
Following the Dallas Mavericks’ decision to fire General Manager Nico Harrison, Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green has come to the executive’s defense, calling the move premature and unfair. On his podcast, Green passionately argued that Harrison wasn’t given a fair chance to see his vision for the team come to fruition.
One of Green’s primary arguments was that Harrison’s intended roster has never been fully healthy. The Mavericks’ slow 3-8 start to the season has been compounded by significant injuries to key players. Kyrie Irving is still recovering from a torn ACL, and Anthony Davis, the centerpiece of the blockbuster trade for Luka Dončić, has also missed time.
“The team that he’s constructed to go win a championship hasn’t been on the court,” Green stated on “The Draymond Green Show.” He pointed out the hypocrisy of blaming the GM when the team’s top players have been unavailable. “Nobody assumed Kyrie Irving would tear his ACL… The team hasn’t really been out there.” Green emphasized that judging Harrison’s roster without seeing it at full strength is unjust.
Green also touched on the expectations surrounding the team after drafting Cooper Flagg with the No. 1 overall pick. He reminded listeners that integrating a top rookie takes time and that immediate success is rare for teams in that position.
“Guess what teams that get the No. 1 pick usually look like the next year? Trash,” Green said bluntly. He explained that top picks need time to develop and make mistakes to learn the NBA game, a process that doesn’t always lead to immediate wins. Firing the architect of the roster just months after making such a significant draft pick, in Green’s view, shows a lack of patience.
Green didn’t hold back his frustration with the decision, suggesting that Harrison became an easy scapegoat for the team’s struggles. He questioned why other leaders, like head coach Jason Kidd, weren’t facing the same level of scrutiny.
“Y’all just wanna go point the finger at Nico because that was a story line. Now let’s make that a story line again,” Green said. “That s–t is whack to me.”
He had previously defended Harrison’s bold move to trade Dončić, respecting the GM for being willing to “swing for the fences” and build the team his way. Now, with Harrison dismissed before his vision could be fully realized, Green wonders what might have been. “So, next year, they come back, their full team that Nico intended to be out there, and they have success. Then what?” His comments highlight a broader debate about front-office accountability and the pressure for immediate results in the modern NBA.
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