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Isiah did recomend Gallinari
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CrushAlot
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6/27/2008  7:46 PM
June 27, 2008
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Text size: Knicks' Gallinari says he understands pressure
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
4:14 PM EDT, June 27, 2008

Knicks first-round pick Danilo Gallinari at the MSG Training Center in Greenburgh, N.Y. (Newsday / Viorel Florescu / June 27, 2008)



GREENBURGH, N.Y. - Sure, New York will be tough. Danilo Gallinari believes he is ready, since there was plenty of pressure playing in Milan.

Especially since he wore the same number as a giant of Italian hoops -- who now happens to be his coach.

Gallinari proved to be worthy of wearing Mike D'Antoni's No. 8 back home, and hopes to win over the fans that jeered him on draft night when he dons a Knicks jersey with the same number next season.

"I think it is two different worlds," the 19-year-old Gallinari said Friday at the Knicks' training center. "There is a lot of pressure in Milan and a lot of pressure in New York. So I'm going to different places, but same place."



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And not an easy one. Fans at the draft booed loudly when the Knicks took Gallinari on Thursday with the No. 6 pick, and that was nothing compared to what he'll hear if he doesn't produce right away next season.

"I think Danilo and I and Mike understand that he's going to have to answer all those questions by how he plays, and understand that he's a young player like all the other rookies and it'll be gradually better," Knicks president Donnie Walsh said.

Walsh said he got a strong recommendation from former coach

Isiah Thomas after a European scouting trip, citing Gallinari's poise in crunch time at such a young age.

"Basically at the end of games, they gave him the ball and he made the plays," Walsh said. "For a guy that's that big, that's unusual."

Playing under D'Antoni should help Gallinari adjust to the NBA. D'Antoni was a star player and championship-winning coach in Italy, where he was once a teammate of Gallinari's father, Vittorio. On the phone after the pick, D'Antoni began the conversation in what was still pretty good Italian, Danilo Gallinari said.

"He played so many years in Europe and Italy, so he knows where I am from, where I come from, and he's probably the right guy to help me, the right coach to help me," Gallinari said.

Gallinari doesn't know D'Antoni well, but certainly knows of him. And when he showed up in Milan as a teenager and asked for No. 8, Gallinari was constantly reminded that "Mike D'Antoni is a legend in Milan."

"Some pressure about that," Gallinari said.

Unlike Kobe Bryant, who used to wear No. 8 in honor of D'Antoni, Gallinari's choice of the number had nothing to do with his new coach. He picked it for his birth date -- Aug. 8, 1988.

The Knicks believe Gallinari will be a good fit in D'Antoni's system because of his outside shooting ability. Listed at 6-foot-8, though Walsh said he's closer to 6-10, Gallinari shot 40 percent from 3-point range last season for Armani Jeans of Milan, averaging 17.5 points in Italian A-1 League play.

D'Antoni's offense depends on having shooters at every position, and Walsh recognized the Knicks didn't. Perhaps when he bulks up, Gallinari can be used as a perimeter-shooting power forward, the way Shawn Marion was under D'Antoni in Phoenix, where he developed into an All-Star.

Gallinari and Walsh both said a doctor told them the forward could grow another inch, perhaps making him as big a threat on the interior as he is from the outside.

"And he's a very, very good shooter," Walsh said. "So I think the combination of being able to take it to the goal and then shoot from the outside, for a guy that big I think is going to be a pretty lethal combination once he gets the strength and all that."
I'm tired,I'm tired, I'm so tired right now......Kristaps Porzingis 1/3/18
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BRIGGS
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6/27/2008  7:56 PM
Posted by CrushAlot:

June 27, 2008
Search Login or register Home Delivery
Text size: Knicks' Gallinari says he understands pressure
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
4:14 PM EDT, June 27, 2008

Knicks first-round pick Danilo Gallinari at the MSG Training Center in Greenburgh, N.Y. (Newsday / Viorel Florescu / June 27, 2008)



GREENBURGH, N.Y. - Sure, New York will be tough. Danilo Gallinari believes he is ready, since there was plenty of pressure playing in Milan.

Especially since he wore the same number as a giant of Italian hoops -- who now happens to be his coach.

Gallinari proved to be worthy of wearing Mike D'Antoni's No. 8 back home, and hopes to win over the fans that jeered him on draft night when he dons a Knicks jersey with the same number next season.

"I think it is two different worlds," the 19-year-old Gallinari said Friday at the Knicks' training center. "There is a lot of pressure in Milan and a lot of pressure in New York. So I'm going to different places, but same place."



Related links
Point guard is next piece to Knicks' puzzle
Danilo Gallinari's news conference Photos
2008 NBA Draft lottery picks Photos
The Knicks' draft
What do you think of the Knicks picking Danilo Gallinari at No. 6?

I love it.

I hate it.

We shall see ...

View current results

Knicks Blog
Knicks fan forum
Mike D'Antoni in pictures Photos
Berger's NBA Blog
GIVE US YOUR BEST SHOT
Your Knicks Photos
Submit your photos and view pics taken by other fans.



