BROOKLYN — In the history of the NBA, no team has promised more and delivered less than the Brooklyn Nets’ “Big Three” era. The union of Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, and James Harden was supposed to be a coronation—a dynasty that would bring championships to New York and redefine offensive basketball. Instead, it ended in a cloud of trade demands, sweeps, and “what ifs.”
For years, the public narrative has blamed the collapse on Kyrie Irving’s availability, Kevin Durant’s wanderlust, or James Harden’s impatience. But this week, Kyrie Irving pulled back the curtain, revealing a story of organizational instability, internal doubt, and “betrayals” that doomed the experiment before it ever truly began.

The Foundation Was Cracked From Day One
In a candid revelation that changes the timeline of the disaster, Irving admitted that the tension didn’t start with the losing—it started with the hiring of head coach Steve Nash.
“When Steve became our head coach, he even admitted to me that he had his own reserves on coaching me,” Irving revealed. “And I had my reserves on being coached by him.”
Think about that. The foundation of the most scrutinized team in sports was built on a coach who wasn’t sure he could handle the star point guard, and a star point guard who doubted the coach’s credentials. While Irving publicly supported Nash out of loyalty to Kevin Durant (who pushed for the hire), the seeds of doubt were planted immediately.
“I felt like there were other candidates out there that could have definitely been our head coach that had championship experience,” Irving noted, hinting that the rookie head coach was ill-equipped to manage the circus that was about to unfold.
The “Betrayal” of Intel

While the internal dynamics were shaky, Irving points to a specific departure as the catalyst for the team’s on-court unraveling: the exit of assistant coach Ime Udoka to the Boston Celtics.
Udoka wasn’t just another assistant; he was a defensive architect who knew the Nets’ playbook, player tendencies, and weaknesses inside out. When he left to become the head coach of a division rival, he took the “cheat codes” with him.
“Handing your playbook to a rival was on another level,” the analysis notes. “Every tendency, every set, every weakness—all of it came back to bite them.”
The consequences were immediate and brutal. When the Nets faced the Celtics in the 2022 playoffs, they were swept in humiliating fashion. Udoka had his team prepared for everything Brooklyn tried to run, neutralizing the pure talent of Irving and Durant with a defensive scheme built on intimate inside knowledge.
The Human Element: Mental Health and “The Trade”
Perhaps the most poignant part of Irving’s reflection is his admission of personal struggle. The season that fans remember for his absences was, in reality, a time of severe mental health and family challenges.
“Behind the scenes, he was struggling badly,” reports confirm. “Family issues, personal problems, mental health struggles—all of it hit him during that same season.”
Irving admits he isolated himself, failing to communicate his pain to his teammates, which created a void that the media filled with speculation. This isolation directly contributed to James Harden’s decision to leave.
The trade that sent Harden to Philadelphia for Ben Simmons is viewed by Irving as the final nail in the coffin. It wasn’t just losing an MVP-caliber player; it was the uncertainty of what they were getting back.
“I don’t think we knew the landscape of where Ben was at,” Irving confessed regarding Simmons’ mental and physical state. “It wasn’t a fair trade.”
The 13-3 “What If”

Despite the chaos, Irving reminds the world of the tragedy of the situation: When they actually played, they were unstoppable. The trio of Durant, Irving, and Harden went 13-3 together, destroying defenses with an efficiency that looked like a video game.
“That’s a 79-win pace,” analysts point out. “Historically dominant.”
But bad luck intervened. A toe on the line by Kevin Durant in the playoffs against Milwaukee turned a series-winning three into a game-tying two, eventually leading to an overtime loss. That one inch likely cost the Nets a championship and changed the trajectory of the franchise forever.
The Verdict
The collapse of the Brooklyn Nets wasn’t a simple story of ego. It was a perfect storm of organizational instability, coaching inexperience, personal crises, and bad timing.
“We were committed, but everyone else wasn’t,” Irving said, referring to the constant turnover of staff and front office personnel.
The “Super Team” didn’t fail because they weren’t talented enough. It failed because talent needs stability to thrive, and in Brooklyn, the ground was always moving beneath their feet. As Irving suggests, the full story—including the perspectives of Durant and Nash—might one day be told in a documentary. But for now, the lesson remains: You can buy talent, but you can’t buy chemistry, health, or peace of mind.
News
“We’ll Kill Every Last One Of You” He Screamed. The SAS Commander Opened His Notebook, Said “Names?”
The video was 43 seconds long. In it, a man stands in front of roughly 60 armed fighters somewhere in northern Mosul, January 2005. He is not hiding his face. He is not lowering his voice. He looks directly into…
They Sent 12 SAS In. The Report Said Nothing Happened. The Bodies Told Another Story.
The official report for Operation Kingswood is four paragraphs long. It was filed at 0847 hours on the morning of March 14th, 2005 by a British officer whose name is redacted across every version of the document that has ever…
The Pentagon Wrote a 47-Page Report On One SAS Night Operation. Page One Simply Read “Impossible”
In November 2004, the Pentagon commissioned a report not about a campaign, not about a month-long offensive, not about a strategic shift in the war in Iraq, about a single night, one operation, eight men, one target, and a result…
“We Have Snipers On Every Rooftop” He Warned — “We Know. We Put Them There.” The SAS Replied
November 3rd, 2006. Al Qaim, western Iraq. A border city on the Euphrates that a heavily resourced American-led task force had failed to control for four consecutive months. Colonel Richard Colburn had been in the room for 11 minutes before…
He Commanded 600 Men And Air Support. The SAS Had 6 And Won Before The Helicopters Even Arrived.
17 seconds. That is how long it took six men to move from the outer wall to the interior of a warehouse in the Al Anbar district of Fallujah. No explosives, no breaching charges, no helicopters circling overhead. Just six…
He Told Prince ‘You Can’t Afford This $45K Guitar’ — Then Prince Picked Up A Dusty $300
April 16th, 2011. 2:47 p.m. Norman’s Rare Guitars on Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood. The kind of shop where rock legends come to spend six figures on vintage instruments. That afternoon, 58-year-old Norman Harris sat behind his desk, polishing a…
End of content
No more pages to load