How can we be talking about this guy being "overrated". He is a career role player who played for the vet min last year. And after what could perhaps be his best year as a pro, he still is out there in free agency. No teams are jumping to sign Barnes right away. Now i am in the camp that would love to add him to the roster. I love what he could bring to the team. His energy, 3 pt. shooting, and swagger would be a welcome addition to a team that is looking to get back to the finals. And for those who think he wouldnt want to play on the east coast, dont forget he did play with both the Knicks and 76ers early in his career. If it came down to a crappy west coast team and the celtics offering similar money, i think he would choose Boston. Playing well for a championship team increases the value of most players. Example: James Posey...signed with Celtics with a cheap 2 year deal and then got himself a fat 4 year contract worth over 20 million with the Hornets. Now i imagine Barnes wouldnt garner a contract that high if he played well and the Celts won but he could get himself a nice contract that would give him some security for the future.
Oh, I don't think he is overrated at all by GMs around the league, who clearly see his limitations, despite the deceivingly good numbers. I think the overrated thing comes from this board, where he seems to have a lot of huge fans, who have been beating the drum about him since last summer. I think the fact that C's did not have a viable backup wing last year, and he put up nice numbers for the Suns on a vet minimum deal has helped his legend grow much larger than his actual skills (much like Chris Andersen's did).
I'm in that boat. He's not a great player, but he's better than the guys we had backing up Pierce last year. He's better than Tony Allen, so it was frustrating to see Tony re-signed to a $2.5M contract when a better player (not saying much in comparison to TA) was potentially available at the minimum.
Would I sign him today (assuming he wanted to come)? As a fall-back option. Step one is calling Sacramento to inquire about Nochioni. Step two is inquiring about Moon (doubtful they could do a S&T, and more doubtful he'd sign for the LLE). Step three is deciding between Stackhouse, Tim Thomas, Barnes, and all of the other available wing players, basically all of whom are fringe-rotation guys.
Step four is to pray that Giddens and/or Billy Walker learn to play under a bit more control and can start earning some real playing time.