Philadelphia 76ers All-Star James Harden was reportedly stopped by security when trying to board the team’s flight for Thursday night’s game against the Milwaukee Bucks, and now the NBA is looking into the situation.
The league is investigating why Harden was not available for the 76ers season opener, which comes more than a month after the NBA board of governors approved a new player participation policy.
“We’re looking into the facts around James Harden’s availability tonight to determine whether an approved reason exists for his lack of participation,” NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement.
76ERS SECURITY ‘STOPPED’ JAMES HARDEN FROM BOARDING TEAM PLANE: REPORT
Head coach Nick Nurse told reporters Wednesday that Harden would not travel with the team to Milwaukee, and would instead remain back to work on conditioning. But according to reports, Harden showed up to the flight and was ultimately stopped by security.
Nurse was asked about the report following the game and said “there was a report that he showed up for practice, and we determined that he should stay back for conditioning.”
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A disgruntled Harden is coming off a 10-day absence. It follows his criticism of team president Daryl Morey, whom he called a liar, and subsequent offseason trade demand.
The strained relationship between Harden and the 76ers could prove costly, at least in the immediate aftermath.
The NBA’s new participation policy is aimed at ensuring that the league’s star players appear in more games, particularly nationally televised matchups.
“It’s a shared view by everyone in the league, it’s not just coming from the league office,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in September.
“I think whether it’s our teams, our players association, individual players, I think there’s an acknowledgment across the league that we need to return to that principle that this is an 82-game league. . . . I think there’s a statement of principle that if you’re a healthy player in this league, the expectation is that you’re going to play.”
Teams could be fined $100,000 for their first violation of the policy.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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