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Former Knicks Employee(jeff nix) is on Anucka's side
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playa2
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9/21/2007  3:49 PM
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=Ag3UMe3fa9pyvXmuLgiF1ca8vLYF?slug=aw-isiah092107&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Garden of shame

By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports
September 21, 2007





No matter the jury's decision in New York federal court, Madison Square Garden and Isiah Thomas are the losers in this sexual harassment case against them. The sewage of sound bites and clumsy deposition clips and sordid, salacious testimony have turned Anucha Browne Saunders' lawsuit of $10 million in damages into a small price for peeling past the bad basketball, beyond the walls of the World's Most Famous Arena, and into a clown culture rotted by incompetence.

There's Stephon Marbury playing the fool, and James Dolan the dolt. There's Thomas insisting that a black man has far more latitude than his white peers to call a woman a bitch, and Garden president Steve Mills casting Browne Sanders, once a rising star, as a bumbling, failed executive.

Who's telling the truth?

Whom do you believe?

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And who was the one person who had everything to lose by telling it?

For 15 years, Jeff Nix worked his way as an advance scout, assistant coach, scouting director and assistant general manager with the New York Knicks. He worked with four of the five most winning coaches in NBA history – Pat Riley, Don Nelson, Lenny Wilkens and Larry Brown. Ernie Grunfeld and Jeff Van Gundy could never agree on anything, but they did on Nix.

He survived regime after regime at the Garden because his employers trusted his loyalty to the Knicks, the job.

"Nix of the Knicks," the media guide called him.

That was until sometime after Jan. 1, when Nix was deposed by lawyers probing Browne Sanders' claims that Thomas had berated her and later made inappropriate passes at her. As he did then and again in federal court this week, Nix testified to witnessing Thomas hugging Browne Sanders in a Garden hallway in February of 2004, and her pushing away. When Nix asked her what happened, he testified, she told him that Thomas said he was in love with her and that their contentious relationship reminded Thomas of the characters in the movie "Love and Basketball."

What's more, Browne Sanders told Nix at the time that Thomas called her a "(expletive) bitch, and a "(expletive) ho," after reporting to Thomas that another Knicks executive, Frank Murphy, had called her a "bitch."

Nix had nothing to gain by backing Browne Sanders, except perhaps a clear conscious and a sober stare in the mirror every morning.

And to lose? Between those depositions in January and the trial this week, Nix was dismissed of his duties as director of scouting.

In Nix's mind, telling the truth would cost him a $250,000-a-year job.

Nix wants this nightmare behind him and wouldn't be interviewed for this column, but a close friend of his in basketball said, "The moment Jeff told what he knew in the depositions, he understood he was finished at the Garden. He knew they would get rid of him, and they did.

"But he also knew that he couldn't live with himself if he didn't tell the truth."

As little respect as most league owners and executives have for Dolan, Thomas and the Garden, it will be fascinating to see how many admire Nix for doing the difficult thing, for sacrificing a career on principle, and how many still subscribe to the locker room code that says siding with a female marketing V.P. over the top basketball executive and coach is a move of weakness, even treachery. No matter how disdainful the alleged behavior with Thomas, in some corners, there's still the belief that Nix should've protected one of his own – a basketball guy.

Do you think that Thomas ever had to truly deal with a tough, determined woman in his professional life? Listen, she didn't get along with everyone at the Garden. That's a fact. She wanted players to be made available for marketing endeavors, and coaches wanted them to concentrate on winning games. That's the push and pull of every front office.

Still, no one ever did bully Browne Sanders, a former All-American player at Northwestern. Just remember something: By and large, there are two areas with which women are generally most familiar to pro players: gyrating half-naked on the court during timeouts, and standing by the bank of elevators in the hotel lobby.

In the abrupt way that Dolan fired Browne Sanders, it sure seemed like he never wanted to know the truth about her charges. She complained, and he dumped her. Whatever case the Garden has made about her poor performance meriting dismissal seems contrived. In the end, Browne Sanders, who finds herself radioactive professionally, had to leave the highest corridors of MSG to oversee non-revenue sports at the University of Buffalo. Nix is back living in South Bend, Ind., looking for his next basketball job.

