tiderulz wrote:eyriq wrote:Disagree completely. Harris is poor defensively and his contributions on the court have the least positive impact of any of our young guns. We plugged in a PROVEN elite system player in Frye and the rotation completely went to **** because Harris's poor defense was exacerbated by Frye's poor defense. 8-9M a year for Harris is market value as he is limited in his on-court impact due to physical limitations and low skill level (poor passer, poor defense, average athleticism and physical tools). Frye is one of the ELITE stretch 4's and his market value as projected by ESPN was exactly where we signed him. The same source doesn't even list Harris in the top 30. Hennigan gave him a fair offer, there was nothing insulting about it.
actually, if you take hater glasses off and look unbiasedly, when Harris performs well, the team usually wins. Now yes, it is Harris and usually Vic or Vuc, but his contributions on the court do have impact. I believe the stats actually show your opinion more with Dipo than with Harris. And Harris defense doesnt affect Frye's defense more than Vuc's defense. You dont usually expect the SF to cover for the PF, you expect the center to. Name me 1 team, outside of maybe SA, that uses a SF to cover for the lack of defense from a PF. So to lay that on Harris is unfounded.
And no, Hennigan didnt give him a fair offer. Now, i could easily see that he was hoping to get a sweetheart deal because Harris hadnt been able to finish a season healthy yet, but it wasnt a fair offer.
I don't think I'm a hater, but it is all relative to our viewing angle I guess.
Anyway, facts are facts. We are better with Harris on the bench vs on the court and yet he is 2nd in PER, 3rd in scoring. You do not see this incongruence on teams that are well coached
or with players that are supposedly worth $13-15M.
He rebounds, yet 73.4% of his rebounds are uncontested, compared to Aaron's 62.7%.
He passes the ball an average of 35.8 times a game, yet generates only 4.1 points off the pass, compared to Vucevic's 34.1 passes and 5 points generated.
Opponents score 54% at the rim against him, compared to Aaron's 48.1%.
And SF is critical for defense as that position is key to preventing penetrations. Given our weakness at protecting the rim we need a SF that can play good help defense, which Harris cannot. He can't protect the rim at the 4, doesn't play good help D at the 3.
He is what he is, a good but not great player that we should try to keep but that isn't worth more than what Hennigan already offered him.