENT
    Where will the Houston Rockets pick in the 2024 NBA Draft? We're watching the NBA Draft Lottery results live on Sunday, with the room discussion starting at 1:30pm CT. Come join us!

    NBA Draft Lottery - LIVE!

How Harden-to-Capela became the NBA's most-feared connection

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by Stormy1234, May 2, 2018.

  1. Stormy1234

    Stormy1234 Member

    Joined:
    Sep 16, 2015
    Messages:
    1,991
    Likes Received:
    5,854
  2. Stormy1234

    Stormy1234 Member

    Joined:
    Sep 16, 2015
    Messages:
    1,991
    Likes Received:
    5,854
    9:28 AM ET
    • [​IMG]
      Tim MacMahonESPN Staff Writer

    HOUSTON -- The raw kid from Switzerland, the center with soft hands, springy legs and open ears, offered James Harden reason for optimism during the roughest year of the Houston Rockets superstar's career.

    It was 2015-16, the final season of Harden's failed marriage with former All-Star center Dwight Howard. As their relationship fizzled due to differences in basketball philosophy, a major factor in a catastrophe of a 41-41 season, Harden saw potential in 21-year-old Clint Capela.



    [​IMG]
    Clint Capela is Houston's secret ingredient
    We joined the Rocket's big man and resident Francophile for a test of his culinary skills and to find out what he's stirring up for the playoffs.



    Capela's physical tools caught Harden's eye. His work ethic earned Harden's respect. His willingness to listen -- the word Harden uses most often when discussing Capela's development -- planted seeds of trust, allowing the bearded face of the franchise to believe he could help groom the project big man into an impact player who would perfectly complement his MVP-level game.

    "I knew it wasn't going to happen right away," Harden recently told ESPN, "but I continued to work with him, and now look where he is."

    Now, the 23-year-old Capela stands right in the middle of the Rockets' success, a blossoming star for a team that had the NBA's best record and has won five of its first six playoff games. He embraces his role alongside Harden and appreciates the perennial All-NBA guard's guidance.

    Capela has come a long way in a few short years since he was a wide-eyed rookie who missed the first 11 field goal attempts of his NBA career, a streak of futility that fittingly ended when he finished an alley-oop from Harden.



    Karl-Anthony Towns and Rudy Gobert.

    Count Harden as one of the first to see this coming from Capela, the 25th overall pick in the 2014 draft who spent most of his rookie year with the G League's Rio Grande Valley Vipers.

    "James is very smart," said Rockets general manager Daryl Morey, who has turned over the entire roster with the exception of Harden, Capela and glue guy Trevor Ariza in the past two years.

    "[Harden] saw the potential -- [Capela's] ability to get off the ground quick, his ability to apply what he learned quick, his ability to finish around the rim, all that. I think James saw that early and really helped develop that."

    Harden privately lobbied for Capela to get more playing time in 2015-16. While that was evidence of Harden's frustration with Howard, whose insistence on post touches bogged down the Rockets' offense, it was also a strong vote of confidence in Capela.



    "He was sitting at the kids' table at the wedding for a long time. Now he's up giving toasts."
    [​IMG]
    Rockets coach Mike D'Antoni, on center Clint Capela


    That confidence was also consistently expressed directly to Capela. Harden frequently gave Capela positive feedback and took time to teach the big man intricacies of the game, such as how to position himself to receive passes around the basket, molding Capela to become the pick-and-roll partner Howard balked at being.

    "He was telling me that he liked to play with me," Capela told ESPN. "He liked that I was always putting in energy. We were struggling that season, but I was always doing the good stuff. It makes me feel good that a player like him believed in me at first. I was a young player surrounded by veterans. It made me feel good that the main guy believed in me."

    Harden's hand in Capela's rapid growth offers a strong counterargument to former Rockets coach Kevin McHale's harsh take this fall on The Beard's leadership skills, or lack thereof. That criticism stung Harden, who responded by calling McHale "a clown."

    But the development of Harden and Capela into arguably the league's most lethal guard/center duo is no laughing matter.



    Russell Westbrook feeding Steven Adams among assists from one teammate to another.

    Harden-to-Capela has been even more prolific during the postseason, with the probable MVP assisting on half of the big man's 42 buckets through six playoff games, including five feeds for dunks or layups during Capela's 16-point, 12-rebound performance in Sunday's Game 1 win over the Utah Jazz.

    On one play in the second quarter, Capela had his hands on his knees with a foot out of bounds on the baseline, a couple of steps out of the paint, as Harden danced with the ball at the top of the arc. Harden blew by Royce O'Neale, driving down the left side of the lane and drawing Gobert to the front of the restricted area.