When you talk to ex-Garden employees, there's such a sadness in their voices. Yes, it was always tough there. But they'll tell you that the culture dramatically changed once Dolan pushed out Dave Checketts in 2001 and decided that his father Charles' most treasured toys, the Knicks and Rangers, belonged to him now.

Under Dolan, this empire knows no shame, no embarrassment. His people do whatever they want there, and they do it so viciously, nastily, that ex-employees have taken to calling it "The Garden of Fear." In this case, Dolan has a courtroom of lawyers and a relentless appetite for destruction. He's going to the wall to defend Isiah Thomas, an ideal of Garden grandeur that long ago crumbled around MSG.

Maybe you believe Browne Saunders was going to lose her job and made a desperate bid to attach harassment charges on Thomas to try and win the lottery on her way out of the NBA. Just ask yourself, though: What did Jeff Nix have to lose by telling the truth, by standing next to her when the rest of the Garden was running away, determined to protect what they had there?

Only his job, his 15-year career with the Knicks.

Only everything.

Against self-interest, against all odds, here's someone to believe in that vitriolic federal courtroom, in that Garden of Fear.

Nix of the Knicks.

The old Knicks, anyway.


Now go cheer yourself up, go to knicks off-topic(FORUM) for some beautiful women




[Edited by - playa2 on 21-09-2007 16:19]
JAMES DOLAN on Isiah : He's a good friend of mine and of the organization and I will continue to solicit his views. He will always have strong ties to me and the team.
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playa2
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9/21/2007  4:16 PM
So the article is saying nix got fired because he blew the whistle on dolemite and the gang...it cost him 250grrr. What was the reason nix got let go in the first place.
JAMES DOLAN on Isiah : He's a good friend of mine and of the organization and I will continue to solicit his views. He will always have strong ties to me and the team.
nixluva
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9/21/2007  4:20 PM
The writer in the story you posted is painting a picture of Nix as a virtuous guy, but really I don't know that this is necessarily the case. When you read other articles there are some reasons to believe that Nix was getting even. For one thing Anucha and Nix had history. He knew here since the mid 80's and reunited in 2000 when she was hired. It's also possible that he had no love for Isiah. I'm not ready to believe that he had pure motives at this point either.

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/knicks/2007/09/18/2007-09-18_former_coach_backs_knicks_accusers_claim.html

By THOMAS ZAMBITO
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Tuesday, September 18th 2007, 3:29 PM
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Knicks coach Isiah Thomas arrives today at U.S. District Court in Manhattan, where he is being sued for sexual harassment.

A former Knicks assistant coach took the witness stand today at the sex harassment trial that has rocked the NBA and backed up many of Anucha Browne Sanders claims against team boss Isiah Thomas.
Jeff Nix, who worked for the team for 15 years until he was fired last month, testified he was present when Thomas called her a "bitch" and "ho."
He recalled a 2004 meeting in which he quoted Thomas as telling Browne Sanders: "Don't forget, you f——— bitch, I'm the president of this f——— team."
Nix, who served under eight head coaches including Thomas, said Browne-Sanders told him of an incident that same year in which Thomas allegedly hugged Browne Sanders and professed his love for her.
He said Browne Sanders pulled away from Thomas at "the end of a hug" which occurred in a hall off the Garden floor and later told him: "I saw Anucha pushing away from Isiah," Nix testified.
He said he caught up to her a few minutes later when he says Browne Sanders told him: "You're not going to believe what (Thomas) just said.... He said I'm in love with you. It's like "Love and Basketball."
Browne Sanders, who as Knicks' vice president for marketing was one of the NBA's highest ranking female execs, is seeking $10 million in damages from team parent Madison Square Garden on her claim that she was fired because she accused Thomas of harassment.
Nix testified that he was personally drawn into the feud between Brown Sanders at one point.
In November 2005, he learned that Garden president Steve Mills had allegedly told Brown Sanders that Thomas would float rumors of she and Nix were having an affair if she pursued sexual harassment charges against the Garden.
"I was angry," Nix told jurors. "I said Steve Mills is a f---ing liar."
Browne Sanders' attorneys are expected to wrap up their case today by playing a video of the pre-trial deposition of Garden owner James Dolan.
Dolan could testify as soon as tomorrow about why he decided in December 2005 to fire Browne Sanders, a married mother of three.
On cross examination, Garden lawyer Ronald Green Green cast Nix as a close ally of former Knick president Scott Layden and suggested his testimony was influenced by his dislike of Thomas.
Nix denied suggestions that his appearance as a witness for Brown Sanders was payback for his firing and the demotion that preceded that.
He was making $425,000 a year as an assistant general manager until Thomas told him in October 2004 that he changing his title to director of scouting and knocking down his salary $250,000 per year.
Nix said he didn't view the move as a demotion because it would allow him to work from his home in South Bend, Indiana where he'd once served as an assistant basketball coach for the University of Notre Dame.
"I could live very comfortably on $250,000 a year," he told Garden attorney Ronald Green.
Nix said he's known Browne Sanders since her days as a basketball player for Northwestern University in the mid-1980s. They reunited when she joined the Knicks in 2000.
He said the team decided against picking up the option year of his three-year contract and he was let go on Aug. 31.
playa2
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9/21/2007  4:27 PM
ok why did they let jeff nix go, being they decided not to pick up the option of his 3 yr contract.

