Lowe: Ten things I like and don’t like, including the Warriors’ genius

4:03 am | February 22, 2019 | Go to Source | Author:


And we’re back:

1. Joey Buckets, 3-point champ

Joe Harris is perhaps the best story of perseverance and growth in the NBA over the past half-decade. He braced himself for a long stint in another league after he underwent foot surgery in January 2016 and the Cavaliers flipped him to Orlando; the Magic immediately waived him.

Brooklyn plucked Harris from the D-League six months later. Kenny Atkinson, the team’s coach, suggested Harris watch film of Kyle Korver and installed some of Korver’s pet Atlanta sets for him. Harris couldn’t believe it. “I was taken aback,” he told me in 2017. “I mean, Kyle Korver is the O.G. — the ultimate shooter.”

Two years in the basketball wilderness made Harris timid — a curse for any shooter. “He was like that battered [deer] you find in the forest,” Atkinson recalled. “He had no confidence.”

He does now. Harris has drained a preposterous 47 percent from deep. He’s comfortable snapping into his shooting motion from a dead sprint, and he has a quick-trigger release to evade defenders trailing him around screens.

He has hit 46 percent of his tightly-contested 3s and 46 percent on pull-ups, per NBA.com. Atkinson loves devising ever more complex ways to spring him — including this circuitous bad boy: