Former NBA star-turned-coach Amarโe Stoudemire had smoke for one of the teamโs franchise players, calling out Kyrie Irving for messing up the teamโs chemistry with his lengthy absences all season. The Nets made the playoffs and then made an early exit earlier this month when they were swept by the Boston Celtics in a series where the Brooklynites seemingly had no answers for Bostonโs defense or their ability to generate offense when necessary. Stoudemire, who worked as a player development assistant this season for the Nets, told ESPNโs Stephen A. Smith on Thursday that he thought Irvingโs missed games were a problem for a team that had to constantly adjust its lineups depending on whether or not Irving was available. โIt made it difficult for us as coaches to figure out, like, well whoโs going to play in spite of Kyrie? The chemistryโs not quite there probably like we would like for it to be, so it was difficult for us to manage that,โ he said in response to a Smith question about the Netsโ superstar guard.
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If youโve been under a rock for a year, Stoudemireโs comments referenced the missed games Irving racked up because of his refusal to be vaccinated against Covid-19. While the NBA did not mandate that players be vaccinated, New York did have a workplace vaccine mandate that covered athletes playing at the Nets home Barclays Center. That meant that for most of the season, Irving was only eligible for away games, and not even all of those since other cities also has vaccine requirements. Irving played in 29 of Brooklynโs 82 regular season games, while the Nets contorted themselves into 43 different starting lineups, according to Netsdaily.com.
In fairness, Kyrie wasnโt the Netsโ only availability problem this season. Former starting guard James Harden forced a trade to the Philadelphia 76ers back in February; the reasons why depend on who you ask. In exchange, Brooklyn got Ben Simmons, who was once regarded as the key to Philadelphiaโs process, but hasnโt played in a professional basketball game in almost a year.
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