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Times: Bad Knees and Worse Contract, but a Gentleman Will Return
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Knight
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8/16/2005  12:18 AM
http://nytimes.com/2005/08/16/sports/basketball/16araton.html

By HARVEY ARATON
Published: August 16, 2005

WITH a foot already out of Madison Square Garden in June 2001, Dave Checketts gave James L. Dolan, the man who had given him the boot from the presidency of the building, some parting advice on how to invest more of the Cablevision family fortune.

"I told him, 'Whatever you do, sign this guy,' " Checketts said.

"This guy" was Allan Houston, the Knicks' leading scorer coming out of the 2000-1 season, when they were still a playoff team, albeit a first-round loser going nowhere but south in the Eastern Conference standings. In a telephone interview, Checketts recalled applying the house rule grasped the hard way early on during his Garden tenure: never, ever get outbid for your own free-agent player, even if it's possible you're bidding against yourself.

"I learned that when we lost Xavier McDaniel to the Celtics back in the early 90's," Checketts said. "He had been awful during the regular season, then played great in the playoffs. But he was getting older, and when the Celtics offered him a four-year deal, I thought I was doing the responsible thing for the franchise by letting him go. What happened? I get a call from Stanley Jaffe, who was running the Garden at the time, screaming at me, that 'I don't want you to ever lose a player over money!' "

Dolan, who surely didn't need any introduction to his checkbook, soon after speaking to Checketts signed off on the now infamous six-year, $100.4 million contract for Houston, an error of over-commission that, in time, has come to symbolize, wrongly, the Knicks' 21st century slide from significance.

However much he has been compensated, however many games for which his arthritic knee has made him a spectator these last two seasons, making Allan Houston the face of failure falls somewhere in the range of simplistic and absurd.

To begin with, Houston did not extort his $100 million from the Knicks, nor did he resort to general jerk tactics formerly practiced here by Latrell Sprewell and currently in Philadelphia by the Eagles' Terrell Owens. Second, believing that paying Houston less - for argument's sake, $5 million less a season, or $70 million over all - would have unclogged the arteries of a franchise gorging on fast food is to ignore the crazy money spent on beef patties like Clarence Weatherspoon, among others.


Face it, the Knicks didn't wind up tens of millions over the salary cap, and a lousy team to boot, because of Houston, who not long ago was still a very good - if never great - shooting guard. When it was time yesterday to waive a player under the N.B.A.'s one-time amnesty agreement for luxury-tax relief, the Knicks had a whole menu of bum contracts to consider. Jettisoning the spare power forward Jerome Williams rather than Houston will save Dolan less money, but, as Isiah Thomas said yesterday in a conference call with reporters, the decision was easy when "he removed the financial burden."

What was Dolan thinking? Probably that he didn't want to risk Houston's knee miraculously healing and then having to pay him $40 million over the next two seasons to drain playoff jumpers elsewhere. It is said that Dolan has a close relationship with Houston, though he was reportedly chummy with Isiah's predecessor, Scott Layden, who was fired two Decembers ago, just in time for Christmas.

"In the years since I left, Jim has told me, 'You were right when you said we had to sign Houston,' " Checketts said. "He's always said, 'I love the guy.' "

Whatever Houston's failings, at least he has been a gentleman, an asset in the community, except for the 2001 fiasco in which he was linked to anti-Semitic remarks in a Bible study class with the insufferably self-righteous Charlie Ward.

More important, from where Dolan sits, at least Houston isn't Sprewell, the chronic troublemaker and profane Dolan-baiter. After Dolan banished Sprewell to Minnesota in 2003, the anti-Allan returned to the Garden to curse out Dolan in the crudest of on-court exhibitions, making Dolan, for once, appear sympathetic and aggrieved.

Not to devalue what Sprewell gave the Knicks, but it always struck me as a sign of the sport's apocalypse that he was celebrated like a rock star and mourned when he left.

Seems to me it was Houston, not Sprewell, who saved the last spring of glory, 1999, and Jeff Van Gundy's job with his first-round, series-winning buzzer-beater in Miami and who torched Reggie Miller and Indiana in the conference finals. Seems to me it was Houston who led the team in scoring the next four years, while Sprewell, chronically tardy and tart, and the Knicks melted down around him.

