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No one foresaw the Utah Jazz making a roster addition right before their first preseason game of the 2020-21 season, but here we are. So then, Shaquille Harrison, come on down for a lightning-round of “Meet the new guy!”
“I really don’t care. The majority of people call me Shaq; my mom calls me Shaquille.”
“A lot of Mormons — that’s all I heard.”
“Honestly, when I first got here, the first thing that came to my mind was, ‘This is a nice airport.’ Where I’m from, Kansas City’s airport isn’t as nice as this.”
Direct and honest. Like it. Off to a good start. Where it goes from here, of course, probably depends on what Harrison does for the Jazz on the basketball court.
At the moment, it’s not much.
The fourth-year guard has been slowed by a broken hand, suffered in a pickup game at the Mamba Sports Academy in Los Angeles during the offseason when an undetermined body part from defender James Harden of the Rockets caused Harrison’s hand to bend back awkwardly. He didn’t even realize anything was wrong initially, but when some swelling subsequently occurred, an exam revealed “a little fracture.”
Still, he’s making progress toward a return.
“Right now I’m very close. My timetable, it isn’t for sure when I’m playing, but as of right now, I’m working out without my cast, and it’s been like that for three days now,” Harrison said. “My hand feels good — no pain in it. I’m just taking it slow and making sure we do it the proper way.”
Harrison’s injury was actually news to new teammate Joe Ingles, who knew nothing of it based on their admittedly limited first practice together Friday.
“I didn’t know he had a broken hand!” Ingles said with a laugh. “He looked fine today.”
They’ll be hoping for better than fine once he’s officially ready to go.
He’d already made an impression on the Jazz to that effect from his previous stops in Phoenix and Chicago.
Minnesota Timberwolves' D'Angelo Russell, left, evades the defensive efforts of Chicago Bulls' Shaquille Harrison in the first half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday, March 4, 2020 in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)
Coach Quin Snyder agreed that Harrison’s dogged attitude on that end of the court was apparent.
“When you watch him play, it jumps out of you that he can defend,” Snyder said. “He can defend the ball, he’s got the physicality, and when you see a guy that can bring that, I’m excited for our staff and myself to have a chance to work with him.”
Harrison said that while he hadn’t had a specific conversation with the Jazz about what his role would be, it wasn’t really that difficult for him to discern.
“My goal is to come in and fill that void that they were missing,” Harrison said. “For me, I’m gonna come in every single day and bring 110%, and I truly believe in that — every guy coming in to work hard every day. You can’t control making shots, you can’t control the ball going in, there’s gonna be some off days, but you can come in and play hard every single day and that takes care of itself.”
Of course, he has the hand recovery and the lateness of his arrival to the team working against him for now. This season was already bound to be tough for newcomers, given the short run-up to the season and the lack of customary organized team activities ahead of training camp.
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New Utah Jazz guard Shaq Harrison eager to 'fill that void' as team's perimeter defense ace - Salt Lake Tribune
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