Why did he get demoted, could it be anucka told him all along what was going on?
JAMES DOLAN on Isiah : He's a good friend of mine and of the organization and I will continue to solicit his views. He will always have strong ties to me and the team.
islesfan
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9/21/2007  6:11 PM
Posted by nixluva:

The writer in the story you posted is painting a picture of Nix as a virtuous guy, but really I don't know that this is necessarily the case. When you read other articles there are some reasons to believe that Nix was getting even. For one thing Anucha and Nix had history. He knew here since the mid 80's and reunited in 2000 when she was hired. It's also possible that he had no love for Isiah. I'm not ready to believe that he had pure motives at this point either.

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/knicks/2007/09/18/2007-09-18_former_coach_backs_knicks_accusers_claim.html

By THOMAS ZAMBITO
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Tuesday, September 18th 2007, 3:29 PM
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Knicks coach Isiah Thomas arrives today at U.S. District Court in Manhattan, where he is being sued for sexual harassment.

A former Knicks assistant coach took the witness stand today at the sex harassment trial that has rocked the NBA and backed up many of Anucha Browne Sanders claims against team boss Isiah Thomas.
Jeff Nix, who worked for the team for 15 years until he was fired last month, testified he was present when Thomas called her a "bitch" and "ho."
He recalled a 2004 meeting in which he quoted Thomas as telling Browne Sanders: "Don't forget, you f——— bitch, I'm the president of this f——— team."
Nix, who served under eight head coaches including Thomas, said Browne-Sanders told him of an incident that same year in which Thomas allegedly hugged Browne Sanders and professed his love for her.
He said Browne Sanders pulled away from Thomas at "the end of a hug" which occurred in a hall off the Garden floor and later told him: "I saw Anucha pushing away from Isiah," Nix testified.
He said he caught up to her a few minutes later when he says Browne Sanders told him: "You're not going to believe what (Thomas) just said.... He said I'm in love with you. It's like "Love and Basketball."
Browne Sanders, who as Knicks' vice president for marketing was one of the NBA's highest ranking female execs, is seeking $10 million in damages from team parent Madison Square Garden on her claim that she was fired because she accused Thomas of harassment.
Nix testified that he was personally drawn into the feud between Brown Sanders at one point.
In November 2005, he learned that Garden president Steve Mills had allegedly told Brown Sanders that Thomas would float rumors of she and Nix were having an affair if she pursued sexual harassment charges against the Garden.
"I was angry," Nix told jurors. "I said Steve Mills is a f---ing liar."
Browne Sanders' attorneys are expected to wrap up their case today by playing a video of the pre-trial deposition of Garden owner James Dolan.
Dolan could testify as soon as tomorrow about why he decided in December 2005 to fire Browne Sanders, a married mother of three.
On cross examination, Garden lawyer Ronald Green Green cast Nix as a close ally of former Knick president Scott Layden and suggested his testimony was influenced by his dislike of Thomas.
Nix denied suggestions that his appearance as a witness for Brown Sanders was payback for his firing and the demotion that preceded that.
He was making $425,000 a year as an assistant general manager until Thomas told him in October 2004 that he changing his title to director of scouting and knocking down his salary $250,000 per year.
Nix said he didn't view the move as a demotion because it would allow him to work from his home in South Bend, Indiana where he'd once served as an assistant basketball coach for the University of Notre Dame.
"I could live very comfortably on $250,000 a year," he told Garden attorney Ronald Green.
Nix said he's known Browne Sanders since her days as a basketball player for Northwestern University in the mid-1980s. They reunited when she joined the Knicks in 2000.
He said the team decided against picking up the option year of his three-year contract and he was let go on Aug. 31.

