fishmike wrote:Funny how the guys that didnt like the trade preached patience in letting our good young players grow, that these things take time. Meanwhile guys like you ensured the rest of us that Gallo, Chandler, AR, etc would never be the caliber player Melo was, bla bla bla.
If y'al are so patient, why pass judgement on what represents 18.29 percent of a season? And do so even before the percentage looks so large? I still maintain Gallo, Chandler, AR, etc. will never be as as good as Melo, and Donnie was hired on April 2, 2008. Every player the Knicks gave up, with the exception of Chandler, was acquired within a year or two. There is little reason to think that the supporting cast won't be replenished within a reasonable time.
There are two problems. One Melo isnt as good as some of you thought. A lot of people around here locked him in as top 10 player or even a top 5 player and expected the type of impact when KG went to Boston. Melo is a not an MVP caliber player and is not an elite rebounder, defender or playmaker.
I would compare Melo to Paul Pierce. That said, for that acquisition to have a similar effect as KG, we'd have to get a Ray Allen. Considering Walsh has all along said that the "2010 plan" isn't the 2010 plan, but the 2011, and 2012 plan, the logic tends to be that this wasn't the final acquisition.
While Bill Simmons is not the holy grail of basketball writers, he does have a best selling basketball encyclopedia. This was from his initial reaction of the trade:
One of the strangest subplots this week: Everyone rushing to pick Carmelo's game apart, especially people who rely on advanced metrics and ended up getting caught up in small-picture stuff. Carmelo has one elite skill (he rebounds extremely well for a small forward) and one transcendent skill (he's as good as anyone in the league at scoring and/or getting to the line, especially in crunch time). You can absolutely, positively, unquestionably win a championship if Carmelo Anthony is your creator at the end of a basketball game. The Knicks didn't have anyone like that. Few teams do.Now throw this in: He's only 26.
Now throw this in: Ten guys started the 2011 All-Star Game. In a 30-team league, the Knicks suddenly have two of them.
Now throw this in: The other players know. They know who's good. They know who's worth a damn. They know who they'd go to war with. So you can't discount (A) how well Carmelo played on the 2008 Olympic team; (B) how much the other guys respected him; and (C) how the key guys on that team were Kobe, LeBron, Wade and Carmelo. It can't be forgotten. It just can't. Neither can the fact that he nearly carried a limited Nuggets team to the Finals two years ago.
Now throw this in: If there was ever a player who could be ignited by a great basketball city and a consistently fantastic crowd, it's Carmelo Anthony. He's been stuck in a relatively icy cruise control for two solid years, playing in a city he didn't totally love, being professional about it, trying hard every game ... and yet, there was something detached about him. No longer. I hate how he weaseled his way to the Knicks and pissed on Denver fans, but that's over. Let's look at this thing objectively: He's going to kill it with the Knicks. I'd bet anything. They haven't had someone like this since Bernard King, which is funny because I always thought Melo was Bernard 2.0. Playing in New York isn't for everyone, but in this case, it will be the best thing that ever happened to Carmelo Anthony.
I keep hearing that you can't win a title with Melo and Amare. Agreed. But you can win the title with Carmelo, Amare and Chris Paul (or Dwight Howard, or Deron Williams). In the short term, you can make some noise, rock the building and make Knicks fans forget about the 10 excruciating years they just endured. And you can scare the living hell out of the fans from the other Eastern contenders. Believe me, as a Celtics fan, I want no part of the Knicks this spring for one reason: You never want to play a playoff series in which the other team has the best guy. There's a decent chance Carmelo could just go off 1984 Bernard-style in Round 1 or Round 2. I'm crapping my pants just thinking about it. Over everything else, THAT is why they had to make this trade. A week ago, the Knicks were a .500 team. Now, they matter. And if you're throwing stats at me, I'll counter with this one: 15 for 15. Thank you and please drive through.
I made a comparison and I will stick too it. Melo is a pre injury Arenas. He's a monster scorer who can drop 40 on you at anytime and take over games. He's got big holes though.
Sure, he's got holes. But he was a key cog in an NCAA championship team and for the gold medal US Olympic Redeem team. Not buying it at all.
And dont poo poo the guys that left. Before the trade rumors were bothering them they were playing very well and getting better. There was no reason not to resign Chandler to a modest contract. He wanted to be here. We had a young, big skilled and deep roster and a star who get big buckets and carry the youths when needed:
PG Felton, Douglas
SG Fields, Walker
SF Gallo, Chandler
PF Amare, Williams
C Mosgov, TuriafThats a deep team everyone but Amare/Felton 25 years old or younger. Thats a good start. We scrapped it to be a win now team built around 2 high scoring forwards who dont too much else and we have taken quite a step backward.
No one is poo-pooing those guys. I just believe those players will be easier to replace than Melo. Also, there has been more minutes available for Douglas and Shawne Williams, both of whom have looked great. (Not to mention the Knicks held onto Fields, who I think is the best player of the bunch.)
What cracks me up is guys like me who believed in our young players preached patience. The pro Melo at all costs guys are now saying the exact same things.. its going to take a year, maybe more to build up the roster around these guys. Its pretty funny.
I don't think anyone discounted "patience." I know I certainly wasn't. The argument then is the same that it is now: the future is brightest with a Melo and Amar'e foundation. This team has sucked for so long. One of five teams that hasn't won 50 games in the last 11 years. We wouldn't have won 50 this season with either roster.
This could be the linchpin right back to the way things were before Walsh. Overpaid over hyped players that point fingers and lose a lot of games.
Except the payroll is in order, and significant upgrades look on the horizon. If Paul/DWill/Howard is added to the mix, this team is positioned to war with Miami for the next five years while Boston continues to age.