[ IMAGES: Images ON turn off | ACCOUNT: User Status is LOCKED why? ]

D'Antoni was never the problem!
Author Thread
nixluva
Posts: 56258
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 10/5/2004
Member: #758
USA
11/20/2010  9:00 AM
I've been arguing with many posters about Mike and his system and what he's been ACTUALLY coaching them to do, rather than what we've seen the team doing. Some seem to think that Mike is actually trying to coach the team to take wild 3's and not really drive the ball or look for other offense. It's absurd if you actually look at the plays he has in his system they are for the most part designed to create highly efficient offense. The 3 will always be a part of it, but the players have to learn when to use that weapon or not. It's natural for players to be lazy and just take the 3 cuz teams will give it to them, but that's not what the offense is really about.

If you notice, lately, for the most part the team is doing a better job of not relying on the 3, but instead running the play as it was intended and getting better shots. The players seem to be getting the hang of it lately. There are still a few bad shots going up, but more good shots are being taken now. These are some quotes that tell more of the truth:

(Mike talking about Gallo) “He’s shown that before. He has to have that mentality — that you’re open, you shoot and they close out, you drive. And you have to figure out that’s my game and don’t let anybody talk you out of it.” -- Mike D'Antoni

"We don't want to jack up threes early in the shot clock. There's a difference. If you're wide open and we get it down and they get you on the numbers, go ahead. Why find a worst shot if it's a good shot. We don't want you coming down, maybe off the dribble, and you're shooting 25 percent and jack it up." -- Mike D'Antoni


In addition to this i'd say that if you look overall at the team and how the players have shined, guys like Chan, Fields, Felton have really shown great progress. Gallo had a bad start but is coming around. Turiaf has looked better than most thought he was. I find it funny that people don't give Mike some credit for these things, considering that many of these guys are showing more game than it may have been assumed they had or that they've shown in the past. No it's not perfect and as a team we've slumped, but if you really look at the team and it's flashes of improved play, the signs are there that Mike is getting thru to these guys and I think as the season moves along and they really master what he's teaching them, we're gonna see some good BB. Yeah there will be setbacks and frustration, but it's not about Mike. The players have to assimilate what he's teaching them and get it right on the floor.
AUTOADVERT
misterearl
Posts: 38786
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 11/16/2004
Member: #799
USA
11/20/2010  9:55 AM
nixluva - you know I look forward to your special brand of positivity but bear with me a moment on an alternate take.

D'Antoni IS the problem. Here's why:

- it was apparent the Knicks missed Turiaf during the losing streak. How can D'Antoni make a comment stating that he didn't think Turiaf was valuable?

- you ever see D'Antoni give Gallo a snarky look after making a mistake? Never. To Gallo's credit, he has made some adjustments, or simply trusting his body to to be more aggressive driving the ball, but that is a player thing. Credit, team doctors.

- the recent change in Ray Felton is not due to coaching, it's the orange kicks.

- Landry Fields was the work of Donnie Walnuts. No coaching needed here. Just wind him up and he does the right thing.

- Amar'e Stoudemire is that good. But he is no center. Amar'e KNOWS he is no center. During the losing streak D'Antoni played Stoudemire at center. Dumb.

With that said, last night was a great road win and the way our boys withstood a late run was a beautiful thing.

It's not coaching. It's evolution.

once a knick always a knick
nixluva
Posts: 56258
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 10/5/2004
Member: #758
USA
11/20/2010  10:14 AM
misterearl wrote:nixluva - you know I look forward to your special brand of positivity but bear with me a moment on an alternate take.

D'Antoni IS the problem. Here's why:

- it was apparent the Knicks missed Turiaf during the losing streak. How can D'Antoni make a comment stating that he didn't think Turiaf was valuable?

- you ever see D'Antoni give Gallo a snarky look after making a mistake? Never. To Gallo's credit, he has made some adjustments, or simply trusting his body to to be more aggressive driving the ball, but that is a player thing. Credit, team doctors.

- the recent change in Ray Felton is not due to coaching, it's the orange kicks.

- Landry Fields was the work of Donnie Walnuts. No coaching needed here. Just wind him up and he does the right thing.

- Amar'e Stoudemire is that good. But he is no center. Amar'e KNOWS he is no center. During the losing streak D'Antoni played Stoudemire at center. Dumb.