So what were his motives for testifying for the plaintiff? Revenge and thereby becoming a pariah in the basketball community for going against ownership in a sexual harrassment case? Yeah, that's how a guy looking for a basketball job is going to go about it. Nix has never been known to be the type of scumbag that Dolan, Isiah and Mills are well known to be but you're naturally going to side with them. That's quite the coincidence that he would be let go soon after his deposition.

I thought it wasn't about Dolan, Isiah, Mills and the other miscreants associated with the Knicks but your love of the orange and blue? I guess that was BS and you can't or won't open your eyes to the cesspool that the Garden and the Knicks organization has become under those people.

Silly me, I just want a franchise that I can be proud of and be a fan of. Like I used to be.

If it didn’t work in Phoenix with Nash and Stoutamire... it’s just not a winning formula. It’s an entertaining formula, but not a winning one. - Derek Harper talking about D'Antoni's System
martin
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9/21/2007  6:21 PM
Posted by islesfan:
Posted by nixluva:

The writer in the story you posted is painting a picture of Nix as a virtuous guy, but really I don't know that this is necessarily the case. When you read other articles there are some reasons to believe that Nix was getting even. For one thing Anucha and Nix had history. He knew here since the mid 80's and reunited in 2000 when she was hired. It's also possible that he had no love for Isiah. I'm not ready to believe that he had pure motives at this point either.

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/basketball/knicks/2007/09/18/2007-09-18_former_coach_backs_knicks_accusers_claim.html

By THOMAS ZAMBITO
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Tuesday, September 18th 2007, 3:29 PM
Print

Email

Suggest a Story

Knicks coach Isiah Thomas arrives today at U.S. District Court in Manhattan, where he is being sued for sexual harassment.

A former Knicks assistant coach took the witness stand today at the sex harassment trial that has rocked the NBA and backed up many of Anucha Browne Sanders claims against team boss Isiah Thomas.
Jeff Nix, who worked for the team for 15 years until he was fired last month, testified he was present when Thomas called her a "bitch" and "ho."
He recalled a 2004 meeting in which he quoted Thomas as telling Browne Sanders: "Don't forget, you f——— bitch, I'm the president of this f——— team."
Nix, who served under eight head coaches including Thomas, said Browne-Sanders told him of an incident that same year in which Thomas allegedly hugged Browne Sanders and professed his love for her.
He said Browne Sanders pulled away from Thomas at "the end of a hug" which occurred in a hall off the Garden floor and later told him: "I saw Anucha pushing away from Isiah," Nix testified.
He said he caught up to her a few minutes later when he says Browne Sanders told him: "You're not going to believe what (Thomas) just said.... He said I'm in love with you. It's like "Love and Basketball."
Browne Sanders, who as Knicks' vice president for marketing was one of the NBA's highest ranking female execs, is seeking $10 million in damages from team parent Madison Square Garden on her claim that she was fired because she accused Thomas of harassment.
Nix testified that he was personally drawn into the feud between Brown Sanders at one point.
In November 2005, he learned that Garden president Steve Mills had allegedly told Brown Sanders that Thomas would float rumors of she and Nix were having an affair if she pursued sexual harassment charges against the Garden.
"I was angry," Nix told jurors. "I said Steve Mills is a f---ing liar."
Browne Sanders' attorneys are expected to wrap up their case today by playing a video of the pre-trial deposition of Garden owner James Dolan.
Dolan could testify as soon as tomorrow about why he decided in December 2005 to fire Browne Sanders, a married mother of three.
On cross examination, Garden lawyer Ronald Green Green cast Nix as a close ally of former Knick president Scott Layden and suggested his testimony was influenced by his dislike of Thomas.
Nix denied suggestions that his appearance as a witness for Brown Sanders was payback for his firing and the demotion that preceded that.
He was making $425,000 a year as an assistant general manager until Thomas told him in October 2004 that he changing his title to director of scouting and knocking down his salary $250,000 per year.
Nix said he didn't view the move as a demotion because it would allow him to work from his home in South Bend, Indiana where he'd once served as an assistant basketball coach for the University of Notre Dame.
"I could live very comfortably on $250,000 a year," he told Garden attorney Ronald Green.
Nix said he's known Browne Sanders since her days as a basketball player for Northwestern University in the mid-1980s. They reunited when she joined the Knicks in 2000.
He said the team decided against picking up the option year of his three-year contract and he was let go on Aug. 31.

