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The Good Things and the Bad Things, What I Will Look Forward to:
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MarburyAnd1Crossover
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3/14/2012  6:10 PM
I will look forward to following the team D'Antoni is coaching next year. His Suns were a blast and Knicks could have had something similar if the owner was not so impulsive. I love the way D'Antoni wants to play and I think he will have no trouble implementing this system on some team where ownership and management will work with him.

I will look forward to Carmelo getting his wish and the Knicks moving forward with isolation basketball. Always I have maintained that it will be either D'Antoni or Carmelo, that they cannot coexist, and that the franchise must choose between team basketball or Carmelo isolation; the franchise has chosen.

I will look forward to following Danilo Gallinari in his career but I will not look forward to crying myself to sleep after watching Nuggets games; it is hard to forget what our Knicks could have been with Gallinari, Amar'e, and a point guard.

Now some predictions: Knicks finish below .500 this year, win 46 games next year. Never advance past First Round during Carmelo's big fat contract. D'Antoni reaches Finals before Knicks.

Carmelo Anthony is ANTI-BASKETBALL
AUTOADVERT
MarburyAnd1Crossover
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3/14/2012  6:11 PM
Tell me your predictions. How do you see Knicks over Carmelo Era?

What will you look forward to?

Carmelo Anthony is ANTI-BASKETBALL
Ghostowl
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3/14/2012  11:09 PM
Yup. I've noticed that MDA was not a good coach (like the coaching decision recently to not foul) but Melo is infinitely worse for the team. His points cover up his low %, his mentality brings down team atmosphere, his trade demand kicks good potential players out of Knicks, his selfishness ruins coach's plays and kills the team game.

I would even forgive him for being a selfish player if he was actually good enough to back up the "stardom" he has. But he's not. He's overrated and waste of money. I hope people can see this.

ChuckBuck
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3/14/2012  11:16 PM
Ghostowl wrote:Yup. I've noticed that MDA was not a good coach (like the coaching decision recently to not foul) but Melo is infinitely worse for the team. His points cover up his low %, his mentality brings down team atmosphere, his trade demand kicks good potential players out of Knicks, his selfishness ruins coach's plays and kills the team game.

I would even forgive him for being a selfish player if he was actually good enough to back up the "stardom" he has. But he's not. He's overrated and waste of money. I hope people can see this.

Yea, definitely a cancerous energy sink. Saw it in the performance and body language in the lopsided loss to the Blazers tonight.

Ghostowl
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3/14/2012  11:19 PM
ChuckBuck wrote:
Ghostowl wrote:Yup. I've noticed that MDA was not a good coach (like the coaching decision recently to not foul) but Melo is infinitely worse for the team. His points cover up his low %, his mentality brings down team atmosphere, his trade demand kicks good potential players out of Knicks, his selfishness ruins coach's plays and kills the team game.

I would even forgive him for being a selfish player if he was actually good enough to back up the "stardom" he has. But he's not. He's overrated and waste of money. I hope people can see this.

Yea, definitely a cancerous energy sink. Saw it in the performance and body language in the lopsided loss to the Blazers tonight.

You must not have watched 6 loss streak games with Melo in them then.

mrKnickShot
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3/14/2012  11:21 PM
Marbs, please tell me that you will still root for the knicks because at the end of the day, you are a KNICK fan. Or where you not mainly a knick fan and mostly an MDA fan and you will follow the coach and be a fan of his next team ...

Its okay to vent cause you are pissed off but you gotta stand by your team!

Peace!

HugeKnick4
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3/14/2012  11:26 PM
I wouldn't be surprised if the Knicks somehow work their way back to 500 this year. MDA's resignation was a huge burden lifted off of Melo's shoulders(for now). Although I did not support his lack of conformity to "the system", I am sure he can play more relaxed now knowing that Woodson will give him more ISO. The tension permeated the team as well...and now it is gone. So, there should be some improvement short term.

However, next year is another issue. The Knicks problem is about defensive commitment by their "STARS". That is the only way they will ever amount to a serious contender. That is the only way teams win Championships.

