THE J0KER wrote:Harris defense is really underrated, and he deserves spot in all-NBA defensive 2nd team at least once in past two seasons despite injuries. But Harris is not two-way player anymore because of his OFFENSE declined badly into 10-3-2 with painful fg%, while Holiday is 20-5-7 (near all-star) in that department. Harris once has 59-60%ts%, but if he recovers at least to 54-55%ts% I will be happy enough to not ask his trade

, but 52%ts% two seasons in the row is literally negative impact on offense.
The question was not whether he was a 2 way player, although we can discuss that compared to other defensive guys as well.
As for 2nd team, he arguably should have been 1st team, here are some more stats for you.
DRPM
Beverly 3.01, Harris 1.92, Smart 1.53, Simmons -0.85, Bledsoe -0.95
Smart shooting percentage allowed 42.8, against 3s 33.9%
Simmons shooting percentage allowed 42.3%, against 3s 36.5%
Bledsoe 41.4% and 32.4%
Beverley 41% and 33.6%
Harris was 40% and 34.1%
Simmons defensive rating 107.3 with the 76ers allowing 108.4 overall
Smart defensive rating 104.6 with the Celtics allowing 106.5 overall
Harris defensive rating 107.1 with the Nuggets at 110.4 overall
Beverley defensive rating is 104 with the Clippers at 106.9
Bledsoe defensive rating 100.8 with the Bucks at 102.5
So Harris improves the defensive rating considerably more
Defensive win shares which are accumulative and both the next 2 heavily favor box score stats especially rebounds
Simmons is at 3.1
Smart is at 2.8
Harris is at 1.3
Beverley 2.0
Bledsoe 3.0
defensive box p/m
Simmons is at 2.6
Beverley 2.5
Bledsoe 1.1
Smart is at 1.4
Harris is at 0.3
So in the end that tells us that while Simmons gets a few more steals during the season, and he rebounds considerably better, at the end of the day he has a minor affect on his team's defense, despite the 76ers bench being among the worst in the league.
For all the crap Beverley catches he deserves to be in the conversation of top guard defenders in the league.
While it appears that Bledsoe is a very good defender, a lot of the plus/minus type stats say he was only elite last year because of his teammates. He is on the next tier down though and still better than SImmons.
Smart has a bigger affect on a good defense, and is clearly on of the best perimeter defenders in the league, and all stats put him there.
So the real all defensive teams should have had a combination of Smart, Beverley, Jrue, and Harris. The best guard defender is a real argument with those 4 as the top contenders. Personally I think Smart is the best in the league right now, with Beverley, Jrue, and Harris all having arguments for 2nd best.
Now you brought up TS%, so have you looked at Holiday's TS%?
His career ts% is 52.9% and he put up 53.7% TS last season.
The league average usually floats between 55-56% TS so both are well below average, the Nuggets as a whole shot 56.7% on TS%.
League average on catch and shoot 3s, or spot up 3s is right around 37%, Harris shot 36.7% Jrue shot 36.4%.
So Harris is a better fit in our offense shooting spot up 3s and spreadiing the floor for Jokic/Murray, while Jrue is obviously better at creating for others. But at the end of the day I would rather have the better spot up shooter but bad overall scorer spotted up for 9.3 times a game than a guy having the ball considerably more and shooting 16.5 times a game with the rest of the team shooting those 7 other shots. We get more points. Sorry for what we need it was not worth trading Harris and 2 1st round picks for Jrue, let alone adding more for him. Harris is considerably better than you seem to give him credit for.