"I always said from the time we signed Allan as a free agent in '97 that he was the guy teams were afraid of," Checketts said, "the guy they had to really guard, and because of what a stable team guy he was, the reason in my mind that Sprewell could stay in New York as long as he did."


Is it likely that Houston, at 34, will ever be that player again? Doubtful. Is the slim chance that he will return as the end-game marksman and senior statesman on a frightfully young and unaccomplished Knicks roster worth Isiah and Larry Brown keeping him on the roster?

Yes, of course, as long as the Garden's corporate daddy, as always, is paying.


[Edited by - Knight on 08-16-2005 12:30 AM]
"He only went to Georgia Tech for one year, and that's an engineering school." -LB
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mintyfreshness33
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8/16/2005  12:45 AM
nice read, thnx knight
TMS
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8/16/2005  12:47 AM
good read...Houston's always been a class act...he's been hated on & had alot of venom directed his way throughout the years & he's always taken it in stride...the contract he signed was offered to him...he didn't force the Knicks' hand in offering him the deal...anyone who thinks they wouldn't have signed the same deal is kidding themselves...i'm glad Dolan's giving Allan a chance to go out on his own terms...let's hope Allan honors his part & doesn't try to hold on for the duration if he knows he can't come back at the level he wants to.
After 7 years & 40K+ posts, banned by martin for calling Nalod a 'moron'. Awesome.
oohah
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8/16/2005  2:13 AM
This Araton article was a very enjoyable read for me. The bolded points are right on.

I'm glad that Houston is coming back. I've argued with others on this forum and others who use terms like "liar", "thief", and "stealing" in describing Houston. Others seem to have been pissed that Houston wasn't at the level of MJ and he still had the gall to accept a huge contract!

The fact is that when it comes to the skill of shooting he has been at the very top of the NBA for most of his career. And guess what? He is a shooting guard!

Last year it was painful to watch Allan run up and down the court. I knew he wasnt healed from the first moment he took the court. I am suffering from the exact same problem (Just had my 3rd knee surgery last week.). But in general, I still preferred watching him play than Jamal Crawford, who is very entertaining until you realize he is the most inefficient player you have ever seen.

P.S. If Allan's problem is anything close to mine, and I think it is probably worse, I don't see how he can play regularly, let alone become a regular contributing player again. I hope I am wrong. IMO, he should have gotten the next surgery, just skipped Norman Scott doing it.

oohah


Good luck Mike D'Antoni, 'cause you ain't never seen nothing like this before!
firefly
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8/16/2005  6:00 AM
I never heard about this whole Anti-Semitism thing before. I used to like Charlie Ward as a Knick. Now he's just another numbskull to me. As for Houston, he was never asked to apologize for what he said, and later said “Being a Christian and a professional athlete many times requires us to take the less popular road, the road that people sometimes don’t understand.” Houston wrote on his website, “But I find joy and strength in knowing that I am fulfilling God’s purpose for my life.”

If thats remorse, I'm a couch.

Shame. He used to be my favourite Knick. Not any more.

But thats not what this thread is about. I liked the article, and if Houston is anywhere near healthy, he should have a small role to play. But think about this. If Allan is healthy, what in the world do we do with Q-Rich?

[Edited by - firefly on 08-16-2005 06:03 AM]
Some men see things as they are and ask why. I dream things that never were and ask why not?
joec32033
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8/16/2005  6:16 AM
I think if Allan is Healthy we have problem, albeit, not a big one...

Steph/Nate
Q/Craw/Allan
Q/Ariza

On a side note, with his decreased speed and athleticism, do you think Allan should be converted to a 3?
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firefly
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8/16/2005  6:51 AM
Posted by joec32033:

I think if Allan is Healthy we have problem, albeit, not a big one...

Steph/Nate
Q/Craw/Allan
Q/Ariza

On a side note, with his decreased speed and athleticism, do you think Allan should be converted to a 3?