With that said, last night was a great road win and the way our boys withstood a late run was a beautiful thing.

It's not coaching. It's evolution.

Let me ask you do you know what the sets are and what the players have been coached to do on every given set? You see it's not like they are out there freelancing. It only appears that way when you don't know the progressions nor what set the team is running. The movements of the players are choreographed and drilled until they look natural and free flowing. It's not an accident that the team is doing the things it's doing.

The points you make are not really valid:
1. Mike was talking tongue in cheek about Turiaf.
2. He's been getting in Gallo's head since day one about being aggressive and driving the ball. He's said so many times over the years.
3. Felton has never played like this and statistically he's exploding compared to what he's done in the past.
4. Landry is a 4yr man and he is certainly used to playing in a similar system, but he is doing what the coaches tell him to do. His energy and hustle and timing is all him, but also the staff points out to players areas that they can exploit. Fields is taking full advantage of those options.
5. Amar'e had some of his greatest success playing some C for Mike. Mike only did it now out of necessity.

It's the coaching and the players starting to get what he's been teaching them to do. They're playing his system and his style. This team is pressuring the ball, playing the passing lanes, running hard, team rebounding, sharing the ball and moving without the ball. That isn't an accident. PG's usually get a bump playing for Mike and so it's no accident that we see Felton going off. Aside from the shooting slumps, this team looks like a D'Antoni team. Gee how is that happening?

Olbrannon
Posts: 21913
Alba Posts: 1
Joined: 10/2/2009
Member: #2919
USA
11/20/2010  10:20 AM
misterearl wrote:nixluva - you know I look forward to your special brand of positivity but bear with me a moment on an alternate take.

D'Antoni IS the problem. Here's why:

- it was apparent the Knicks missed Turiaf during the losing streak. How can D'Antoni make a comment stating that he didn't think Turiaf was valuable?

- you ever see D'Antoni give Gallo a snarky look after making a mistake? Never. To Gallo's credit, he has made some adjustments, or simply trusting his body to to be more aggressive driving the ball, but that is a player thing. Credit, team doctors.

- the recent change in Ray Felton is not due to coaching, it's the orange kicks.

- Landry Fields was the work of Donnie Walnuts. No coaching needed here. Just wind him up and he does the right thing.

- Amar'e Stoudemire is that good. But he is no center. Amar'e KNOWS he is no center. During the losing streak D'Antoni played Stoudemire at center. Dumb.

With that said, last night was a great road win and the way our boys withstood a late run was a beautiful thing.

It's not coaching. It's evolution.

Regardless of playing out of his mind Raymond laced his sneakers on and came to play. It all is appears to be coming together for him.

Agree on Amar'e he is a finesse player. And looking much better. Moving the ball and even some success working from the left.
Lee might be more skilled being ambidextrous but Amar'e is much more explosive.

Turiaf with his great passing skills and defense is just what the Knicks need when they need it.
8 man rotation. Will the rotation be this tight going forward? Can they run with that energy on back to backs?

When it works you can tell the players are enjoying themselves.

Bill Simmons on Tyreke Evans "The prototypical 0-guard: Someone who handles the ball all the time, looks for his own shot, gets to the rim at will and operates best if his teammates spread the floor to watch him."
Solace
Posts: 30002
Alba Posts: 20
Joined: 10/30/2003
Member: #479
USA
11/20/2010  11:00 AM
It's been better the past few games, but it's too early to tell for sure. The last two teams we faced did not put much effort into the defensive end, at all, IMHO. I was happy to see far far less bad threes, so if it keeps up over a solid stretch, we can give the coach credit for adjusting, but too early, IMHO.
Wishing everyone well. I enjoyed posting here for a while, but as I matured I realized this forum isn't for me. We all evolve. Thanks for the memories everyone.
Vmart
Posts: 31800
Alba Posts: 1
Joined: 5/23/2002
Member: #247
USA
11/20/2010  11:19 AM
When a team is losing the coach looks real bad and when the team is winning the coach looks real good. Just win and everything is alright. Still think to many three are going up. There was a sequence where the Knicks shot three straight threes from offensive rebounds on the same possession. That left me shaking my head.
TMS
Posts: 60684
Alba Posts: 617
Joined: 5/11/2004
Member: #674
USA
11/20/2010  11:22 AM    LAST EDITED: 11/20/2010  11:24 AM
nixluva wrote:I've been arguing with many posters about Mike and his system and what he's been ACTUALLY coaching them to do, rather than what we've seen the team doing. Some seem to think that Mike is actually trying to coach the team to take wild 3's and not really drive the ball or look for other offense. It's absurd if you actually look at the plays he has in his system they are for the most part designed to create highly efficient offense. The 3 will always be a part of it, but the players have to learn when to use that weapon or not. It's natural for players to be lazy and just take the 3 cuz teams will give it to them, but that's not what the offense is really about.

