- Tyson Chandler
is it sustainable?
"... everyone assumed that the story of a successful Knicks team would feature tales of the derring-do by ‘Melo and Amare. However, Woodson’s squad is a surprising team. This very good Knicks team over the last three games has really been the story of Chandler and the bench."
While all the gnashing of teeth over bad apple Carmelo was occupying the opinion merchants, something crazy happened. The players ignored the experts and the doubters, and continued the process of defining themselves, with a HUGE assist from Mike Woodson.
“I expected to anchor this team, honestly, especially defensively,... We have to use our horses. We have to use Carmelo. We have to use Amare, but we can’t allow teams to just know where we’re going every night. We have to have contributors like J.R. (Smith), myself, (Steve) Novak.”
And what about the "soon-to-be-ignored"/ overlooked/ rookie/ discarded Jeremy Lin?
Even Howard Beck had it wrong when he wrote, "Linsanity Has Left The Building"
It’s the end of Linsanity as we know it.
The sudden and surprising change in head coaches almost ensures it.
Lin blossomed because he played in a system that perfectly suited him, for a coach who believed in him and needed him. Lin restored the aesthetics and the excitement to Mike D’Antoni’s frenetic offense and restored faith at Madison Square Garden.
But D’Antoni left the building Wednesday, taking his speedy, free-flowing offense with him. His replacement, Mike Woodson, is an old-school coach and Larry Brown disciple who emphasizes defense, ball control and isolation play. He does not push the tempo, or rely heavily on the pick-and-roll. He holds a tight leash on his point guards.
None of this bodes well for Lin.
Think again.
“I’m learning to play in a less spread offense, ... A lot of stuff is still the same. But there are times when I won’t have as many opportunities. I just need to be select about when to go. I think tonight was a big step."
Can you say discipline?