ChuckBuck
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3/14/2012  11:27 PM
Ghostowl wrote:
ChuckBuck wrote:
Ghostowl wrote:Yup. I've noticed that MDA was not a good coach (like the coaching decision recently to not foul) but Melo is infinitely worse for the team. His points cover up his low %, his mentality brings down team atmosphere, his trade demand kicks good potential players out of Knicks, his selfishness ruins coach's plays and kills the team game.

I would even forgive him for being a selfish player if he was actually good enough to back up the "stardom" he has. But he's not. He's overrated and waste of money. I hope people can see this.

Yea, definitely a cancerous energy sink. Saw it in the performance and body language in the lopsided loss to the Blazers tonight.

You must not have watched 6 loss streak games with Melo in them then.

You must not have watched the Knicks pre-Linsanity. Enough with the piling on Melo crap, it's old. Nobody cares about that shiet anymore. New chapter, turn the leaf. The Woodsanity era begins. Captain Tyson got Melo's back, that's good enough for me

gunsnewing
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3/14/2012  11:45 PM
You can join DJSU once MDA lands in Toronto! If you're really lucky you can root for Washington or Sacramento!
Uptown
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3/14/2012  11:48 PM
Never understood fans who pledge to leave when a player is traded or coach is fired. I was the biggest Rod Stickland fan on the planet. Was devastated when he was traded to the Spurs. But not one time did I think of leaving my beloved Knicks and following the Spurs. Same for Pitino, loved the way he had the Knicks balling. but I didn't turn off Knick games in favor of Kentucky basketball.
gunsnewing
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3/14/2012  11:56 PM
What also stinks is that Jeremy Lin is going to join MDA in Washington supposedly lol
eViL
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3/14/2012  11:58 PM
Uptown wrote:Never understood fans who pledge to leave when a player is traded or coach is fired. I was the biggest Rod Stickland fan on the planet. Was devastated when he was traded to the Spurs. But not one time did I think of leaving my beloved Knicks and following the Spurs. Same for Pitino, loved the way he had the Knicks balling. but I didn't turn off Knick games in favor of Kentucky basketball.

you're the best fan, bro. you won the title, just now, with that story. do the discount double check

check out my latest hip hop project: https://soundcloud.com/michaelcro http://youtu.be/scNXshrpyZo
JrZyHuStLa
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3/14/2012  11:59 PM
It's all Melo's fault.

We were perennial title contenders before he joined.

eViL
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3/15/2012  12:01 AM
JrZyHuStLa wrote:It's all Melo's fault.

We were perennial title contenders before he joined.

you're so good at sarcasm, bro. you won the title, just now, with that post. do the discount double check

check out my latest hip hop project: https://soundcloud.com/michaelcro http://youtu.be/scNXshrpyZo
FeltonandAmare
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3/15/2012  12:14 AM
MarburyAnd1Crossover wrote:I will look forward to following the team D'Antoni is coaching next year. His Suns were a blast and Knicks could have had something similar if the owner was not so impulsive. I love the way D'Antoni wants to play and I think he will have no trouble implementing this system on some team where ownership and management will work with him.

I will look forward to Carmelo getting his wish and the Knicks moving forward with isolation basketball. Always I have maintained that it will be either D'Antoni or Carmelo, that they cannot coexist, and that the franchise must choose between team basketball or Carmelo isolation; the franchise has chosen.

I will look forward to following Danilo Gallinari in his career but I will not look forward to crying myself to sleep after watching Nuggets games; it is hard to forget what our Knicks could have been with Gallinari, Amar'e, and a point guard.

Now some predictions: Knicks finish below .500 this year, win 46 games next year. Never advance past First Round during Carmelo's big fat contract. D'Antoni reaches Finals before Knicks.

My prediction is that these words will come back to haunt you!

Ghostowl
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3/15/2012  12:14 AM    LAST EDITED: 3/15/2012  12:16 AM
ChuckBuck wrote:
Ghostowl wrote:
ChuckBuck wrote:
Ghostowl wrote:Yup. I've noticed that MDA was not a good coach (like the coaching decision recently to not foul) but Melo is infinitely worse for the team. His points cover up his low %, his mentality brings down team atmosphere, his trade demand kicks good potential players out of Knicks, his selfishness ruins coach's plays and kills the team game.