So what were his motives for testifying for the plaintiff? Revenge and thereby becoming a pariah in the basketball community for going against ownership in a sexual harrassment case? Yeah, that's how a guy looking for a basketball job is going to go about it. Nix has never been known to be the type of scumbag that Dolan, Isiah and Mills are well known to be but you're naturally going to side with them. That's quite the coincidence that he would be let go soon after his deposition.

I thought it wasn't about Dolan, Isiah, Mills and the other miscreants associated with the Knicks but your love of the orange and blue? I guess that was BS and you can't or won't open your eyes to the cesspool that the Garden and the Knicks organization has become under those people.

Silly me, I just want a franchise that I can be proud of and be a fan of. Like I used to be.

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COSSUCKS
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9/21/2007  6:26 PM
If I'm the MSG attorneys I cal ABS to the stand.

I ask her what she thinks the definition of a "Bword" is.

Then I tell her that one definition of a Bword is "something or someone that is extremely difficult, objectionable, or unpleasant"

Then I ask her if she has ever been difficult, objectionable or unpleasant to anyone.

Then I ask her if she has ever called anyone a Bword. If she has was that other person compensated for it?

Then I ask her if anyone else in her life has ever called her a bword.

Lastly I call Jeff Van Gundy and Clarence Weatherspoon to testify and I ask them if ABS has ever been "something that is extremely difficult, objectionable, or unpleasant" to them.

Vmart
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9/21/2007  6:55 PM
Are you going to take some disgruntles ex-employees word for it. I wouldn't because I know what owners and superiors go through with employees especially the one of the vindicative variety.
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9/21/2007  7:02 PM
uh... he was director of scouting from 1990 to 2005? our draft during that period is horrendous. maybe he was fired for sucking.

also, brendan suhr is now director of scouting I believe and he's been responsible for three solid drafts in a row. he's definitely helped draft more impact players than nix ever did.

did nix scout freddy weis?

also, i believe everyone has a motive at this point as well. especially sports writers.
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djsunyc
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9/21/2007  7:03 PM
Posted by Vmart:

Are you going to take some disgruntles ex-employees word for it. I wouldn't because I know what owners and superiors go through with employees especially the one of the vindicative variety.

he gave his deposition while he was still an employee.
BasketballJones
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9/21/2007  7:27 PM
He was there for 15 years, then they suddenly discovered that he was incompetent after he gave his deposition.

I'm beginning to detect a pattern here.
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codeunknown
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9/21/2007  8:44 PM
Posted by BasketballJones:

He was there for 15 years, then they suddenly discovered that he was incompetent after he gave his deposition.

I'm beginning to detect a pattern here.

Wow, so incompetence is tolerated for 15 years? I guess that's why Isiah was extended.
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9/22/2007  12:37 PM
Posted by playa2:

So the article is saying nix got fired because he blew the whistle on dolemite and the gang...it cost him 250grrr. What was the reason nix got let go in the first place.

What was the reason he got let go anyway??? Didn't you read the article?
I'll never trust this' team again.
4949
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9/22/2007  12:45 PM
Posted by nixluva:

The writer in the story you posted is painting a picture of Nix as a virtuous guy, but really I don't know that this is necessarily the case. When you read other articles there are some reasons to believe that Nix was getting even. For one thing Anucha and Nix had history. He knew here since the mid 80's and reunited in 2000 when she was hired. It's also possible that he had no love for Isiah. I'm not ready to believe that he had pure motives at this point either.

