Knicks Players Fed Up With Losing
By: Alex Kennedy Last Updated: 12/3/09 8:31 AM ET | 818 times read
The contrasting moods in each of the locker rooms an hour before game time said it all. The Orlando Magic players were cracking jokes and having fun. Mickael Pietrus found a mini motorcycle belonging to the Magic's street team and rode it through the Amway Arena's tunnels.
The New York Knicks, on the other hand, sat in silence and kept to themselves in the visitor's locker room. There was no smiling or laughing. The only noise in the room was coming from the big screen that showed footage from Sunday's home loss to Orlando. Players glanced at the video, shaking their heads in frustration at each mistake.
Last week, George Karl made headlines when he said that head coach Mike D'Antoni was being thrown to the wolves this season as they wait for the summer of 2010 to field a competitive team. "Losing will strangle a coach. I don't like the philosophy," Karl said. "Losing is painful. No matter how strong and tough you are it takes away your confidence."
Because coaches are judged heavily by their records, they carry each of their losses with them forever unlike players. But that doesn't mean that the losing atmosphere isn't impacting the guys that suit up for D'Antoni as well.
"The constant losing is painful, it's rough," Al Harrington told HOOPSWORLD. "It's not just one person that's losing though. We're all losing together so if one person is getting thrown under the bus then we all are."
These are players that have been winning their whole lives. Most have dominated at every level and have trouble adjusting to losing game after game. If you think a coach's confidence dips on the bench, imagine how the players feel getting beat night after night. Aside from their impressive win against the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday, the Knicks have only beaten the New Orleans Hornets, Indiana Pacers, and New Jersey Nets. These teams are a combined 13-37 this season.
And New York isn't just losing games; they're consistently getting blown out. Eleven of the team's fifteen losses have been by double digits and it's starting to take its toll on the players' psyche. Once a team that was considered to be goofy and fun like Orlando, the solemn locker room scene shows just bad things have gotten within the Knicks.
"Man, I'm tired of it. Everybody is fed up with the losing, it's bull****," a frustrated Nate Robinson told HOOPSWORLD before Wednesday's game.
D'Antoni knew what he was getting into when he joined New York. He understood that the team would suffer some down years until 2010. The players, on the other hand, didn't sign up for this.
Many have nothing to look forward too because their contracts expire after this year. Nate Robinson, David Lee, Chris Duhon, Al Harrington, Darko Milicic, and Larry Hughes come off of the books after this season. Unlike D'Antoni, these players are enduring the short-term failures with no guarantee that they'll be included in the team's resurgence. Who is really being thrown to the wolves in this situation?
"I'm not worried about that, 2010 will take care of itself," said Harrington. "Hopefully the majority of us are back but if we're not, we'll all move on and continue to further our careers but we can't worry about that right now. We need to right the ship now and just see what happens."
With that said, some players are frustrated that the team isn't making more of an effort to field a competitive team this season. They understand the team's plans but don't like the idea of focusing solely on the future.
"What if the world ended tomorrow? Let me ask you that. Then what? There you go, that's my answer to that," said Robinson when asked if the team has been focusing too much on the future and landing a star free agent rather than the current squad.
While this may be somewhat extreme, Robinson made his point. The team has spent so much time planning for next offseason but nothing is promised. As they pass on free agents like Allen Iverson or Ramon Sessions, they have put all of their eggs into one basket.
These are troubled time in New York. The losses are piling and the players are upset. They have been thrown to the wolves just as much, if not more, than the coaching staff and are finally getting fed up that the team is complacent sitting at the bottom of the standings. The world may not be ending tomorrow but at times, it does feel like the sky is falling in New York.