I would even forgive him for being a selfish player if he was actually good enough to back up the "stardom" he has. But he's not. He's overrated and waste of money. I hope people can see this.

Yea, definitely a cancerous energy sink. Saw it in the performance and body language in the lopsided loss to the Blazers tonight.

You must not have watched 6 loss streak games with Melo in them then.

You must not have watched the Knicks pre-Linsanity. Enough with the piling on Melo crap, it's old. Nobody cares about that shiet anymore. New chapter, turn the leaf. The Woodsanity era begins. Captain Tyson got Melo's back, that's good enough for me

And you must not have watched the Knicks since Knicks got Melo. Knicks have never won anything from Melo being around...in fact, Denver has had a better record from getting rid of Melo and Knicks got worse record from gaining Melo. He has YET to prove why he got that multi million dollar contract.

In fact, I'll show you an ESPN article way back in the day before Knicks got Melo


Carmelo Anthony has averaged 20 points per game every season since he arrived in the NBA. This past campaign, he became the third-youngest player ever to reach the 10,000-point plateau, behind only Kobe Bryant and LeBron James. And next summer, he could hit the open market as an unrestricted free agent.
But despite all those gaudy point totals, the three-time All-Star may not even be worth the max deal a team would likely give him in 2011.
<offer></offer>
At first glance, Anthony seems like a member of the NBA's elite, largely due to his scoring prowess. But a deeper look at the points column and elsewhere in his game reveals a player who lives on an undeserved reputation more than his actual impact on wins.
It's tough to argue with his 28.2 points-per-game average in '09-10, but in the game of basketball, how a shooter gets his points is more meaningful than the raw number itself. To see that, we need to peel back the layers.
Let's first talk about Anthony's shot volume. It's not exactly a secret that 'Melo likes to shoot the rock, but his propensity to launch shots may raise some eyebrows. This past season, no player in the NBA took more shots per minute than Anthony -- not Kobe, not LeBron, not even scoring champ Kevin Durant.
It may seem obvious that a player worthy of 20 shots per game would have a healthy conversion rate. But in Anthony's case, that's far from the truth. Anthony, in reality, had a below-average field goal percentage (.458) this past season -- and his career percentage (.459) is no different. (The league average is .463.)
The sharp readers out there will point out that traditional field goal percentage doesn't reflect Anthony's shooting ability, since he launches a healthy dose of 3-pointers, which obviously count more on the scoreboard. That's true. But if you've been paying attention, you know Anthony is not a good shooter from beyond the arc, so that doesn't help his case. As a career .308 percent 3-point shooter, his shot from downtown ranks far below the norm (the average small forward shot .349 last season; Melo shot .316) and any progress he seemingly made in 2008-09, when he shot a career-high .371, disappeared. Even if we incorporate the added point bonus of a 3-pointer, the Syracuse product's shooting percentages are, at best, average.
It seems that, anyway we slice it, Anthony is a gunner at the core. His exceptional skill on offense is his ability to get his shot off, whether it's attacking the rim or through a patented pull-up jumper on the perimeter. But interestingly enough, Anthony got his shot blocked a whopping 109 times last season, which ranks as the second-highest total in the league, according to Hoopdata.com. Evidently, he doesn't lack perseverance.
Anthony's case illustrates a fundamental problem in conventional basketball analysis: scoring averages don't reflect efficiency. It's true that Anthony scored 28.2 points per game last season, but it's also true that no player missed more shots as often as Anthony did. Feel free to credit his skill but also pay attention his lofty shot volume and playing time.
And that's before we consider the disguise of team pace. Since Anthony entered the league, the Denver Nuggets have averaged 95.9 possessions per game, which places them as the third -fastest squad in the NBA over that period of time (and just a fraction behind the high-octane Phoenix Suns). Over that same span, the Nuggets have squeezed out an extra four possessions per game when compared to the average NBA team. Do the math, and the Nuggets have enjoyed nearly 2,000 extra possessions above the norm since Anthony joined the NBA. That's a ton of extra opportunities that can pad the per-game stats used as measuring sticks.
So after stripping out the inflationary effect of fast pace and boiling down Anthony's numbers to a per possession level, his scoring punch looks even more pedestrian. How pedestrian? Anthony's career offensive rating, an efficiency measure that calculates how many points a player produces per 100 possessions he uses, checks out at 107, which sits right at the league average. For reference, 2003 draft-mates James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh have earned 114, 111, and 113 lifetime offensive ratings, respectively.
Before we prematurely call Anthony an average player, there is something to be said for the burden of trust. Not every player can still perform while shouldering the heavy scoring responsibility that Anthony has endured. But the Nuggets have probably allowed Anthony to shoot far too often if efficiency -- and winning -- is their goal. In fact, last season Melo was only sixth on his own team in ORtg (110), trailing far behind other legit weapons like Nene (124), Chauncey Billups (120) and Ty Lawson (118).
Aside from scoring, Anthony doesn't have many other bankable weapons as a player. His rebounding (career 6.2 rpg) is only slightly better than what we'd expect from a small forward, and he doesn't create opportunities for his teammates like Paul Pierce, Wade and James can. Furthermore, he hasn't shown the intensity and dedication on the defensive end that you'd want from a max player.
In the end, Anthony's game demonstrates why it's important to strip away the biases that color our perceptions of elite players. In Anthony's case, the excessive shot volume, his team's stat-padding tempo and the lack of a true 3-point game makes his 28.2 ppg seem far less impressive than his sparkling reputation would suggest.
If anything, it's time we moved on from per-game statistics to evaluate our players. Millions of dollars are wasted every year basing player value on the archaic statistics that teams used half a century ago. And someone will surely overpay Anthony and offer him a max contract -- just look at the deals Joe Johnson and Rudy Gay got.
If the New York Knicks, rumored to be the favorites to land Melo if he decides to leave Denver, are expecting salvation from Anthony next summer, they're going to be very disappointed with their investment. It would be a much a wiser move to throw that cash toward the pursuit of Chris Paul, a real max player.

