newyorknewyork wrote:Chandler wrote:newyorknewyork wrote:Chandler wrote:HofstraBBall wrote:newyorknewyork wrote:Chandler wrote:nyknickzingis wrote:Put KP 1.5 year after an ACL injury just coming back, on the Knicks roster, and he is be far the best player. By miles. However they won't make the playoffs. So it was good they moved him, they were going nowhere with him, and KP knew that as well. KP is not Lebron, Kawhi, Giannis level to carry a team by himself to the playoffs. The main thing that messed it all up in hindsight is how they dealt him. Without bidding, without any real wheeling and dealing. We got very little for a 23 year old all-star big man, who is viewed as a special talent because of his ability to play inside/out and defend.
I agree except feel free hey should have tried to fix the situation and keep him
Knicks were in a pickle w the cap and wanted him to trust he’d get paid
Then fizzdLe starts flapping his gums to suggest he was more injured than he was
If KP was on the roster, they allocate the money to other needs like PG. Knicks would be a playoff team if they were to secure DLo or Brogden to go along with Barrett in the draft. Would have a healthy amount of young upcoming 2-way players. Foundation would have been rock solid with Mitch-KP-Barrett frontcourt and Brogden or DLo at G.
Then all of a sudden the FO looks competent for KP. KP created this set back for the org. Made a calculated power play by waiting a week until the deadline to force them to trade him.
The Knicks made the decision to trade Kristaps Porzingis last week, ending a three-and-a-half year run that featured a number of highs and lows. Porzingis, the team’s 2015 lottery pick, began to express his displeasure with the team and its losing ways, culminating in a meeting involving him, his agent, and Knicks management last Thursday.
“We started to get a feel that everything wasn’t going as well as we would’ve liked with Kristaps,” Knicks president Steve Mills said in an interview on MSG. “So Scott [Perry] and I spent a lot of time saying, ‘Okay. We need to be prepared if things aren’t going well or if he doesn’t want to be here, or that we need to be ready.'”
“We felt the 7th was really important because if we let this go beyond the 7th, the leverage completely shifted. We would not have control of the situation,” Mills said, as relayed by Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic. “We weren’t sure what Kristaps was going to come in and tell us. We didn’t know if he’d come in and tell us he wanted to be traded or he may have come in and said he wanted to do a one-year contract with the player option, which would then have made him untradeable and he would have had all the leverage. We just felt we needed to have some certainty by the 7th.
“When they came in to meet with us, they made it clear to us — it was a meeting that they requested — they made it clear to us that he did not want to play for the Knicks, that he was not going to re-sign with us as a free agent. And we in one way thanked him for the clarity because it gave us the information we needed to know.”
KP being upset about the losing ways while he missed the last like 80 games. While shooting 41% from the field and grabbing 6.5 rebs the 26 games before his injury due to fatigue to assist in the losing. This is irrational to me. Leads to believe that him wanting out was due to ulterior motives. Used the "losing ways" as his cop out.
Good post. Many good points. However, and this is a real question, how do you come up with the conclusion that KP wanting out was "Irrational'? I mean us fans know what has been going on here for MANY years even more than KP ever did. And I don't think that there is ONE of us that would say that if they were an NBA talent they would see it as "Rational" decision to want to be a part of this organization? That is the reality. Don't know why so many act like its not. We suck, have sucked for many years. The FO is a joke, has been for many years. At least I KNOW THIS. Still watch every game and pay a lot of money for seats. But I KNOW THIS the reality.
Agree. What was irrational was expecting KP to have infinite patience. The team was going backwards last year. Yes tanking is one thing. Playing YMCA ball is another
They also wanted him to trust them that he would be taken care of financially. That would have worked if he trusted them intrinsically, but (a) they started to say one thing and do another (e.g., where about two way players who pass the ball) and (b) Fizz started saying stupid things about his health.
Add in the lack of suck-up and he wanted out. We were willing to give JR's brother a roster spot, but our european unicorn can't get an audience with the owner?!?
The team got what it deserved. wHat I don't understand is why the Knicks fanbase has be tormented worse than Job (from the bible)
You ignore KPs contributions to losing. If KP stay healthy and plays like that allstar that we claim he is for more than 3 months of the season. Then Knicks are making moves to be a contender instead of tanking.
I don't think I'm ignoring it. He was too skinny and weak and faded. Settler for too many outside shots.
All fixable with a good training and coaching staff. He was far from perfect; so is Luca, Donovan Mitchell, KAT, Ben
On balance he had a reasonable chance of being an elite player, top 5 maybe. Certainly an impact player. You need to nurture those guys (not piss them off) and kiss ass a little too
It's a fact of life that many of the most successful people on the planet have huge insecurities. It's those insecurities that drive them to get an A in class instead of an A; it's those insecurities that drive them to wake up earlier to practice more or get a gym session in. Some of them can even be a bit thin skinned to criticism, e.g., over-react seemingly obvious to their own success.
Any decent team (i.e., need not be genius) would have appreciated that KP could be a generational talent and no less than an impact player and would have acted accordingly. And no, sending Fizzdale to go eat some Galumpki is not enough
From hearing Perry and Mills interview at the time of the trade. They stated that they tried but couldn't make KP happy which pushed them to believe that he was going to force his way out eventually. He then solidified their fears with the meeting (that they could have had in Jan and worked on a resolution. Rather than him postponing the meeting until calling for one a week before the dealine in a calculated power play).
KP is viewed as more valuable a commodity than the Knicks FO so reguardless if he is right or wrong some will side with him. Im just going by the right or wrong aspect reguardless of value or talent level. And KP did the Knicks dirty.
The other tidbit (i forget who reported) is that KP asked to speak to Dolan and they said no and traded him. This may have been with some green light from Dolan to do as they thought best
Now, assuming story is true, why would they deny that request? I'm in the camp (and I'll admit i have a bias against this FO [though they don't suck at drafting]) that they knew KP was going to give them a Lebron like ultimatum. Dump the GM/Coach or me type thing.
Why wouldn't they let him speak to Dolan who could have simply said, I'm running with/supporting whatever Mills/Perry say. He could have even said it in a nice way, or a dick way. WHy not let them meet
AT the moment, most of the news is leaked from the FO -- not saying Mills or Perry directly -- but all this negative stuff is classic politics. We have heard very little in the other direction other than Stay WOke. It could be the case that the FO is blameless -thus no leaks, or that KP has decided to move on -- my guess.
It's excruciatingly frustrating we couldn't make that work out