fishmike wrote:OasisBU wrote:fishmike wrote:we had one of the youngest teams in the NBA, added Amare and were playoff bound with max cap space. We dumped it all for Melo a proven first round and done star with Marbury maturity.We have one young drafted player in Shump whom we tried to trade for Nash anyway.
Funny thing is the Knicks will be solid next year. Woody will get them to defend enough to go 50-32 and a 3rd or 4th seed. Then his iso-joe offense he rode all year will have the same results it did in Atl and Melo has every post season. Maybe we win a round.. that would be something special.
Didnt Melo make it to the WCF?
sure did... I guess that offsets the 8? 9? first round exits where his teams were never even competitive?Hey... the one year he advanced Nuggets had JR, Camby, KMart, Billups... looks like rebuilding that magical season is the goal.
Actually, it has been 7 total, and, again, it's not one man. You don't have to like Melo as I assume you never will, but get off the idea that he's been the problem with his teams. Unlike Ewing who had a relatively consistent core with Oak and Starks during his peak years and solid starters and role players, Melo (while clearly no Ewing) has had a revolving door of players with no say in who stays or goes, many on their way out or consistently injured.
As for Lin, we'll never know, but it's just as likely that he wanted to leave NY as anything else. That he wasn't forcing their hand for the best salary, but that he wanted to go to Houston. And while he could be honest about it, it would be a marketing disaster. So no matter how much he thanks and praises the Knicks, we'll never know his true motivations.