If you notice, lately, for the most part the team is doing a better job of not relying on the 3, but instead running the play as it was intended and getting better shots. The players seem to be getting the hang of it lately. There are still a few bad shots going up, but more good shots are being taken now. These are some quotes that tell more of the truth:

(Mike talking about Gallo) “He’s shown that before. He has to have that mentality — that you’re open, you shoot and they close out, you drive. And you have to figure out that’s my game and don’t let anybody talk you out of it.” -- Mike D'Antoni

"We don't want to jack up threes early in the shot clock. There's a difference. If you're wide open and we get it down and they get you on the numbers, go ahead. Why find a worst shot if it's a good shot. We don't want you coming down, maybe off the dribble, and you're shooting 25 percent and jack it up." -- Mike D'Antoni


In addition to this i'd say that if you look overall at the team and how the players have shined, guys like Chan, Fields, Felton have really shown great progress. Gallo had a bad start but is coming around. Turiaf has looked better than most thought he was. I find it funny that people don't give Mike some credit for these things, considering that many of these guys are showing more game than it may have been assumed they had or that they've shown in the past. No it's not perfect and as a team we've slumped, but if you really look at the team and it's flashes of improved play, the signs are there that Mike is getting thru to these guys and I think as the season moves along and they really master what he's teaching them, we're gonna see some good BB. Yeah there will be setbacks and frustration, but it's not about Mike. The players have to assimilate what he's teaching them and get it right on the floor.

i'm not sure u can say Turiaf has looked better than most people thought he was... he's putting up pretty much what he's averaged his entire career but playing more minutes... to his credit he's brought his FG% up to almost 60% which is great for what we're looking for out of him in that shallow water role... i love his defense, his court awareness & his team first attitude, but those are things that we sorta knew he could do... not bashing him at all, just saying i don't see where you can credit MDA for getting him to raise his game... that's pretty much the player he's been his entire career.

also don't see much progression this year in Chandler & Felton's games... they've both looked shaky in several games... Wilson's FG% is way down compared to last season, & that has a lot to do with him chucking up 3's... he's averaging twice the amount of 3's taken per game than last year in less minutes per game no less... that's not a sign of progression in my eyes... at least not this season... as for Felton, when you look at his numbers he's actually having a very nice season so far, but if you watch the games all year i think it's apparent that he's been struggling greatly getting in synch with Amare in the PnR... that's a major concern & something that hopefully they will iron out as the season goes along... i think we've also seen a regression in Toney Douglas' play this year... his shooting & shot selection have both been horrendous... hopefully that comes around as the season goes along too.

Fields i will give MDA a lot of credit for, realizing his talent & allowing him the opportunity to play big minutes... that's something i definitely like... Gallo has been looking better of late, so hopefully he's out of his early season funk... i still think he needs to be more aggressive going to the hole & playing more of an all around game, but his shot looks like it's improving.

After 7 years & 40K+ posts, banned by martin for calling Nalod a 'moron'. Awesome.
loweyecue
Posts: 27468
Alba Posts: 6
Joined: 11/20/2005
Member: #1037