Don't think it would work. He'd get burned by the fast three's and beaten down by the strong ones.
Some men see things as they are and ask why. I dream things that never were and ask why not?
Silverfuel
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8/16/2005  6:58 AM
Posted by oohah:

The fact is that when it comes to the skill of shooting he has been at the very top of the NBA for most of his career. And guess what? He is a shooting guard!
Thanks for pointing that out oohah. Its fine, except that just like the game of basketball has evolved, so has the position of a shooting guard. Shooting is an important skill but so is driving into the paint, passing, defending and rebounding. Walt Frazier, Monroe did all of those and guess what, Allan Houston didnt. Today, Redd, Jason Richardson, Stephen Jackson etc all do those. Give it a break guy, dont make it sound like you no better than the guys that dont like Houston.

You cannot defend the fact that he never did anything other than shoot the ball. No one can defend him on that cause he never did anything other than shoot the ball. Even the biggest H20 fans agree, Houston was 1-dimensional and that hurt the team a lot.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
fishmike
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8/16/2005  7:36 AM
give me a break
"winning is more fun... then fun is fun" -Thibs
Silverfuel
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8/16/2005  8:07 AM
Posted by fishmike:

give me a break
You want to say something to me, say it. If ur post was not directed towards me, my bad. This is not referencing you but if anyone thinks I should stop, then remember your routine is getting old too. I dont start flamming, I just reply.
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fishmike
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8/16/2005  8:22 AM
ok, silverfuel... give me a break
"winning is more fun... then fun is fun" -Thibs
Silverfuel
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8/16/2005  8:57 AM
Posted by fishmike:

ok, silverfuel... give me a break
What for? I am not taking potshots. I never get on people that want to say they are big Houston fans and they really like Houston etc. I'm actually glad that they are Knick fans for whatever reason, but I dont like Houston. If someone says, "houston haters", they are refering to me so I want to respond. If I get personal, you can stop me.
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Nalod
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8/16/2005  9:40 AM
When a team is not going well its important for the fans to attempt to put a face on the failure. We tend to hit on the guy making the most money and must always put a face, or demonize some one for the failure.

Allan has been a great player, and the team could have many times thrown him under the bus but the reality is not much would have changed.

The team eventually had to throw Pootie Spree under for his numerous antics, but they really kept much of it in house and if anything management took the heat, not the players.

If anyone did more harm to the team in the last few years it was Ewings DEMAND to be traded. even in 1996 he applied his leverage to the max and preserved is place on the team and his money. Hey, its just business, and his right, and we followed suit, but it must be recognized.

Demonizing Allan or pointing out his lack of skills in other areas becomes an exausting read. Many of the players mentioned lack many of the skills or tangable qualities that Allan possessed!

Defending him point for point is old news. The deal is done.

And if anything Isiah needs to keep his mouth shut learn how to handle such matters as ridding players. His handling of Shandon was shamful and very selfish. Im not saying he had a place on the team, but! His fireing of Chaney was awful, and it seemed the Lenny hiring was a knee jerk reaction.

In the end, Allans career will be over soon and both he and the knicks will have handled it the right waY!

Even Isiah is learning and I think he will do better going forward!
Silverfuel
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8/16/2005  10:41 AM
Posted by Nalod:

When a team is not going well its important for the fans to attempt to put a face on the failure. We tend to hit on the guy making the most money and must always put a face, or demonize some one for the failure.
No true Nalod. When is team is doing poorly, fans tend to blame the the best player on the team. The last 2 years the fans blamed Steph, TT or Craw for the team doing poorly.

Pointing out houston's lack of skill serves the purpose when someone disagrees he lacks skill. Its exhaustive but thats what fans do. You feel strongly about something, you cannot just ignore it. I felt strongly about Layden being a bad GM and mentioned it over and over. People still mention it. Dolan is a bad owner and people still mention that. Its exhaustive. Every post on every thread is overdone. We are NY fans, not one is bullet proof. You give him a pass, I dont and that what keeps forums going.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
oohah
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8/16/2005  6:26 PM
Hi Silverfuel!
Thanks for pointing that out oohah. Its fine, except that just like the game of basketball has evolved, so has the position of a shooting guard. Shooting is an important skill but so is driving into the paint, passing, defending and rebounding.

