Metta could've pushed him out of the way, not aimed an elbow in a blind-side to the head.
James Harden didn't have it coming.
I think the two of you have missed my point. I never wrote that Harden had it coming - only that his attempt to "body up" with Metta in a little macho gamesmanship was part of the problem.
Harden ran toward Metta - actually came into contact with Metta the way a defensive player might have. They weren't tangled in a crowd under the basket after the score. There was no "basketball reason" for doing this. It was a totally unnecessary move by Harden. Watch any basketball game on any level and see if you see an inbounds play where the offensive guys run toward the defensive guys.
Here is a video, so everyone can judge.
As you can see, he walked towards the baseline to catch the inbound pass. As long as the Lakers aren't pressing, this is a perfectly logical move. Artest will just run pass him and he can catch the ball. So, no, you're not right.
Watch Harden's feet only. He makes two distinct steps to his left, right into Metta's path (although you call this "walking to the baseline"). You cannot say he didn't see Met because Harden was facing him. Then Harden's hands go up in what appears to be an attempt to block Metta's path to the other end of the floor - force W-P to run around him - and then, boom.
If Harden takes two steps to his right, he is wide open. Why also was Harden not headed back to his end of the court? The Thunder's point guard was wide open on the other side of the baseline and as you correctly point out, the Lakers weren't pressing. So why would the Thunder need two guys to bring the ball up with no pressure? Harden's reason for hanging back, I think, had nothing to do with bringing the ball up.
This is an argument about "intent" and I believe Harden's intent was to give Metta a little bit of "the business". James does not get the benefit of the doubt from me here because he has a reputation for taunting and talking crap on court.
Metta's reaction, as I have already stated, was wrong. It was brutal and James' childish stunt didn't warrant that type of aggression. If the two had been jockeying for position during play and Metta let him have it, I would agree that Harden is likely blameless, but this did not happen during play - the ball was out of bounds. The play was totally avoidable IF Harden doesn't push up on Metta.
Harden didn't "deserve" what he got for what he did, but what he did is what prevents him from saying his hands are completely clean.
BTW, you realize that telling me that I'm wrong doesn't magically make me wrong, right?
