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McK1
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Brown Launches a Full-Court Rant
By HOWARD BECK Published: March 15, 2006
GREENBURGH, N.Y., March 14 — Larry Brown and Stephon Marbury have vastly different ideas about what ails the Knicks. Logically, one of them is wrong. Brown is pretty sure it is not him.
The debate could go on for months or years, but Brown all but declared it over on Tuesday, delivering a striking and harsh rebuke to Marbury's recent remarks. It was Brown's strongest response and his angriest, and perhaps his most honest appraisal since he became the Knicks' coach last summer.
"Look, I've been coaching how many years?" said Brown, whose Hall-of-Fame career spans three decades. "I never left a team in worse shape than I got it. Not one. Now think about that. Think about me and think about the guy who's talking," he said, referring to Marbury. "I never left a team in worse shape. Never asked anything of my players any different than I'm doing right now. Think about that. Think about that.
"So the bottom line is, I want us to rebound, defend, share the ball, play hard. That's all. If you can't do that, if that's not important enough to you, it's not on me. It's not on me. And you owe it to your teammates to do that every single night if you care about the right things. We're 17-45, all right? So we've got to figure out a way to get better."
Brown's rant came in response to Marbury's recent plea for more freedom on offense. Citing the Knicks' poor record, Marbury asserted that playing Brown's way has not worked. He declared he would return to his own style next season and go back to being Starbury, the nickname he coined for himself.
On Monday, Brown generally deflected the issue but said, "I'm hopeful that he'll step up and be Starbury." That magnanimity was gone by Tuesday, when Brown was peppered with questions about Marbury for a second straight day.
His impromptu speech left little doubt that if the relationship cannot be mended, Brown does not intend to be the one to go. The Knicks are expected to shop Marbury aggressively this summer.
The Knicks cut short their practice and let veterans leave early, and Marbury was gone when reporters entered the gym.
Brown said he was not concerned about the effect of a team captain openly questioning his coaching.
"Look, I'll take my credibility," Brown said. "I ain't worried about my credibility. We're 17-45. You want to say because we don't have freedom, that's why we're losing, that's fine. You can say that all you want. But the reality is, we foul more than any team in the league. Since the fifth week of the season, we're the second-worst field-goal percentage defensive team in the world. We turn the ball over more than any team in the league. We're close to the fewest blocked shots of any team in the league.
"Now, if you want freedom? Now how are you going to have freedom with those stats? You think about that. That means, 'I ain't thinking about all those things that really were relevant. I ain't thinking about any of those things.' So, if we would get blocked shots and steals and stops, then we could talk about other things."
Although it was Marbury's complaints that set him off, Brown has been making similar statements all season, and they have been directed teamwide. He has practically begged his players for more defense, to no avail.
On Tuesday, Brown said he would start basing playing time on who is showing the most defensive conscience. Those who do not at least "try to defend," in Brown's words, will sit. It seems unlikely that he would bench Marbury, the Knicks' best player, but Brown clearly is displeased by Marbury's line of thinking.
Asked if Marbury was raising the wrong issue by talking about offensive freedom, Brown said, "There's no doubt in my mind he is." Brown also noted that he could not keep Marbury and Steve Francis on the court together in Monday's loss to Denver because "we didn't guard anybody last night with that backcourt."
Finally, Brown took issue with the notion that Marbury could be given the same offensive license that Brown gave Allen Iverson in Philadelphia. The 76ers made the N.B.A. finals in 2001.
"Philly got stops, got blocks, got steals, one of the best defensive teams in the league, every night," Brown said.
Although Brown and Iverson feuded throughout their time together, Brown said their relationship also bore no comparison to his relationship with Marbury. The problems with Iverson stemmed mostly from his tardiness and his practice habits, not from his play.
"I didn't have things on the court" with Iverson, Brown said. "On the court, he tried to win every game."
Brown said that he and Iverson never did resolve their differences, but they managed to coexist, collaborate and win a lot of games.
"But he came out every game trying to win as hard as he possibly could," Brown said of Iverson, the most valuable player of the regular season in 2001. "Played hurt, broken down, competed every single night, and we had a team around him that accepted what he could do. And they all knew that every single night he was trying to win the game."
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/15/sports/basketball/15knicks.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
the stop underrating David Lee movement
1. FIRE MIKE 2. HIRE MULLIN 3. PAY AVERY 4. FREE NATE!!!
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