The skills you mentioned are very important, and I am pretty sure they were important back in the 50's and before. I don't think we can attribute the usefulness of these skills to "evolution".

However, I stick to my guns that the skill of shooting is the most important skill by a good margin at the position of shooting guard.

Look at Jamal Crawford, is he the all-around MVP caliber player you think Allan should have been? No, in fact watching him play makes many wish for a player just like Allan Houston. An eficient shooter.

Let me ask you this: Don't you think that if Houston and Crawford could have switched places last year the Knicks would have been a better team?

Look at the fantasy backcourt of Marbury/Houston. That is an EXCELLENT backcourt. Period.
Walt Frazier, Monroe did all of those and guess what, Allan Houston didnt.

I think it is folly to compare Houston to Frazier, one of the NBA's all time greats. Unfortuantely, I haven't seen Monroe play enough to compare Houston's game and his based on personal observation. You?

Guess what? Monroe did not win a championship until he was paired with Frazier. The rest of team was pretty damn good too.

Now, just for fun, let's compare Monroe and Houston:

Houston
Career 839 727 33.7 .444 .402 .863 .4 2.5 2.9 2.4 .67 .10 2.10 2.50 17.3

Monroe
Career 926 .464 .807 2,796 3.0 3,594 3.9 473 121 17,454 18.8

I would happily agree that Monroe was a better player solely based on his legend, but statistically he hardly blows Houston out of the water. I don't beleieve you or most of us has watched Monroe play enough to talk about his defense, but his rep was based solely on his offensive game.
Today, Redd, Jason Richardson, Stephen Jackson etc all do those. Give it a break guy, dont make it sound like you no better than the guys that dont like Houston.

I don't think I know better than (most) people who don't like Houston. It has nothing to do with 'liking' anyone. In your case, you seem to have a personal beef with him that I can't put my finger on. You won't even concede that he was a GOOD player! You also forget that when the franchise left him out there by himself he never complained, he just played until he could not play anymore. But you don't give him credit for heart or good sportmanship. He also hit many clutch shots, not just the game winner against Miami. But let's not give him credit for that either. Who needs to give it a break?

The fact is Houston was a very good player in his time if for no other reason than his shooting.
Do you remember the days before Allan Houston? All we Knick's fans ever talked about is how we needed a shooter. Houston was that shooter. He filled that need beautifully. That was his job. He was never brought in to be "The Man" or a Clyde Drexler clone. He was brought in to take pressure off of Ewing because nobody on the damn team could make a jumper consistently.

All those players you named are pretty good, let me talk about them one at a time:

Stephen Jackson? If you think he is better than the Allan Houston that played for the Knicks then I guess that is your opinion and maybe I do know better after all. To me he is a journeyman. But he has played on winning teams.

Stephen Jackson:
Career 311 226 28.6 .421 .336 .779 .8 2.9 3.7 2.2 1.39 .20 2.17 2.50 13.1

Jason Richardson, an exciting player for sure, and a big part of terrible teams his career thus far.

Jason Richardson:
Career 312 307 35.2 .431 .333 .703 1.6 3.8 5.3 3.2 1.24 .40 2.26 2.40 17.5

Michael Redd, a player with a top-heavy career because he had to wait his turn. Really he is very similar to Allan Houston: If you take away his shooting, there isn't much left. His numbers are a touch better, except for the wins. Let's see how things go for him. He certainly has not been successful on a team level yet.

Michael Redd
Career 312 179 30.9 .452 .394 .844 1.2 3.0 4.2 1.8 .92 .10 1.22 1.70 17.7
You cannot defend the fact that he never did anything other than shoot the ball. No one can defend him on that cause he never did anything other than shoot the ball.

I can defend that fact because it is nonsense. I would agree that Houston's skills outside of shooting were average to below average, but he did what he could. He did do what he was supposed to do though: shoot well. Apparently putting the ball in the basket falls low on your chart of important things to do in basketball, because you still won't admit that he was one of the best shooters in the game. There are 5 guys on the floor and Houston pulled his weight and then some. He does not have to be the best rebounder, passer, and defensive player to be a good player. Just about any player who does anything among the best in the NBA is good.
Even the biggest H20 fans agree, Houston was 1-dimensional and that hurt the team a lot.

