Best after-the-fact analysis in print
“I just think they’re flawed,” said an Eastern Conference scout who has watched the Knicks several times since the trade.
The scout listed defense and ball movement as the Knicks’ greatest weaknesses. But the lack of talent was a close third.
(ball movement relates directly to playing together and feeling where and when to deliver the ball, it would also help if Toney Douglas played like Ray Felton)
“You have no depth,” he said. “You’ve got five good starters and a sixth man in Toney Douglas and who is the next guy? Jared Jeffries is your next-best player?”
(the best part is coming up)
Beyond the top six, the Knicks fall into two categories: specialists (who have one notable skill) and space-fillers (who have none). Shawne Williams, Roger Mason Jr. and Bill Walker are capable 3-point shooters who do little else. (And Williams is reliable only from the corners — meaning even his one dimension is one-dimensional.) Jeffries is a decent help defender who has a knack for drawing charges.
But consider their recent history: Jeffries was waived by the Houston Rockets, who barely used him. Williams spent the 2009-10 season out of the N.B.A. Until recently, Mason could not break the Knicks’ rotation. Walker has fallen out of the rotation entirely.
The rest of the Knicks are space-fillers — a category the scout bluntly called “Can’t Play.” That includes Shelden Williams, Renaldo Balkman, Anthony Carter, Andy Rautins and Derrick Brown.
(did he just call one half of our roster "scrubs"?)
- Howard Beck