ChuckBuck
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3/15/2012  12:24 AM
Ghostowl wrote:
ChuckBuck wrote:
Ghostowl wrote:
ChuckBuck wrote:
Ghostowl wrote:Yup. I've noticed that MDA was not a good coach (like the coaching decision recently to not foul) but Melo is infinitely worse for the team. His points cover up his low %, his mentality brings down team atmosphere, his trade demand kicks good potential players out of Knicks, his selfishness ruins coach's plays and kills the team game.

I would even forgive him for being a selfish player if he was actually good enough to back up the "stardom" he has. But he's not. He's overrated and waste of money. I hope people can see this.

Yea, definitely a cancerous energy sink. Saw it in the performance and body language in the lopsided loss to the Blazers tonight.

You must not have watched 6 loss streak games with Melo in them then.

You must not have watched the Knicks pre-Linsanity. Enough with the piling on Melo crap, it's old. Nobody cares about that shiet anymore. New chapter, turn the leaf. The Woodsanity era begins. Captain Tyson got Melo's back, that's good enough for me

And you must not have watched the Knicks since Knicks got Melo. Knicks have never won anything from Melo being around...in fact, Denver has had a better record from getting rid of Melo and Knicks got worse record from gaining Melo. He has YET to prove why he got that multi million dollar contract.

