NBA The special offer for a car wash
James Harden He has gone from hero to villain for the Rockets fans in just a few hours. The time that has passed between the last game played by ‘La Barba’ with the Rockets jersey and that his transfer to the Brooklyn Nets with Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving.
A move that has allowed Houston fans to start hostilities against the shooting guard. And so has a Texas city car wash, offering their free services to all those who arrive with a ‘La Barba’ t-shirt and then throw it away.
A Car Wash in Houston is offering a free car wash in exchange for your old James Harden jersey
( @ MayraABC13 ) pic.twitter.com/zmVXvzJgmD
? NBA Central (@TheNBACentral) January 14, 2021
It is only the first sample of ‘affection’ from a hobby that seconds after confirming its transfer retrieved an old social media post from 2017, in which Harden promises a fan that he will never leave the Rockets And that will be Houston for life.
The MVP of the 2018 season was also active on social media. Specifically on Instagram, where gave a ‘like’ to a comment about how the dancers of the strip clubs were going to be of Houston before the departure of the escort, who is said to have been a regular customer of this type of premises.

But the fans aren’t the only ones who have charged at Harden. Even within the Rockets themselves there were voices against the escort before his march to Brooklyn became official. The architect was DeMarcus Cousins, one of the team’s signings this season, who assured that the guard had already ‘left’ before the season began: “My interest was to play with John Wall, if I’m honest. Harden’s lack of respect comes from long before any interview. Your arrival at the training camp, showing itself as it was shown, the antics off the court … The disrespect started much earlier “.
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More from Author Travis M. Andrews here: https://globelivemedia.com/author/travis-m-andrews/

Travis M. Andrews is a features writer for The Washington Post. He joined The Post in 2016 as a reporter for Morning Mix. He was previously a travel and culture editor for Southern Living magazine, a contributing pop culture reporter for Mashable and the Week, and a contributing editor for the Syfy blog Dvice. He also has freelanced for magazines, including Esquire, GQ and Time. He is the author of the coming book “Because He’s Jeff Goldblum,” a semi-rumination and semi-ridiculous look at the career of the enigmatic actor and an exploration of the shifting nature of fame in the 21st century, to be published in November by Plume.
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