The problem here is that you are establishing falsehoods as givens. It has nothing to do with being a fan or not. Once again, it was not his job to do EVERYTHING the best on the Knicks. His one dimension, IMO, is the most important dimension in the game of basketball: putting the ball in the basket, because that is when you get 2 points. His being one dimensional did not hurt the team alot, his one dimension helped the team alot!

This is not about who likes or dislikes Houston. Anyone can feel the way they want to. But when you try to make the case that Houston was not good it becomes silly. Even you admit elsewhere on this thread that he was the Knicks' best player! Other times you have described him in derogatory
ways that have nothing to do with basketball, so I really don't think your dislike has anything to do with his game. Outside of the stupid semi-anti-semitic remarks which really weren't, I see his personal behavior record as better than most players.

The quote I referred to:
No true Nalod. When is team is doing poorly, fans tend to blame the the best player on the team. The last 2 years the fans blamed Steph, TT or Craw for the team doing poorly.

If someone says, "houston haters", they are refering to me so I want to respond. If I get personal, you can stop me.

You are hardly the only "Houston hater" around, though I hope you don't consider yourself a Houston hater, because I define a hater as: "Someone who is jealous or envious of another's success because they are not satisfied with their own life." I really don't think that is you. I think your reason for disliking him is because he was only an excellent shooter.
When a team is not going well its important for the fans to attempt to put a face on the failure. We tend to hit on the guy making the most money and must always put a face, or demonize some one for the failure.

Yup.
Allan has been a great player, and the team could have many times thrown him under the bus but the reality is not much would have changed.

Exactly. Maybe nothng would have changed.
If anyone did more harm to the team in the last few years it was Ewings DEMAND to be traded. even in 1996 he applied his leverage to the max and preserved is place on the team and his money. Hey, its just business, and his right, and we followed suit, but it must be recognized.

Ewing should not have demanded to be traded but he was too proud. But I would have to say the mistake was the Knick's. They didn't have to acquiesce to his demands.
Demonizing Allan or pointing out his lack of skills in other areas becomes an exausting read. Many of the players mentioned lack many of the skills or tangable qualities that Allan possessed!

yes... YES!
Defending him point for point is old news. The deal is done.

True, but I am laid up from a knee operation so I have time to waste.
And if anything Isiah needs to keep his mouth shut learn how to handle such matters as ridding players. His handling of Shandon was shamful and very selfish. Im not saying he had a place on the team, but! His fireing of Chaney was awful, and it seemed the Lenny hiring was a knee jerk reaction.

I agree. When has Isiah been a nice guy? Never.
In the end, Allans career will be over soon and both he and the knicks will have handled it the right waY!

Let us hope.
Pointing out houston's lack of skill serves the purpose when someone disagrees he lacks skill. Its exhaustive but thats what fans do. You feel strongly about something, you cannot just ignore it. I felt strongly about Layden being a bad GM and mentioned it over and over. People still mention it. Dolan is a bad owner and people still mention that. Its exhaustive. Every post on every thread is overdone. We are NY fans, not one is bullet proof. You give him a pass, I dont and that what keeps forums going.

We finally agree.

oohah
Good luck Mike D'Antoni, 'cause you ain't never seen nothing like this before!
OldFan
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8/16/2005  6:35 PM
Posted by Silverfuel:
Posted by oohah:

The fact is that when it comes to the skill of shooting he has been at the very top of the NBA for most of his career. And guess what? He is a shooting guard!
Thanks for pointing that out oohah. Its fine, except that just like the game of basketball has evolved, so has the position of a shooting guard. Shooting is an important skill but so is driving into the paint, passing, defending and rebounding. Walt Frazier, Monroe did all of those and guess what, Allan Houston didnt. Today, Redd, Jason Richardson, Stephen Jackson etc all do those. Give it a break guy, dont make it sound like you no better than the guys that dont like Houston.

