The Brooklyn Nets star trio of Kevin Durant, James Harden, and Kyrie Irving have only played in four games together so far, but they're starting to figure out what to best maximize each player's abilities.

On the daily Locked On Nets Podcast, hosts Adam Armbrecht and Doug Norrie break down the recent success and how James Harden's passing is setting everything else up.

Adam Armbrecht: I just think from a basketball standpoint, it's always better when Harden is going pure facilitator to start a game. That means that Irving and KD are leaning more into their offensive shooting game, as opposed to all three of them walking through the first and second quarters and coming out of the break saying, okay, we've all been looking to facilitate we've all been looking to get ourselves and each other in the best spots. Having the consistency of what you've been doing over the course of all four quarters, I think just lends itself to late game things going more smoothly. Everyone getting to their spots and finding the best looks, whether it was getting you to open shots or getting to the line. Again, the balance, the flow, all those words we keep throwing out but I think that this is the kind of thing that Steve Nash and his coaching staff should be looking to carry over with consistency going forward.

Doug Norrie: I think what's funny is that we talk about the flow of the game and when you look at this game, in terms of least Harden's stat line when it's all said and done, he finishes with 31 points and 15 assists but by my count, you only had two of these assists in the first half. Even though it didn't feel like that necessarily. A lot of the assists came in the second half and in overtime… All in all, I think it was a nice way of approaching the game and it really just ended up paying dividends.