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Sports
The Knicks need changes but firing Thibodeau isn’t the answer
By JAIME C. HARRIS AmNews Sports Editor
The high expectations many Knicks fans held for their team coming into this season were myopic, clouded by unusually fortuitous circumstances last season that resulted in a 41-31 regular season record and No. 4 seed in the Eastern Conference. Unfortunately, the Knicks’ unforseen pre-playoff success was not a reliable index of where they were in the process of being a sustainable postseason contender.
Their 4-1 first round series loss to the Atlanta Hawks was a more conclusive indicator of areas of strengths and weaknesses, and a painful examination of a roster that was and remains in dire need of an infusion of transformative talent at the top of its roster. The harsh truth is the Knicks, 25-34 coming out of the All-Star break and 12th in the conference, aren’t equipped to challenge the top dogs in the East as currently constituted. They’ll host the Miami Heat tomorrow at the Garden and the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday at MSG before going on a 12-day, seven-game road trip.
By and large, they are what their record says they are. The Knicks are composed of a one-time All-Star in Julius Randle who would be slotted as the third or fourth best player on a championship contender, a promising but inconsistent young guard in RJ Barrett who is no lock to make an AllStar team in his career, several good role players (Mitchell Robinson, Evan Fournier, Alec Burks and Nerlens Noel), aging veterans (Kemba Walker, Taj Gibson and Derrick Rose) and developing players (Immanuel Quickley, Obi Toppin, Quentin Grimes and Cam Reddish) still finding their way. So ascribing the Knicks’ struggles to head coach Tom Thibodeau is an exercise in misplaced frustration. Yes, the Knicks need changes, but firing Thibodeau shouldn’t be on the to-do lists of owner James Dolan and team president Leon Rose. Thibodeau deservedly won NBA Coach of the Year honors last season and is capable of producing positive outcomes when supplied with elite talent as he had in Chicago when Rose was in his prime. While he plays some starters too many minutes, a fault he has carried with him throughout his head coaching career, and has been stubborn and resistant to allocate more time to Toppin and Reddish, and seemingly has not even considered giving rookie point guard Miles McBride a look, no combination of young players and veterans would significantly alter the Knicks’ downward trajectory. What would alter it are stars, a fundamental must for any team with championship aspirations.
Here is the cumulative record from 2014 to 2020 of Thibodeau’s predecessors Derek Fisher, Jeff Hornacek and David Fizdale, in addition to interim coaches Kurt Rambis and
Mike Miller, who briefly took over after Fisher AMNEWS and Fizdale were fired: 147-329. The recur01/06/22 ring theme is they all failed to have a winning record in any season they coached and had a 0 74470 22784 7 combined zero playoff appearances. The hook was warranted for Fisher and Fizdale. Hornacek was the victim of a philosophical battle with then-team president Phil Jackson, who was married to the triangle offense and brought in Fisher, his former Los Angeles Lakers point guard, in a disastrous experiment to implement the system. Rose decided to forego making an impactful move at the NBA trade deadline and wait for the upcoming off-season to bolster the Knicks’ roster. But it is incumbent on him to acquire game changers. No Knick should be deemed untouchable. Red Auerbach, Pat Riley or any of the all-time great NBA coaches would find it an arduous endeavor to move this season’s Knicks team much further up in the standings. Last May, ahead of Tim Duncan’s enshrinement into the Pro Basketball Hall of Fame, San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich, who won five NBA championships with Duncan, explained succinctly why he is considered one of the best coaches in the history of the game. “The most concise way to put it is, no Duncan, no championships!” An immutable NBA axiom is players make coaches. Thibodeau’s charge is to be more flexible. Rose’s obligation is to stock the roster with the requisite talent to contend for a title. Neither has yet to prove willing or capable. The Nets don’t have much time to form chemistry ahead of the postseason
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(Bill Moore photo) Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau has faced criticism for the team’s current 25-34 record after winning NBA Coach of the Year honors last season 01064
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Newly acquired Nets forward Ben Simmons has a short period of time to get acclimated to his teammates with only 23 regular season games remaining
By VINCENT DAVIS Special to the AmNews
Returning from the NBA All-Star break, the Brooklyn Nets now embark on the last quarter of their season. It begins tonight at home against the Boston Celtics and moves on to Milwaukee Saturday night where they will face the Bucks. The Nets, who led the Eastern Conference six weeks ago, went into the break 31-28, losers of 12 of their past 14 games and the 8th seed in the East.
Nets head coach Steve Nash expressed optimism after his team’s final game before the break, a 117-103 loss to the Washington Wizards at the Barclays Center last Thursday.
“Hopefully, we have a good run of health where we can really build something in a short period of time and get a better seed,” he said.
With 23 regular season games remaining, 10 at home and 13 on the road, the Nets don’t have the luxury of time to develop chemistry with many new additions to the team. The 13 road games could have been key because New York City COVID vaccine restrictions still do not allow Kyrie Irving to play home games.
But Irving will not be allowed to play in two of those 13 games, March 1 in Toronto against the Raptors and April 6 against the Knicks at Madison Square Garden. Canada has nation wide regulations prohibiting unvaccinated players from performing.
Hampered by injuries for most of this season, the Nets will soon have the services of superstar Kevin Durant, who is close to returning from a sprained left MCL. The injury happened Jan. 15 in a 120-105 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder. Durant has been out for over a month. But they have reshaped their team after trading James Harden to the Philadelphia 76ers at the Feb. 10 NBA trade deadline. The Nets received Ben Simmons, Andre Drummond and Seth Curry.
Then on Monday they signed 35-year-old veteran free-agent guard Goran Dragic, who was agreed to a buyout with the San Antonio Spurs after being traded to them by the Raptors at the trade deadline.
Dragic has only played in five games this season, the last in November. He averaged 8 points, 2.8 rebounds, 1 assist and 18 minutes per game. In the 50 games he played last season with the Miami Heat, Dragic averaged 13.4 points and 4.4 assists. Dragic reportedly was also pursued by several top contenders.
Dragic has history with Nash, serving as his back-up for four seasons with the Phoenix Suns when he first joined the league. He was also a teammate of former All-Star Amar’e Stoudemire with the Suns and Heat. Stoudemire is currently a Nets player development assistant.
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