You cannot defend the fact that he never did anything other than shoot the ball. No one can defend him on that cause he never did anything other than shoot the ball. Even the biggest H20 fans agree, Houston was 1-dimensional and that hurt the team a lot.

A qote from a recent statistical analyses of players defense on the site 82games.com:

Michael Redd is in a league of his own on defense at the shooting guard position. The difference between Redd and the next lowest-rated shooting guard is three times as large as the difference between the 2nd and 10th lowest-rated shooting guards. And Redd has been very consistently ineffective over the years. Again, defense may win championships, but it does not pay the bills.
oohah
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8/16/2005  6:38 PM
A qote from a recent statistical analyses of players defense on the site 82games.com:

Michael Redd is in a league of his own on defense at the shooting guard position. The difference between Redd and the next lowest-rated shooting guard is three times as large as the difference between the 2nd and 10th lowest-rated shooting guards. And Redd has been very consistently ineffective over the years. Again, defense may win championships, but it does not pay the bills.

I am not sure if I understand...was he analyzed as a good or bad defensive player? I think bad but you threw me with the first line.

oohah

Good luck Mike D'Antoni, 'cause you ain't never seen nothing like this before!
Silverfuel
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8/16/2005  6:53 PM
seems like you spent a long time putting the post above together. I have no intention of breaking any post down the way you did so let me reply to what I disagree with the most. Houston stagnated the offense with his jumpshot after 1999 where as 99 and before he drove a little and passed too. You are satisfied with him jumpshooting and there is nothing I can say against that. I never argued that he couldnt jumpshoot with the best of them.

Let me ask you this: Don't you think that if Houston and Crawford could have switched places last year the Knicks would have been a better team?
I think it is folly to compare Houston to Crawford (.398), probably the worst starting SG the Knicks have had in 15 years.

There are 5 guys on the floor and Houston pulled his weight and then some. He does not have to be the best rebounder, passer, and defensive player to be a good player. Just about any player who does anything among the best in the NBA is good.
He was a good player.

His one dimension, IMO, is the most important dimension in the game of basketball: putting the ball in the basket, because that is when you get 2 points.
Except, that 1-dimension was: always fake a drive, fake another drive, pump fake, shoot and miss 56% of times. If the offense ran around Spree, that Knicks team would win more games.

Anyone can feel the way they want to. But when you try to make the case that Houston was not good it becomes silly.
I never said he wanst a good player. I argue that he wasnt a "great" player and I stick to that.

Other times you have described him in derogatory
ways that have nothing to do with basketball, so I really don't think your dislike has anything to do with his game.
Example? Honestly, I have no problem with Allan Houston himself, just the way he stopped doing a lot of things after 1999. He became too 1-dimensional.
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OldFan
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8/16/2005  7:08 PM
Posted by oohah:
A qote from a recent statistical analyses of players defense on the site 82games.com:

Michael Redd is in a league of his own on defense at the shooting guard position. The difference between Redd and the next lowest-rated shooting guard is three times as large as the difference between the 2nd and 10th lowest-rated shooting guards. And Redd has been very consistently ineffective over the years. Again, defense may win championships, but it does not pay the bills.

I am not sure if I understand...was he analyzed as a good or bad defensive player? I think bad but you threw me with the first line.

oohah


A Terrible defense player.
oohah
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8/16/2005  7:45 PM
seems like you spent a long time putting the post above together. I have no intention of breaking any post down the way you did so let me reply to what I disagree with the most.

That is just how I post.
I think it is folly to compare Houston to Crawford (.398), probably the worst starting SG the Knicks have had in 15 years.

Crawford is Houston's heir appartent at this time, so I think comparing them is fine, apt in fact. Do you think Crawford was worse than Gerald Wilkins? I think they are just about even.
You are satisfied with him jumpshooting and there is nothing I can say against that. I never argued that he couldnt jumpshoot with the best of them.

My satisfaction rarely begins or ends with one player as an absolute, but rather how they play and fit within their team. My point really is that shooting/scoring is the main skill of the shooting guard. You did not arguue that he could not shoot, but rather belittled that aspect of his game and magnified (exagerrated?) his shortcomings quite a bit. Also you have taken personal shots at him which befuddle me. At the end of the day I really couldn't care less why you don't like him, I am just curious.
He was a good player.