In fact, I'll show you an ESPN article way back in the day before Knicks got Melo


Carmelo Anthony has averaged 20 points per game every season since he arrived in the NBA. This past campaign, he became the third-youngest player ever to reach the 10,000-point plateau, behind only Kobe Bryant and LeBron James. And next summer, he could hit the open market as an unrestricted free agent.
But despite all those gaudy point totals, the three-time All-Star may not even be worth the max deal a team would likely give him in 2011.
<offer></offer>
At first glance, Anthony seems like a member of the NBA's elite, largely due to his scoring prowess. But a deeper look at the points column and elsewhere in his game reveals a player who lives on an undeserved reputation more than his actual impact on wins.
It's tough to argue with his 28.2 points-per-game average in '09-10, but in the game of basketball, how a shooter gets his points is more meaningful than the raw number itself. To see that, we need to peel back the layers.
Let's first talk about Anthony's shot volume. It's not exactly a secret that 'Melo likes to shoot the rock, but his propensity to launch shots may raise some eyebrows. This past season, no player in the NBA took more shots per minute than Anthony -- not Kobe, not LeBron, not even scoring champ Kevin Durant.
It may seem obvious that a player worthy of 20 shots per game would have a healthy conversion rate. But in Anthony's case, that's far from the truth. Anthony, in reality, had a below-average field goal percentage (.458) this past season -- and his career percentage (.459) is no different. (The league average is .463.)
The sharp readers out there will point out that traditional field goal percentage doesn't reflect Anthony's shooting ability, since he launches a healthy dose of 3-pointers, which obviously count more on the scoreboard. That's true. But if you've been paying attention, you know Anthony is not a good shooter from beyond the arc, so that doesn't help his case. As a career .308 percent 3-point shooter, his shot from downtown ranks far below the norm (the average small forward shot .349 last season; Melo shot .316) and any progress he seemingly made in 2008-09, when he shot a career-high .371, disappeared. Even if we incorporate the added point bonus of a 3-pointer, the Syracuse product's shooting percentages are, at best, average.
It seems that, anyway we slice it, Anthony is a gunner at the core. His exceptional skill on offense is his ability to get his shot off, whether it's attacking the rim or through a patented pull-up jumper on the perimeter. But interestingly enough, Anthony got his shot blocked a whopping 109 times last season, which ranks as the second-highest total in the league, according to Hoopdata.com. Evidently, he doesn't lack perseverance.
Anthony's case illustrates a fundamental problem in conventional basketball analysis: scoring averages don't reflect efficiency. It's true that Anthony scored 28.2 points per game last season, but it's also true that no player missed more shots as often as Anthony did. Feel free to credit his skill but also pay attention his lofty shot volume and playing time.
And that's before we consider the disguise of team pace. Since Anthony entered the league, the Denver Nuggets have averaged 95.9 possessions per game, which places them as the third -fastest squad in the NBA over that period of time (and just a fraction behind the high-octane Phoenix Suns). Over that same span, the Nuggets have squeezed out an extra four possessions per game when compared to the average NBA team. Do the math, and the Nuggets have enjoyed nearly 2,000 extra possessions above the norm since Anthony joined the NBA. That's a ton of extra opportunities that can pad the per-game stats used as measuring sticks.
So after stripping out the inflationary effect of fast pace and boiling down Anthony's numbers to a per possession level, his scoring punch looks even more pedestrian. How pedestrian? Anthony's career offensive rating, an efficiency measure that calculates how many points a player produces per 100 possessions he uses, checks out at 107, which sits right at the league average. For reference, 2003 draft-mates James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh have earned 114, 111, and 113 lifetime offensive ratings, respectively.
Before we prematurely call Anthony an average player, there is something to be said for the burden of trust. Not every player can still perform while shouldering the heavy scoring responsibility that Anthony has endured. But the Nuggets have probably allowed Anthony to shoot far too often if efficiency -- and winning -- is their goal. In fact, last season Melo was only sixth on his own team in ORtg (110), trailing far behind other legit weapons like Nene (124), Chauncey Billups (120) and Ty Lawson (118).
Aside from scoring, Anthony doesn't have many other bankable weapons as a player. His rebounding (career 6.2 rpg) is only slightly better than what we'd expect from a small forward, and he doesn't create opportunities for his teammates like Paul Pierce, Wade and James can. Furthermore, he hasn't shown the intensity and dedication on the defensive end that you'd want from a max player.
In the end, Anthony's game demonstrates why it's important to strip away the biases that color our perceptions of elite players. In Anthony's case, the excessive shot volume, his team's stat-padding tempo and the lack of a true 3-point game makes his 28.2 ppg seem far less impressive than his sparkling reputation would suggest.
If anything, it's time we moved on from per-game statistics to evaluate our players. Millions of dollars are wasted every year basing player value on the archaic statistics that teams used half a century ago. And someone will surely overpay Anthony and offer him a max contract -- just look at the deals Joe Johnson and Rudy Gay got.
If the New York Knicks, rumored to be the favorites to land Melo if he decides to leave Denver, are expecting salvation from Anthony next summer, they're going to be very disappointed with their investment. It would be a much a wiser move to throw that cash toward the pursuit of Chris Paul, a real max player.