    As soon as Gobert stepped toward Harden, Capela sliced down the baseline, presenting himself as a target to Harden, who floated a lefty lob to the big man for the easy layup as the probable Defensive Player of the Year was caught helplessly flat-footed. It's one of the simplest, most unstoppable plays in the NBA.

    How can one defender take away Harden's layup and the lob to Capela? It's especially difficult given Harden's innate ability to wait until the defender commits to make a decision, and the perfect rhythm the Rockets' duo has established, whether it comes from a Harden iso or a pick-and-roll.

    "It's really more about the feel of the game," Capela said, who has finished 129 alley-oops this season, according to NBA.com tracking, 112 coming on feeds from Harden. That includes all 14 of Capela's alley-oop finishes during the playoffs.

    They've reached a point where Harden rarely pulls Capela aside to discuss offensive details. They click off of feel now.

    Capela knows exactly how Harden wants his screens set and when to anticipate a fastball bounce pass -- one few big men in the league can handle as smoothly as Capela, who possesses a rare ability to pluck a low pass and explode to the rim in one motion -- or a lob. Capela understands the rhythm of when to dart to the rim late when Harden attacks the basket on an iso. He can read Harden's eyes and know he's looking to throw an alley-oop from half court.




    "I was in that same situation -- playing behind somebody when I first got into the league and then finally getting my opportunity and then taking advantage of it," said Harden, a sixth man for the Thunder behind Kevin Durant and Westbrook before being traded to the Rockets. "That's what it's about. So I can relate to what he's come from. He works his butt off every single day. That's the reason that he's so successful."

    The Harden-Capela combination really took off after the hiring of offensive guru Mike D'Antoni as head coach. The duo's net rating shot up to plus-9.2 last season, Capela's first year as a full-time starter. Their net rating bumped up to plus-10.5 this season, and it has taken another leap to plus-13.8 during the playoffs.


    All the while, Capela is becoming a more and more critical part of the Rockets' machine. He provides the vertical spacing on his offense that helps create open perimeter looks for a Houston team that broke the NBA's record for 3-pointers made in two straight seasons. His rim protection anchors a drastically improved Rockets defense, and his quick feet enable Houston to employ the switch-everything scheme that has been a big part of their success on that end of the floor.

    "He was sitting at the kids' table at the wedding for a long time," said D'Antoni, who refers to Capela as the best player at his role in the NBA. "Now he's up giving toasts."

    Harden will happily raise his glass to that.
     
  3. Stormy1234

    Stormy1234 Member

    Joined:
    Sep 16, 2015
    Messages:
    1,991
    Likes Received:
    5,854
    9:28 AM ET
    • [​IMG]
      Tim MacMahonESPN Staff Writer

    HOUSTON -- The raw kid from Switzerland, the center with soft hands, springy legs and open ears, offered James Harden reason for optimism during the roughest year of the Houston Rockets superstar's career.

    It was 2015-16, the final season of Harden's failed marriage with former All-Star center Dwight Howard. As their relationship fizzled due to differences in basketball philosophy, a major factor in a catastrophe of a 41-41 season, Harden saw potential in 21-year-old Clint Capela.



    [​IMG]
    Clint Capela is Houston's secret ingredient
    We joined the Rocket's big man and resident Francophile for a test of his culinary skills and to find out what he's stirring up for the playoffs.



    Capela's physical tools caught Harden's eye. His work ethic earned Harden's respect. His willingness to listen -- the word Harden uses most often when discussing Capela's development -- planted seeds of trust, allowing the bearded face of the franchise to believe he could help groom the project big man into an impact player who would perfectly complement his MVP-level game.

    "I knew it wasn't going to happen right away," Harden recently told ESPN, "but I continued to work with him, and now look where he is."

    Now, the 23-year-old Capela stands right in the middle of the Rockets' success, a blossoming star for a team that had the NBA's best record and has won five of its first six playoff games. He embraces his role alongside Harden and appreciates the perennial All-NBA guard's guidance.

    Capela has come a long way in a few short years since he was a wide-eyed rookie who missed the first 11 field goal attempts of his NBA career, a streak of futility that fittingly ended when he finished an alley-oop from Harden.



    Karl-Anthony Towns and Rudy Gobert.

    Count Harden as one of the first to see this coming from Capela, the 25th overall pick in the 2014 draft who spent most of his rookie year with the G League's Rio Grande Valley Vipers.

    "James is very smart," said Rockets general manager Daryl Morey, who has turned over the entire roster with the exception of Harden, Capela and glue guy Trevor Ariza in the past two years.

