.
|
| |
| 3 - Al Harrington
- SF/PF, 6'9, 250 |
| Orlando Magic
- Acquired via trade in August 2012 |
|
|
Date of
birth: 02/17/1980
Country:
USA
|
Drafted
(NBA): 25th pick, 1998
Out of: St. Patrick's High School
|
NBA
Experience: 14 years Hand: Right |
| Agent: Dan Fegan (Lagardere). Formerly Arn Tellem and Andy Miller.
|
|
| When: |
Where: |
| June 1998 - July 2004 |
Indiana Pacers (NBA) |
| July 2004 - August 2006 |
Atlanta Hawks (NBA) |
| August 2006 - January 2007 |
Indiana Pacers (NBA) |
| January 2007 - November 2008 |
Golden State Warriors (NBA) |
| November 2008 - July 2010 |
New York Knicks (NBA) |
| July 2010 - August 2012 |
Denver Nuggets (NBA) |
| August 2012 - present |
Orlando Magic (NBA) |
|
Date
|
League
|
Transaction
|
|
1998 NBA Draft
|
NBA
|
Drafted 25th overall by Indiana.
|
|
22nd January, 1999
|
NBA
|
Signed four year rookie scale contract with Indiana. Included team option for 2001/02.
|
|
18th October, 2000
|
NBA
|
Indiana exercised 2001/02 team option.
|
|
1st November, 2001
|
NBA
|
Signed a four year, $24,035,000 extension with Indiana.
|
|
15th July, 2004
|
NBA
|
Traded by Indiana to Atlanta in exchange for a signed-and-traded Stephen Jackson.
|
|
22nd August, 2006
|
NBA
|
Signed and traded by Atlanta with a four year, $35,303,750 contract, along with John Edwards, to Indiana in exchange for a 2007 first round pick (#11, Acie Law) and cash. Included a player option for 2009/10.
|
|
17th January, 2007
|
NBA
|
Traded by Indiana, along with Stephen Jackson, Josh Powell and Sarunas Jasikevicius, to Golden State in exchange for Mike Dunleavy Jr, Troy Murphy, Ike Diogu and Keith McLeod.
|
|
21st November, 2008
|
NBA
|
Traded by Golden State to New York in exchange for Jamal Crawford.
|
|
30th June, 2008
|
NBA
|
Exercised 2009/10 player option.
|
|
14th July, 2010
|
NBA
|
Signed a five year, $33.437 million contract with Denver.
|
|
10th August, 2012
|
NBA
|
As a part of a four team trade, traded by Denver to Orlando, along with Arron Afflalo, a 2013 second round pick and a 2014 first round pick, in exchange for Andre Iguodala from Philadelphia.
|
|
Creative Financing in the NBA, 2010
|
| 2010-08-12 |
[B]ecause it's fun, here's a list of players who were renounced by teams with cap space this offseason.
New York - Tracy McGrady, Al Harrington, Chris Duhon, Eddie House, Sergio Rodriguez, Jonathan Bender, Kelvin Cato, Andrew Lang, Larry Robinson, Felton Spencer, Bruno Sundov and Qyntel Woods.
|
| [read full post] |
|
Creative Financing in the NBA, 2010
|
| 2010-08-12 |
 | | Al Harrington, still not looking as dumb as he did when he had that mohawk |
|
| [read full post] |
|
Chicago's Meticulously Crafted 2011 Offseason Plan That Relies An Awful Lot Upon Guesswork
|
| 2011-06-09 |
[T]he amnesty clause (that we're having to pretend will exist here, but which almost certainly will exist in some form) will further expand the range of available talents. A lot of decent players are going to become available, not because they can't play the game, but because they can't justify their contract. A lot of the candidates are obvious and inevitable, some perhaps less so. Here's a potential list:
- Denver: Chris Andersen and Al Harrington - Neither is a bad player, and both give fairly consistent if highly flawed production. But on a team in the midst of a power re-build, they combine for seven years and $43,286,700 of salary, untenable for two backups.
|
| [read full post] |
|
 |
Orlando Magic |
 |
|
Note: Non-US teams that the player
has played for are, unless stated otherwise, from the top division in
that nation. If league or division name is expressly stated, it's not
the top division. The only exceptions to this are the rare occasions where
no one league is said to be above the other, such as with the JBL/BJ League
split inJapan.
In the event where more than one agent is listed, this is because the
player has more than one agent. This is rather commonplace - a lot of
times, a player will sign with a big agency, and they will have both primary
and secondary agents from within that agency to handle their affairs.
(Where that happens, the primary agent is listed first.) Also, foreign
players tend to have both American and domestic agents. Where the details
of such are known, they are listed.
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