11/20/2010  11:47 AM
I tend to think Chandler, Gallo and TD are all reacting to the same thing in various degrees that is having a primary option in the team in terms of scoring in the paint. While Chandler and TD look like they have regressed a bit, I think Chandler will pull out f it pretty quickly. TD may have to slow down a bit and really pay attention to his shot selection.
TKF on Melo ::....he is a punk, a jerk, a self absorbed out of shape, self aggrandizing, unprofessional, volume chucking coach killing playoff loser!!
Childs2Dudley
Posts: 23906
Alba Posts: 5
Joined: 1/25/2010
Member: #3051
USA
11/20/2010  12:04 PM
Convenient to start this thread after winning 2 games in a row.
"Our attitude toward life determines life's attitude towards us." - Earl Nightingale
CrushAlot
Posts: 59764
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 7/25/2003
Member: #452
USA
11/20/2010  12:23 PM
The only good thing about D'Antoni's most recent 6 game losing streak was the hiatus from threads like this. Two wins doesn't erase two plus years of incompetence at the coaching spot.
I'm tired,I'm tired, I'm so tired right now......Kristaps Porzingis 1/3/18
eViL
Posts: 25412
Alba Posts: 9
Joined: 1/21/2004
Member: #561
USA
11/20/2010  12:23 PM
two games against poor defensive teams was the recipe we needed to look better and well-coached. i will say this though: they appear to have a better grasp on where to go when they are defended in certain ways. felton has looked much improved over the last few games. he's finding amare on the pick and roll and him and chandler have developed some pick and roll chemistry.

love him or hate him
can't decide on d'antoni
please just keep winning

check out my latest hip hop project: https://soundcloud.com/michaelcro http://youtu.be/scNXshrpyZo
nixluva
Posts: 56258
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 10/5/2004
Member: #758
USA
11/20/2010  12:25 PM
I can see that it's still not clear what my point is. Given more time it will be much more obvious to everyone what i've been saying. It's not just about the last two wins. You have to be more observant than judging only by the W/L column. The general accusation by those who have been critical of Mike is that his style of play is to blame, or that his decision making is suspect and they aren't seeing any results. My point is that it takes time for his teachings to be absorbed and for the team to execute on a high level and with fewer periods of time where they lose focus on what they're supposed to be doing. Especially with such a young team.

This isn't about strength of opponent. It's about methodology and consistency. There has never been anything wrong with Mike's system and style of coaching. It's about the players and their ability and willingness to conform to what he's been teaching them. It's no accident that the team was chucking wildly and ignoring the primary focus of the plays and lately they've reigned in the lazy BB and have been moving more, passing more and taking fewer bad shots. It's not perfect yet, but they're starting to show signs of getting it. Old habits are hard to break and I suspect when they get tired they'll again revert to playing stupid BB, but to the extent that they stay on top of this they'll have far more games where the do it right.

Childs2Dudley
Posts: 23906
Alba Posts: 5
Joined: 1/25/2010
Member: #3051
USA
11/20/2010  12:43 PM
nixluva wrote:I can see that it's still not clear what my point is. Given more time it will be much more obvious to everyone what i've been saying. It's not just about the last two wins. You have to be more observant than judging only by the W/L column. The general accusation by those who have been critical of Mike is that his style of play is to blame, or that his decision making is suspect and they aren't seeing any results. My point is that it takes time for his teachings to be absorbed and for the team to execute on a high level and with fewer periods of time where they lose focus on what they're supposed to be doing. Especially with such a young team.

This isn't about strength of opponent. It's about methodology and consistency. There has never been anything wrong with Mike's system and style of coaching. It's about the players and their ability and willingness to conform to what he's been teaching them. It's no accident that the team was chucking wildly and ignoring the primary focus of the plays and lately they've reigned in the lazy BB and have been moving more, passing more and taking fewer bad shots. It's not perfect yet, but they're starting to show signs of getting it. Old habits are hard to break and I suspect when they get tired they'll again revert to playing stupid BB, but to the extent that they stay on top of this they'll have far more games where the do it right.

We gave up 119 points last night and they didn't even have David Lee. The defense for me is awful.

"Our attitude toward life determines life's attitude towards us." - Earl Nightingale
tj23
Posts: 21851
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 4/20/2010
Member: #3119

11/20/2010  12:54 PM
Childs2Dudley wrote:
nixluva wrote:I can see that it's still not clear what my point is. Given more time it will be much more obvious to everyone what i've been saying. It's not just about the last two wins. You have to be more observant than judging only by the W/L column. The general accusation by those who have been critical of Mike is that his style of play is to blame, or that his decision making is suspect and they aren't seeing any results. My point is that it takes time for his teachings to be absorbed and for the team to execute on a high level and with fewer periods of time where they lose focus on what they're supposed to be doing. Especially with such a young team.