Why do people like you try to justify this crap? He lost a $250,000.00 dollar a year job!!! Why would anyone in their right ming want to lose a $250,000.00 a year job with the Knicks just to get even?! That's dumb! He's sitting home looking for a new job. There are too many arrows pointing at Dolan and Thomas. These guys got to burn. This is the sick attitude I been complaining about all this time. Wake up people!!! Dolan and Thomas gotta go! Ever since Dolan took over and kicked Checketts out, we been going down hill ever since. Just ****'n stupid!
I'll never trust this' team again.
4949
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9/22/2007  12:49 PM
Posted by Vmart:

Are you going to take some disgruntles ex-employees word for it. I wouldn't because I know what owners and superiors go through with employees especially the one of the vindicative variety.

I hope your not suggesting that Thomas and Dolan are angels. This crap happens all' of the time. The boss always gets the upper hand. If it were just Anucha, then maybe they'd have a case, but Nix, he lost his job and he didn't have to lose it, if he wanted to stay quiet. Why in the world would he go and do something like that. It couldn't be because he was 'disgruntled'. There is truth to what Anucha is saying.
I'll never trust this' team again.
4949
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9/22/2007  12:53 PM
Posted by djsunyc:
Posted by Vmart:

Are you going to take some disgruntles ex-employees word for it. I wouldn't because I know what owners and superiors go through with employees especially the one of the vindicative variety.

he gave his deposition while he was still an employee.

That's why he lost a $250,000.00 a year job. I mean for some here, it's simple math. Right?
I'll never trust this' team again.
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9/22/2007  12:56 PM
Posted by codeunknown:
Posted by BasketballJones:

He was there for 15 years, then they suddenly discovered that he was incompetent after he gave his deposition.

I'm beginning to detect a pattern here.

Wow, so incompetence is tolerated for 15 years? I guess that's why Isiah was extended.

Well' the hiring of crack pots is a seperte issue. But I suppose if Nix was a poor drafter, then maybe it reflects a character of honesty for one.
I'll never trust this' team again.
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9/22/2007  2:52 PM
Sounds like Nix has a lot better case than ABS.

I think ABS could end up regretting not settling.

[Edited by - COSSUCKS on 09-22-2007 2:53 PM]
islesfan
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9/22/2007  4:37 PM
Posted by COSSUCKS:

Sounds like Nix has a lot better case than ABS.

I think ABS could end up regretting not settling.

[Edited by - COSSUCKS on 09-22-2007 2:53 PM]

I think Isiah and Dolan should already regret not settling but are too stupid not to.
If it didn’t work in Phoenix with Nash and Stoutamire... it’s just not a winning formula. It’s an entertaining formula, but not a winning one. - Derek Harper talking about D'Antoni's System
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9/22/2007  4:45 PM
Posted by islesfan:
Posted by COSSUCKS:

Sounds like Nix has a lot better case than ABS.

I think ABS could end up regretting not settling.

[Edited by - COSSUCKS on 09-22-2007 2:53 PM]

I think Isiah and Dolan should already regret not settling but are too stupid not to.

They offered her 300k. She wanted 7 million. Thats not settling. Thats giving in to extortion.

I would never give that lady 7 million dollars and Dolan was smart not to give in to that.

Why should Dolan pay her 7 million dollars?

For Marbury calling her a Bword and Isiah hugging her once?

This is a lady that was in charge of marketing put out huge murals of players no longer with the team. She expalined she didnt know about the Eddy Curry trade. Even the most casual Knicks fan knew about the Eddy Curry trade. This was the head of marketing not doing her job in a professional way.

She committed tax fraud and drug MSG in to her tax fraud.

She had problems with many other people including Jeff Van Gundy and Clarence Weatherspoon.

Giving her 1-2 years salary as severance seems like plenty.
7 million dollars would have been around 30 years of pay for not working and in my opinion nothing less than extortion with the threat of bad publicity.

A hug and a bword does not equal 7 million dollars.
Former Knicks Employee(jeff nix) is on Anucka's side

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