Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
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Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268 USA
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Since it requires login (free registration) figured some might not get to read the whole thing. Here is the whole article:
October 7, 2005 -- JUDGING strictly by e- mails, Knicks fans haven't been this excited about their platoon since Pat Riley was taking smoke breaks behind Charles Oakley's screens.
Should Eddy Curry somehow pass the Knicks comprehensive two-day physical following months of monitoring by doctors hired by the Bulls, we're talking about a title-famished audience that's positively spellbound.
Lo and behold, people suddenly find themselves on the verge of being blessed with a kiddy centerfold oozing plenty of unrealized possibility and a cosmic coach whose commanding presence and demanding voice effortlessly drowns out the previous three combined — Herb Williams, Lenny Wilkens and Don Chaney — without having to raise it a bare octave.
Cablevision mastermind James Dolan already has met with Madison Square Garden marketing mavens about how to delicately spring a mid-season ticket price hike.
On one hand, you've got profit taking; on the other we've got prophet making.
Emboldened by his recruitment of Curry, who could keel over in a heartbeat, and Larry Brown, who's liable to quit in a New York minute (he's still dependent on a catheter despite a two-day summer sojourn in Lourdes, er, the Mayo Clinic), team president Isiah Thomas no doubt sees himself as the second coming of Red on Roundball.
Red Auerbach, as 16 Celtics championships under his auspices attest (if you're interested in an accurate count for the NBAs all-time leader, Phil Jackson owns 11 rings, two as a Knick player), established and re-confirmed himself many times over as an oracle; research his countless cunning trades and adroit draft choices.
Isiah Thomas, indeed, is the modern-day version of Auerbach; except he's proving, repeatedly so, to be more of an auricle.
While I appreciate the difficult position Thomas found himself in when he came into power almost two seasons ago, and understand desperate times sometimes call for desperate measures, the game doesn't have a more habitual reckless recruiter.
Exempting last June's draft, it's as if he doesn't know anything else other than assembling or attempting to add high risk players and coaches.
A serial sermonizer about character, how it's much more important to be a good person than, say, a good rebounder, realism reeks a different story; if a player is better than what he's got going for him, Thomas doesn't give a zippity-do-dah how many inoperable warts he has or how weird he acts off the court.
In fact, as long as you flaunt talent being branded an untouchable, incorrigible or reasonably incurable seems to help rather than hurt you with Thomas. If you don't have some form of disability or rap sheet, it seems, you can almost forget about getting an offer sheet.
Check it out:
* Stephon Marbury held the Timberwolves hostage until they traded him to the Nets, where he was a royal pain in the posterior. Before coming to the Knicks from Phoenix, he was arrested for drunk driving and served time.
* Jamal Crawford corrupted the Bulls with his selfishness before Thomas rewarded him with a $46 million, six-year contract.
* Quentin Richardson's back is uninsurable on account of a disc injury suffered while a Clipper two seasons ago.
* Maurice Taylor arrived in New York by way of Houston following several seasons of substance abuse and fat attacks.
* Jerome James earned a $30M, six-year contract from Thomas because he played relatively well (when not benched due to foul trouble) against Tim Duncan in the playoffs. A year ago, his Sonics teammates were clamoring to have him traded or released because of a toxic attitude.
* Tim Thomas gained a reputation as selfish and arrogant as a rookie with the 76ers and bolstered it in Milwaukee before Isiah acquired him.
* Penny Hardaway, injury riddled and uncoachable in Orlando, where he championed a player revolt against Brian Hill, has lived down to his image in Phoenix and New York.
* Vin Baker's demons with drugs and alcohol were well documented before Thomas reached out for him. Despite a heart condition that required surgery and nearly a complete disintegration of skills, he got a new two-year guarantee worth $3.5M and $3.85M, an apparent gift to Aaron Goodwin as thanks for providing Crawford. Or were they both down payments on ultimately securing LeBron James, no longer a client of the agent?
* Eddie Griffin's crime spree apparently mesmerized Isiah Thomas, who went all out to sign the screwy forward before losing him to the Rockets.
* Eddie Robinson outworked no one in Chicago before being waived just past mid contract. His notorious bad habits turned off everyone but Thomas. Only a failed physical saved the Knicks from experiencing yet another terror alert.
In all fairness to Thomas, it's not as if he's stagnating in the job. He's gone from simply taking on unhealthy contracts to taking on unhealthy players and giving them unhealthy contracts.
No wonder Knicks fans are so proud of Thomas' current product.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
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