This isn't about strength of opponent. It's about methodology and consistency. There has never been anything wrong with Mike's system and style of coaching. It's about the players and their ability and willingness to conform to what he's been teaching them. It's no accident that the team was chucking wildly and ignoring the primary focus of the plays and lately they've reigned in the lazy BB and have been moving more, passing more and taking fewer bad shots. It's not perfect yet, but they're starting to show signs of getting it. Old habits are hard to break and I suspect when they get tired they'll again revert to playing stupid BB, but to the extent that they stay on top of this they'll have far more games where the do it right.

We gave up 119 points last night and they didn't even have David Lee. The defense for me is awful.


I dont like to go by points with this team, since we have more possessions. But yeah, the defense was awful last night. We didnt do anything to attempt to slow down Ellis. He had like 40. Curry had almost 30. And Wright and Williams both almost had 20 a piece.

Usually I think our help defense is solid, but last night it didnt exist. Our defense has carried us in some games, but is non existent in others. Like the end of the portland game. I dont know how many stops we got in a row but we couldnt score. Our offense failed. But last night we didnt play an ounce of D.

When our offense is clicking like that, when Felton is dropping in ridiculous last second fallaway shots, and the basket is as big as the ocean, we should win. But if the defense doesn't show up at all were gonna blow some of those games. And the capability is there with this group. They are just lazy. And say what you want but I blame a decent portion on Mike for not motivating his players, getting them well prepared and organized, and focused for 48 minutes.

scoshin
Posts: 20584
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 1/23/2004
Member: #568
11/20/2010  2:16 PM    LAST EDITED: 11/20/2010  2:16 PM
This is why D'Antoni is and will forever be a problem:

From the NYTimes' game recap, on GS's 4th quarter run

“You have to keep scoring,” Coach Mike D’Antoni said, “and if you lose your concentration they would have won. But Gallo hits some timely 3s and kind of solidified everything.”

Still want D'Antoni fired, but I'll give him kudos for getting more of our players to move off-the-ball in the offense. We ran a lot more curls, and had a lot of players sneak in for backdoor cuts last night, which is something I'd like to see more of. Now if only we added the occasional post play, and D'Antoni may actually have a complete NBA playbook.

Also, he got on Felton to get the ball and take control of the offense when it looked like Amare was going to go iso, or when Turiaf stupidly tried to create. That's the accountability for his captains I want to see. Felton needs to continue being our floor general in the 4th quarter, which he hadn't done in the first ten games (usually just gave up the ball to Amare or Wil in past games in the 4th). That mentality may have just been Felton's habit after playing in Charlotte, where he'd give the ball to Jackson to create in crunch time.

nixluva
Posts: 56258
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 10/5/2004
Member: #758
USA
11/20/2010  8:02 PM
scoshin wrote:This is why D'Antoni is and will forever be a problem:

From the NYTimes' game recap, on GS's 4th quarter run

“You have to keep scoring,” Coach Mike D’Antoni said, “and if you lose your concentration they would have won. But Gallo hits some timely 3s and kind of solidified everything.”

Still want D'Antoni fired, but I'll give him kudos for getting more of our players to move off-the-ball in the offense. We ran a lot more curls, and had a lot of players sneak in for backdoor cuts last night, which is something I'd like to see more of. Now if only we added the occasional post play, and D'Antoni may actually have a complete NBA playbook.

Mike acknowledged that the team got stagnant on D at the end and let GS back in. His comments were that in that situation when you are up and your D gets out of whack you must keep playing good O to secure the win. When you outscore a team 41-28 in a qtr you're defense has to be doing something right. Sure the Knicks D was awful for much of the game and they couldn't stop Ellis and Curry, but in the end they got stops or else how do you win the game?

Mike's trying to get the players to execute the progressions of the sets better and not just jack up lazy jumpers. It's not like the motion you saw and the curls were something new. These things are part of the playbook but you never see it if guys come down and jack up early shots.

jrodmc
Posts: 32927
Alba Posts: 50
Joined: 11/24/2004
Member: #805
USA
11/22/2010  9:53 AM
Childs2Dudley wrote:Convenient to start this thread after winning 2 games in a row.