Except, that 1-dimension was: always fake a drive, fake another drive, pump fake, shoot and miss 56% of times. If the offense ran around Spree, that Knicks team would win more games.

Good point. But your blame is misplaced. I have posted before that Houston should not have been made to create his own shot, or initiate the offense, that is not really his game. But what can I say, Jeff Van Gundy is among the most imagineless offensive coaches I have ever seen.

.444 is a pretty decent percentage for a jumpshooter. his Knick percentage is .442 if you throw out last year .439 if you dont. Steady.

I don't think the key would have been to run the offense through Spree, who is more inefficient than Allan, and was declining at a faster rate than Houston when he was with the Knicks. The key would have been to get a decent playmaker at point guard, which we did not get until Houston's knees were shot.
I never said he wanst a good player. I argue that he wasnt a "great" player and I stick to that.

He definitely was not "great", but you've said quite a bit more than that.
Example? Honestly, I have no problem with Allan Houston himself, just the way he stopped doing a lot of things after 1999. He became too 1-dimensional.

He was never a great all around player at all, before 99 or after. I remember you have written in other threads that he "played defense in 99", but I think doesn't make much sense, his numbers did not change much after, and I don't think most players are even capable of saying, "I think I'll play defense and rebound this year" and then just doing it. If he was, how come his numbers didn't spike in the year of 99? No, one thing Allan Houston is is steady. Also one of the better free throw shooters in the game.

CAREER AVERAGES
REBOUNDS PER GAME
YEAR TEAM G GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% OFF DEF RPG APG SPG BPG TO PF PPG
93-94 DET 79 20 19.2 .405 .299 .824 .2 1.3 1.5 1.3 .43 .16 1.25 2.10 8.5
94-95 DET 76 39 26.3 .463 .424 .860 .4 1.8 2.2 2.2 .80 .18 1.49 2.40 14.5
95-96 DET 82 75 37.5 .453 .427 .823 .7 3.0 3.7 3.0 .74 .20 2.84 2.80 19.7
96-97 NYK 81 81 33.1 .423 .385 .803 .5 2.4 3.0 2.2 .51 .22 2.06 2.90 14.8
97-98 NYK 82 82 34.7 .447 .385 .851 .5 2.8 3.3 2.6 .77 .29 2.44 2.50 18.4
98-99 NYK 50 50 36.3 .418 .407 .862 .4 2.6 3.0 2.7 .70 .18 2.60 2.30 16.3
99-00 NYK 82 82 38.6 .483 .436 .838 .5 2.8 3.3 2.7 .79 .17 2.27 2.70 19.7
00-01 NYK 78 78 36.6 .449 .381 .909 .3 3.4 3.6 2.2 .67 .13 2.06 2.40 18.7
01-02 NYK 77 77 37.8 .437 .393 .870 .5 2.8 3.3 2.5 .70 .13 2.21 2.40 20.4
02-03 NYK 82 82 37.9 .445 .396 .919 .3 2.5 2.8 2.7 .66 .09 2.17 2.30 22.5
03-04 NYK 50 50 36.0 .435 .431 .913 .4 2.0 2.4 2.0 .76 .04 2.04 2.10 18.5
04-05 NYK 20 11 26.6 .415 .388 .837 .2 1.0 1.2 2.1 .40 .10 1.05 2.00 11.9
Career 839 727 33.7 .444 .402 .863 .4 2.5 2.9 2.4 .67 .10 2.10 2.50 17.3
Playoff 63 63 40.1 .448 .420 .884 .3 2.6 2.9 2.2 .68 .16 2.59 2.40 19.3
All-Star 2 0 16.5 .333 .400 1.000 .0 1.5 1.5 2.5 .50 .00 1.00 .50 8.0

No more from me...

oohah

P.S. Silverfuel that was an oohah style breakdown you did.
Good luck Mike D'Antoni, 'cause you ain't never seen nothing like this before!
Times: Bad Knees and Worse Contract, but a Gentleman Will Return

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