And not an easy one. Fans at the draft booed loudly when the Knicks took Gallinari on Thursday with the No. 6 pick, and that was nothing compared to what he'll hear if he doesn't produce right away next season.

"I think Danilo and I and Mike understand that he's going to have to answer all those questions by how he plays, and understand that he's a young player like all the other rookies and it'll be gradually better," Knicks president Donnie Walsh said.

Walsh said he got a strong recommendation from former coach

Isiah Thomas after a European scouting trip, citing Gallinari's poise in crunch time at such a young age.

"Basically at the end of games, they gave him the ball and he made the plays," Walsh said. "For a guy that's that big, that's unusual."

Playing under D'Antoni should help Gallinari adjust to the NBA. D'Antoni was a star player and championship-winning coach in Italy, where he was once a teammate of Gallinari's father, Vittorio. On the phone after the pick, D'Antoni began the conversation in what was still pretty good Italian, Danilo Gallinari said.

"He played so many years in Europe and Italy, so he knows where I am from, where I come from, and he's probably the right guy to help me, the right coach to help me," Gallinari said.

Gallinari doesn't know D'Antoni well, but certainly knows of him. And when he showed up in Milan as a teenager and asked for No. 8, Gallinari was constantly reminded that "Mike D'Antoni is a legend in Milan."

"Some pressure about that," Gallinari said.

Unlike Kobe Bryant, who used to wear No. 8 in honor of D'Antoni, Gallinari's choice of the number had nothing to do with his new coach. He picked it for his birth date -- Aug. 8, 1988.

The Knicks believe Gallinari will be a good fit in D'Antoni's system because of his outside shooting ability. Listed at 6-foot-8, though Walsh said he's closer to 6-10, Gallinari shot 40 percent from 3-point range last season for Armani Jeans of Milan, averaging 17.5 points in Italian A-1 League play.

D'Antoni's offense depends on having shooters at every position, and Walsh recognized the Knicks didn't. Perhaps when he bulks up, Gallinari can be used as a perimeter-shooting power forward, the way Shawn Marion was under D'Antoni in Phoenix, where he developed into an All-Star.

Gallinari and Walsh both said a doctor told them the forward could grow another inch, perhaps making him as big a threat on the interior as he is from the outside.

"And he's a very, very good shooter," Walsh said. "So I think the combination of being able to take it to the goal and then shoot from the outside, for a guy that big I think is going to be a pretty lethal combination once he gets the strength and all that."

It's good to know Isiah still has a major influence on the franchise and we can all remember his last work on our high lottery pick Channing Frye--who he stated he would've taken at pick 1. Its great to know the brain trust that led us to 25 win season with the highest payroll in NBA history is still fully intact
RIP Crushalot😞
PhilinLA
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6/27/2008  7:59 PM
I don't know how you can conclude that he will have a major influence on the franchise.
http://amonthhoffundays.blogspot.com/ We got a ringer.
Pharzeone
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6/27/2008  8:00 PM
Walsh don't care if you don't like it. That's is his MO, there are guys he trust and Thomas is one of them. Same for Dolan too. Thomas is now underground, part of the shadow front office.
I don't like to play bad rookies , I like to play good rookies - Mike D'Antoni
BigC
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6/27/2008  8:00 PM
Just because Isiah said the kid can play that does not mean he told the Knicks to draft Gallinari over other picks. Also we all know that D'Antoni was the one that had the final say because he is the one that is:

1. Coaching the the team
2: Best friends with Gallinari's dad
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Pharzeone
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6/27/2008  8:02 PM
Posted by PhilinLA:

I don't know how you can conclude that he will have a major influence on the franchise.

Walsh hired Thomas and gave him the keys to the Pacer franchise basically. He recommended him to Dolan. Went on record to say he doesn't understand why the Knicks weren't better. Thomas wants Marbury gone, per Frank Isola last night, Thomas still has both Dolan and Walsh ears. Sector 7, the public does not need to know. Shh...
I don't like to play bad rookies , I like to play good rookies - Mike D'Antoni
GKFv2
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6/27/2008  8:02 PM
There is no question Isiah is still a cancer to the organization but I don't think he played a major role in this pick.
Thank you, Rick Brunson.
Pharzeone
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6/27/2008  8:03 PM
Posted by BigC:

Just because Isiah said the kid can play that does not mean he told the Knicks to draft Gallinari over other picks. Also we all know that D'Antoni was the one that had the final say because he is the one that is:

1. Coaching the the team
2: Best friends with Gallinari's dad

Mike D said no on MSG said he went with the scouting reports.
I don't like to play bad rookies , I like to play good rookies - Mike D'Antoni
Pharzeone
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6/27/2008  8:05 PM
Do you think it is coincident that the Knicks haven't hire a GM yet? You don't hear those reports anymore do you?
I don't like to play bad rookies , I like to play good rookies - Mike D'Antoni
TMS
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6/27/2008  8:08 PM
Isiah's role was to scout internationally & give his feedback... that's what he did... what the hell is the problem here? in the end this is Walsh's pick, not Isiah's, & that's how we're going to judge it... the GM has the final call on who they want to pick... i love how everyone is so damn quick to criticize any & every single move this franchise makes unless it meets EXACTLY to what they have planned out as if they're so much more qualified to make these types of decisions than the ones actually making them... it's freakin' comical is what it is.
After 7 years & 40K+ posts, banned by martin for calling Nalod a 'moron'. Awesome.
PhilinLA
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6/27/2008  8:08 PM
Kevin Wilson is the Knicks European scout who was pushing the pick.
http://amonthhoffundays.blogspot.com/ We got a ringer.
fishmike
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6/27/2008  8:08 PM
he was the BPA.
"winning is more fun... then fun is fun" -Thibs
GKFv2
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6/27/2008  8:10 PM
Furthermore, Isiah would have taken Eric Gordon.
Thank you, Rick Brunson.
BigC
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6/27/2008  8:10 PM
Posted by Pharzeone:
Posted by BigC:

Just because Isiah said the kid can play that does not mean he told the Knicks to draft Gallinari over other picks. Also we all know that D'Antoni was the one that had the final say because he is the one that is:

1. Coaching the the team
2: Best friends with Gallinari's dad

Just because someone said that TV does not mean something happened that way behind closed doors. Do you really think the Knicks would have gone after Gallinari with the number 6th pick if D'Antoni was not the coach?

Mike D said no on MSG said he went with the scouting reports.



[Edited by - BigC on 06-27-2008 8:11 PM]
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PhilinLA
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6/27/2008  8:12 PM
Posted by GKFv2:

Furthermore, Isiah would have taken Eric Gordon.

he would have taken Randolph: skinny, run and jump guy who can't play.
http://amonthhoffundays.blogspot.com/ We got a ringer.
Pharzeone
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6/27/2008  8:17 PM
Posted by BigC:
Posted by Pharzeone:
Posted by BigC:

Just because Isiah said the kid can play that does not mean he told the Knicks to draft Gallinari over other picks. Also we all know that D'Antoni was the one that had the final say because he is the one that is:

1. Coaching the the team
2: Best friends with Gallinari's dad

Just because someone said that TV does not mean something happened that way behind closed doors. Do you really think the Knicks would have gone after Gallinari with the number 6th pick if D'Antoni was not the coach?

Mike D said no on MSG said he went with the scouting reports.



[Edited by - BigC on 06-27-2008 8:11 PM]

I believe that a president was hired a month and a half ago. A coach was hired about a month ago. The president has a relationship with employee, you guys are crazy not to think he wouldn't pick his mind. Like TMS said it is still Walsh's call. Many people believe that Walsh wants nothing to do with Thomas and his input. I disagree.
I don't like to play bad rookies , I like to play good rookies - Mike D'Antoni
BigC
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6/27/2008  8:26 PM
Posted by Pharzeone:
Posted by BigC:
Posted by Pharzeone:
Posted by BigC:

Just because Isiah said the kid can play that does not mean he told the Knicks to draft Gallinari over other picks. Also we all know that D'Antoni was the one that had the final say because he is the one that is:

1. Coaching the the team
2: Best friends with Gallinari's dad

Just because someone said that TV does not mean something happened that way behind closed doors. Do you really think the Knicks would have gone after Gallinari with the number 6th pick if D'Antoni was not the coach?

Mike D said no on MSG said he went with the scouting reports.



[Edited by - BigC on 06-27-2008 8:11 PM]

I believe that a president was hired a month and a half ago. A coach was hired about a month ago. The president has a relationship with employee, you guys are crazy not to think he wouldn't pick his mind. Like TMS said it is still Walsh's call. Many people believe that Walsh wants nothing to do with Thomas and his input. I disagree.
I think all three are working together, however I do think Mike D'Antoni had major influence in this pick. Not to say that is a bad thing because if you want something to work everyone has to be on the same page. Isiah's role was probably to back up what D'Antoni was saying all along.

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CrushAlot
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6/27/2008  8:27 PM
D'Antoni wanted a guard. It was widely reported that he did not want to pick Gallinari. I think he accepted Walsh's decision and put a good spin on it. Walsh was hired to fix the franchise but he also was chosen because he would not fire Isiah and would allow him to still have a role in the organization. Isiah does have a role. I think he had alot to do with the D'Antoni hire also. Dolan is a big Isiah guy. Isiah has his ear. I think Isiah still has a prominent role in the organization he is just behind the scenes. What I am worried about is when Walsh becomes semi retired and his boys Mike and Isiah take over the family business.
I'm tired,I'm tired, I'm so tired right now......Kristaps Porzingis 1/3/18
TMS
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6/27/2008  8:29 PM
maybe the Knicks are working on other means to get Walsh that PG... the season hasn't started yet & there are still rumors flying all over the place... we just gotta let things play out.
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CrushAlot
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6/27/2008  8:37 PM
I am hoping for Hinrich and I also like Felton. I really want Isiah gone but at least there is a buffer that can control his tremendous ego and mindless moves.
I'm tired,I'm tired, I'm so tired right now......Kristaps Porzingis 1/3/18
Isiah did recomend Gallinari

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