    "[Harden] saw the potential -- [Capela's] ability to get off the ground quick, his ability to apply what he learned quick, his ability to finish around the rim, all that. I think James saw that early and really helped develop that."

    Harden privately lobbied for Capela to get more playing time in 2015-16. While that was evidence of Harden's frustration with Howard, whose insistence on post touches bogged down the Rockets' offense, it was also a strong vote of confidence in Capela.



    "He was sitting at the kids' table at the wedding for a long time. Now he's up giving toasts."
    [​IMG]
    Rockets coach Mike D'Antoni, on center Clint Capela


    That confidence was also consistently expressed directly to Capela. Harden frequently gave Capela positive feedback and took time to teach the big man intricacies of the game, such as how to position himself to receive passes around the basket, molding Capela to become the pick-and-roll partner Howard balked at being.

    "He was telling me that he liked to play with me," Capela told ESPN. "He liked that I was always putting in energy. We were struggling that season, but I was always doing the good stuff. It makes me feel good that a player like him believed in me at first. I was a young player surrounded by veterans. It made me feel good that the main guy believed in me."

    Harden's hand in Capela's rapid growth offers a strong counterargument to former Rockets coach Kevin McHale's harsh take this fall on The Beard's leadership skills, or lack thereof. That criticism stung Harden, who responded by calling McHale "a clown."

    But the development of Harden and Capela into arguably the league's most lethal guard/center duo is no laughing matter.



    Russell Westbrook feeding Steven Adams among assists from one teammate to another.

    Harden-to-Capela has been even more prolific during the postseason, with the probable MVP assisting on half of the big man's 42 buckets through six playoff games, including five feeds for dunks or layups during Capela's 16-point, 12-rebound performance in Sunday's Game 1 win over the Utah Jazz.

    On one play in the second quarter, Capela had his hands on his knees with a foot out of bounds on the baseline, a couple of steps out of the paint, as Harden danced with the ball at the top of the arc. Harden blew by Royce O'Neale, driving down the left side of the lane and drawing Gobert to the front of the restricted area.

    As soon as Gobert stepped toward Harden, Capela sliced down the baseline, presenting himself as a target to Harden, who floated a lefty lob to the big man for the easy layup as the probable Defensive Player of the Year was caught helplessly flat-footed. It's one of the simplest, most unstoppable plays in the NBA.

    How can one defender take away Harden's layup and the lob to Capela? It's especially difficult given Harden's innate ability to wait until the defender commits to make a decision, and the perfect rhythm the Rockets' duo has established, whether it comes from a Harden iso or a pick-and-roll.

    "It's really more about the feel of the game," Capela said, who has finished 129 alley-oops this season, according to NBA.com tracking, 112 coming on feeds from Harden. That includes all 14 of Capela's alley-oop finishes during the playoffs.

    They've reached a point where Harden rarely pulls Capela aside to discuss offensive details. They click off of feel now.

    Capela knows exactly how Harden wants his screens set and when to anticipate a fastball bounce pass -- one few big men in the league can handle as smoothly as Capela, who possesses a rare ability to pluck a low pass and explode to the rim in one motion -- or a lob. Capela understands the rhythm of when to dart to the rim late when Harden attacks the basket on an iso. He can read Harden's eyes and know he's looking to throw an alley-oop from half court.




    "I was in that same situation -- playing behind somebody when I first got into the league and then finally getting my opportunity and then taking advantage of it," said Harden, a sixth man for the Thunder behind Kevin Durant and Westbrook before being traded to the Rockets. "That's what it's about. So I can relate to what he's come from. He works his butt off every single day. That's the reason that he's so successful."

    The Harden-Capela combination really took off after the hiring of offensive guru Mike D'Antoni as head coach. The duo's net rating shot up to plus-9.2 last season, Capela's first year as a full-time starter. Their net rating bumped up to plus-10.5 this season, and it has taken another leap to plus-13.8 during the playoffs.


    All the while, Capela is becoming a more and more critical part of the Rockets' machine. He provides the vertical spacing on his offense that helps create open perimeter looks for a Houston team that broke the NBA's record for 3-pointers made in two straight seasons. His rim protection anchors a drastically improved Rockets defense, and his quick feet enable Houston to employ the switch-everything scheme that has been a big part of their success on that end of the floor.

    "He was sitting at the kids' table at the wedding for a long time," said D'Antoni, who refers to Capela as the best player at his role in the NBA. "Now he's up giving toasts."

    Harden will happily raise his glass to that.
     