And playing against teams that on any given night probably the top 4 posters on here and Bip could score 130 against.

fishmike
Posts: 53846
Alba Posts: 1
Joined: 7/19/2002
Member: #298
USA
11/22/2010  10:04 AM
Childs2Dudley wrote:
nixluva wrote:I can see that it's still not clear what my point is. Given more time it will be much more obvious to everyone what i've been saying. It's not just about the last two wins. You have to be more observant than judging only by the W/L column. The general accusation by those who have been critical of Mike is that his style of play is to blame, or that his decision making is suspect and they aren't seeing any results. My point is that it takes time for his teachings to be absorbed and for the team to execute on a high level and with fewer periods of time where they lose focus on what they're supposed to be doing. Especially with such a young team.

This isn't about strength of opponent. It's about methodology and consistency. There has never been anything wrong with Mike's system and style of coaching. It's about the players and their ability and willingness to conform to what he's been teaching them. It's no accident that the team was chucking wildly and ignoring the primary focus of the plays and lately they've reigned in the lazy BB and have been moving more, passing more and taking fewer bad shots. It's not perfect yet, but they're starting to show signs of getting it. Old habits are hard to break and I suspect when they get tired they'll again revert to playing stupid BB, but to the extent that they stay on top of this they'll have far more games where the do it right.

We gave up 119 points last night and they didn't even have David Lee. The defense for me is awful.


Knicks are #1 in blocks and #7 in steals. That counts for nothing?

We will always give up a lot of points when you play at that pace.

I'm still wait and see on MDA. The 3's kill me. Taking 25 a game is ludicris. Does anyone realize the Knicks are #2 in the NBA in FT attempts? Thats crazy.. we are attacking the basket and getting to line as well as any team in the NBA. Obviously its a strength.

I think he's done a good job fixing some of the Felton problems. Has anyone noticed the stress on ball movement and that other guys (Gallo and Fields) are running the pick and roll? Meanwhile Felton's scoring has improved and his assists off the scoring have increased. He's looked great running the break and a dozen games into Felton is giving you almost 18/8 a night. Who wouldnt have signed up for that?

I just want to see fewer 3's and more pushing the ball.

MDA has also handled Gallo's slump well because the rooster is beasting

"winning is more fun... then fun is fun" -Thibs
crzymdups
Posts: 52018
Alba Posts: 0
Joined: 5/1/2004
Member: #671
USA
11/22/2010  10:20 AM
D'Antoni certainly was the problem. He was trying to force Felton to be Steve Nash.

Credit goes to him for subtly adjusting Felton's role and making the offense use a lot more ball movement and less dependcy on the pick and roll. It was a great adjustment and the offense took off as a result.

Ball movement is the hardest thing to guard against in the NBA. Teams that have an ELITE point guard can get away without relying on it too much, but otherwise moving the ball around is all important.

There was a possession in Golden State towards the end of the game where literally every Knick on the floor touched the ball and it resulted in a wide open three for Gallo. It was beautiful. Great adjustment by MDA.

The defense is precarious. I'd like to see some improvements there, but you can't argue with the offense.

¿ △ ?
Uptown
Posts: 31323
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 4/1/2008
Member: #1883

11/22/2010  10:25 AM
crzymdups wrote:D'Antoni certainly was the problem. He was trying to force Felton to be Steve Nash.

Credit goes to him for subtly adjusting Felton's role and making the offense use a lot more ball movement and less dependcy on the pick and roll. It was a great adjustment and the offense took off as a result.

Ball movement is the hardest thing to guard against in the NBA. Teams that have an ELITE point guard can get away without relying on it too much, but otherwise moving the ball around is all important.

There was a possession in Golden State towards the end of the game where literally every Knick on the floor touched the ball and it resulted in a wide open three for Gallo. It was beautiful. Great adjustment by MDA.

The defense is precarious. I'd like to see some improvements there, but you can't argue with the offense.

Excellent points on the subtle adujustments on the O by MDA. Definitely want to see improvement on the defensive end (epecially in the paint). It seems like if we dont get a block or a steal, its a bucket for the opposition. We've stepped up opn the hustle plays (blocks, steals and deflections) and are very opportunistic on D but Turiaf is still smallish for a big, Mosgoz is still learning and Amare was never a defensive beast. We definitely need another defensive big upfront to help out.

D'Antoni was never the problem!

©2001-2025 ultimateknicks.comm All rights reserved. About Us.
This site is not affiliated with the NY Knicks or the National Basketball Association in any way.
You may visit the official NY Knicks web site by clicking here.

All times (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time.

Terms of Use and Privacy Policy