Hard to argue Chris Paul, but I'd rather have the combo of Melo + Captain Tyson's defense.

tkf
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3/15/2012  12:30 AM
MarburyAnd1Crossover wrote:I will look forward to following the team D'Antoni is coaching next year. His Suns were a blast and Knicks could have had something similar if the owner was not so impulsive. I love the way D'Antoni wants to play and I think he will have no trouble implementing this system on some team where ownership and management will work with him.

I will look forward to Carmelo getting his wish and the Knicks moving forward with isolation basketball. Always I have maintained that it will be either D'Antoni or Carmelo, that they cannot coexist, and that the franchise must choose between team basketball or Carmelo isolation; the franchise has chosen.

I will look forward to following Danilo Gallinari in his career but I will not look forward to crying myself to sleep after watching Nuggets games; it is hard to forget what our Knicks could have been with Gallinari, Amar'e, and a point guard.

Now some predictions: Knicks finish below .500 this year, win 46 games next year. Never advance past First Round during Carmelo's big fat contract. D'Antoni reaches Finals before Knicks.

+100

Anyone who sits around and waits for the lottery to better themselves, either in real life or in sports, Is a Loser............... TKF
mrKnickShot
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3/15/2012  12:32 AM
tkf wrote:
MarburyAnd1Crossover wrote:I will look forward to following the team D'Antoni is coaching next year. His Suns were a blast and Knicks could have had something similar if the owner was not so impulsive. I love the way D'Antoni wants to play and I think he will have no trouble implementing this system on some team where ownership and management will work with him.

I will look forward to Carmelo getting his wish and the Knicks moving forward with isolation basketball. Always I have maintained that it will be either D'Antoni or Carmelo, that they cannot coexist, and that the franchise must choose between team basketball or Carmelo isolation; the franchise has chosen.

I will look forward to following Danilo Gallinari in his career but I will not look forward to crying myself to sleep after watching Nuggets games; it is hard to forget what our Knicks could have been with Gallinari, Amar'e, and a point guard.

Now some predictions: Knicks finish below .500 this year, win 46 games next year. Never advance past First Round during Carmelo's big fat contract. D'Antoni reaches Finals before Knicks.

+100

-100

tkf
Posts: 36487
Alba Posts: 6
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3/15/2012  12:37 AM
mrKnickShot wrote:
tkf wrote:
MarburyAnd1Crossover wrote:I will look forward to following the team D'Antoni is coaching next year. His Suns were a blast and Knicks could have had something similar if the owner was not so impulsive. I love the way D'Antoni wants to play and I think he will have no trouble implementing this system on some team where ownership and management will work with him.

I will look forward to Carmelo getting his wish and the Knicks moving forward with isolation basketball. Always I have maintained that it will be either D'Antoni or Carmelo, that they cannot coexist, and that the franchise must choose between team basketball or Carmelo isolation; the franchise has chosen.

I will look forward to following Danilo Gallinari in his career but I will not look forward to crying myself to sleep after watching Nuggets games; it is hard to forget what our Knicks could have been with Gallinari, Amar'e, and a point guard.

Now some predictions: Knicks finish below .500 this year, win 46 games next year. Never advance past First Round during Carmelo's big fat contract. D'Antoni reaches Finals before Knicks.

+100

-100

no need to list your IQ , we are well aware.

Anyone who sits around and waits for the lottery to better themselves, either in real life or in sports, Is a Loser............... TKF
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