  4. Rocket River

    Rocket River Member

    Joined:
    Oct 5, 1999
    Messages:
    61,799
    Likes Received:
    29,172
    "Harden privately lobbied for Capela to get more playing time in 2015-16."

    "That confidence was also consistently expressed directly to Capela. Harden frequently gave Capela positive feedback and took time to teach the big man intricacies of the game, such as how to position himself to receive passes around the basket, molding Capela to become the pick-and-roll partner Howard balked at being."

    LEadership is not all scowls and screaming

    Rocket River
     
    IvanLCPM, Deuce, hakeem94 and 3 others like this.
  5. vlaurelio

    vlaurelio Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jan 26, 2005
    Messages:
    21,310
    Likes Received:
    11,755
    Big man superstar whisperer
     
  6. hongxingli

    hongxingli Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jul 8, 2004
    Messages:
    707
    Likes Received:
    517
    We must give some credit to our young fella, sometimes he can just catch anything up there and convert it to a basket, I haven't seen any center in today's NBA doing that quite consistently.

     
    Tfor3 likes this.
  7. J Sizzle

    J Sizzle Member

    Joined:
    Feb 27, 2012
    Messages:
    43,505
    Likes Received:
    29,554
    Great article on Clint. Should be a nice boost to his stock for when we trade him for Nerlens Noel or Thon Maker.
     
  8. Daddy Long Legs

    Daddy Long Legs H- Town Harden

    Joined:
    Sep 11, 2016
    Messages:
    10,984
    Likes Received:
    13,588
    Tim is a mavs fan
     
    Invisible Fan likes this.
  9. hakeem94

    hakeem94 Member

    Joined:
    Sep 23, 2016
    Messages:
    30,803
    Likes Received:
    41,420
    spot on!
    unfortunately the world is still under the impression that running and dunking while screaming and pounding your chest equals to being a great leader, player, fierce competitor and exempt from criticism
     
    Stormy1234 and Tfor3 like this.
  10. topfive

    topfive CF OG

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2002
    Messages:
    19,055
    Likes Received:
    37,471
    Clint's agent this year:

    [​IMG]
     
    HookemHorns1250, Stormy1234 and Tfor3 like this.
  11. Tfor3

    Tfor3 Member

    Joined:
    Feb 9, 2007
    Messages:
    19,739
    Likes Received:
    22,733
    Awesome read!
     
    Stormy1234 likes this.
  12. vlaurelio

    vlaurelio Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jan 26, 2005
    Messages:
    21,310
    Likes Received:
    11,755
    the rockets yao ming era would have been more successfull with harden at the helm
     
    arubato, Drogba, Rocket River and 2 others like this.
  13. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Contributing Member
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    May 2, 2014
    Messages:
    72,966
    Likes Received:
    111,161
    media conspiracy
     
  14. bilaal14

    bilaal14 Member

    Joined:
    Oct 14, 2008
    Messages:
    3,027
    Likes Received:
    2,841
    NBA money is dried up. I just hope DM doesnt bid against himself and let the market set the value.

    Hopefully we can get washed up NENE sent out of here as well.
     
  15. Vin2k2

    Vin2k2 Member

    Joined:
    Oct 10, 2006
    Messages:
    2,034
    Likes Received:
    2,764
  16. TheRealAllpro

    TheRealAllpro Morey only fan

    Joined:
    Jul 22, 2012
    Messages:
    5,842
    Likes Received:
    4,999
    "It's really more about the feel of the game," Capela said, who has finished 129 alley-oops this season, according to NBA.com tracking, 112 coming on feeds from Harden. That includes all 14 of Capela's alley-oop finishes during the playoffs.

    Huge area of growth for the team. Cp3 and Capela pick and roll. Chris also never throws the lob to Capela.
     
    Stormy1234 likes this.
  17. Cash Cam

    Cash Cam Member

    Joined:
    Oct 7, 2015
    Messages:
    35
    Likes Received:
    39
    Still can’t believe Kevin McHale let his bitterness embarrass himself about Harden’s lEaDErShiP ‍♂️
     
    Stormy1234 likes this.

Share This Page

  • About ClutchFans

    Since 1996, ClutchFans has been loud and proud covering the Houston Rockets, helping set an industry standard for team fan sites. The forums have been a home for Houston sports fans as well as basketball fanatics around the globe.

  • Support ClutchFans!

    If you find that ClutchFans is a valuable resource for you, please consider becoming a Supporting Member. Supporting Members can upload photos and attachments directly to their posts, customize their user title and more. Gold Supporters see zero ads!


    Upgrade Now