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djsunyc
Posts: 44929
Alba Posts: 42
Joined: 1/16/2004
Member: #536
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Big Market Mess posted: Thursday, April 20, 2006
The Northeast's three big cities -- all basketball mecca's in their own right -- are on the outside looking in on these playoffs, and boy do they want answers.
In Thursday's Philadelphia Daily News, they call for GM Billy King to trade Allen Iverson, and in Thursday's New York Daily News, they issue the latest call for Isiah Thomas's head.
Boston? We won't link the Celtics with the two lost clubs above because they have a bustling youth movement that could pay dividends in the future Gerald Green, Kendrick Perkins, Delonte West, Ryan Gomes, Al Jefferson, Tony Allen. Green is going to be ferocious. He looks like the next great swingman.
Anyway, it'll be interesting to see what King does. It's obvious the Sixers are never going to win big with A.I., as great as he is. Still, King might want to try moving Chris Webber first.
Problem is, Webber is perhaps the most untradeable player in the league, what with the two years, $43 million-plus left on his contract and the gimpy knee and back that render him ineffective defensively.
A.I. would have some takers, and it might actually be easier for King to rebuild around Webber than Iverson. Iverson is such a unique player that not just anybody will fit with him.
Up the Turnpike in New York, it's even uglier. The Knicks organization, as well as many executives across the league, are absolutely baffled at the coaching job turned in by Larry Brown this season.
The rumblings throughout the organization and again, the league, are that Brown purposely sabotaged the season. But no one can prove that and you never want to publicly accuse someone of doing that. One team's president told me, "All I can say is that if he did that, he's one evil (expletive)."
While that sentiment is an indictment on Brown's character, it's actually a compliment to his coaching ability. No one who knows anything about the NBA can believe Brown could coach this badly unless he was trying to.
Many of the Knicks players believe Brown quit on them in December, saying his attention to preparation went south around Christmas.
Whatever the case, the Knicks are not considering firing him, which is smart. You don't fire a coach with Brown's credentials and history of turnarounds after one year. But at the same time, they're not sure he wants to come back , despite his statements that he's in it for the long haul. Such is the case when you have a history like Larry's.
Who can believe his or his agent's statements about his wanting to return? They were dropping the same line in Detroit all last season, even as Brown was chatting with Cleveland owner Dan Gilbert.
When the Knicks were in Detroit last week, folks in Motown were convinced Larry was creating an exit strategy (with his acid reflux).
I, for one, can't believe Brown would leave the Knicks after this disaster. I would think he's got too much pride to leave his hometown team in a heap after just one year. His entire claim to fame is his ability to rebuild clubs, so if he leaves New York after this year, his legacy will take a severe hit.
As for Isiah, well, I'm not saying he's been Jerry West, but any suggestion that he should be fired largely for hiring Brown is nuts. Who wouldn't have hired Brown?
A year ago, Brown was regarded as the best coach in basketball. And while Brown and for that matter, Thomas, knew the roster was flawed, Brown assured the Knicks he could work with it. Then, from Day 2, he started bashing his players in the press.
And while people want to rip Isiah for trading for Steve Francis and Jalen Rose, those were actually Brown's decisions. It's always been said about Brown that he likes other team's players better than his own, so it's not surprising that he wanted Francis and Rose -- until he got them.
If you want to blame Isiah for those moves, you can only blame him for listening to his coach. And any GM who has a coach with the stature of Brown, Riley, Jackson or Popovich pretty much does what the coach wants.
That said, it will be Brown's call on Starbury. If he wants him out, the Knicks will make every effort to move him. Good news in that regard came across the wire Thursday when T-Wolves owner Glen Taylor told the Minneapolis Star Tribune he would be willing to bring Marbury back to Minnesota if the Knicks will work with them financially.
I'd do it if I were running the Knicks. While Marbury's a great talent, his teammates dislike him so much that moving him will be addition by subtraction.
And I would love to see Steph and KG reunited. I may be naïve or foolish, but I'll give Steph one more chance (with KG and KG alone) before considering him a lost cause.
You wonder if King will do the same with A.I. in Philly.
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