laitimes

Honest and old, still able to eat or not

author:Spring in Boston

Early life

In high school, Al Harrington held a three-year basketball record of 1104 points at St. Patrick's School, while also having 1307 points, 179 blocks and 152 assists and 71 steals during those three years. On March 29, 1998, when he represented the U.S. National Junior Team at the Nike Summit for High School Students, he achieved a game-high 26 points and 9 rebounds. Named one of the 25 "Usa Today Super Junior Players" in '97-98, he was named the fifth Best High School Small Forward in the National Duke Basketball Yearbook that same year. He was also selected as a national winter qualifier. At the National High School Basketball Game in '97-98, his team was selected as the second team in the Smith's area. He once rose to fourth in the Best Striker selection. In the 1997 Nike Cup High School Competition, he became a school star and was named the second place for the best forward, while being named the second best player in the whole tournament by HoopScoop Magazine. In '98 he was selected to participate in the McDonald's Cup All-American High School League. By the end of his year of high school, he was already named the Most Valuable Player of '97. As a first-year student, his grade point average at St. Patrick's High School was 18.4 points and 11.5 rebounds. Before transferring to St. Patrick's High School, he worked at Roselle (N.J.) The high school has participated in the high school competition as a newcomer.

Honest and old, still able to eat or not

Athletic career

Walker period

Al Harrington entered the 1998 NBA Draft at the age of 18 and was selected by the Indiana Pacers with 25 picks in the first round. In his six seasons with the Pacers, Harrington began his 2001-02 season, averaging 13.1 points and 6.3 rebounds per game, but eventually missed 38 games due to a knee injury. By 03-04, Harrington had made 79 starts and 15 games, averaging 13.3 points and 6.4 rebounds per game, making him a strong contender for the sixth man of the year and finishing second.

Eagle period

In July 2004, Al Harrington was sent by the Pacers to the Atlanta Hawks in exchange for Stephen Jackson. Harrington started all of his two seasons with the Hawks, averaging 18 points, seven rebounds and three assists per game.

Back to the Walkers' Bow Head

After the 2005–06 season, Harrington became a free agent. After he turned down the Miami Heat's contract with the Golden State Warriors, the Hawks sent Harrington back to the Pacers by signing first (35.2 million in 4 years) in exchange for John Edwards and a 2007 first-round pick.

Warrior period

On January 17, 2007, harrington and teammates Stephen Jackson, Šarūnas Jasikevičius and Josh Powell were traded to the Warriors in an 8-man trade between the Warriors and the Pacers, while the Pacers were traded to Troy Murphy and Mike Dunleavy. Ike Diogu and Keith Mcleod.

Knicks period

Before the start of the 2008–09 season, Al Harrington asked head coach Don Nelson to trade himself, initially refusing to play on the grounds of a back injury. On November 21, 2008, the Warriors traded Harrington for Jamal Crawford of the New York Knicks. Harrington reached his personal stats in his first season with the Knicks, averaging 20.7 points and 6.3 rebounds per game, which of course has something to do with the Knicks' core chaos.

Nuggets period

On July 15, 2010, Al Harrington signed a new five-year, $33.44 million contract with the Denver Nuggets.

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