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Nalod
Posts: 71157 Alba Posts: 155 Joined: 12/24/2003 Member: #508 USA |
![]() franco12 wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:KnickDanger wrote:What are we expecting from this season...realistically? For me it is (hopefully) development of our young-uns, increasing competitiveness (and wins) as the season progresses, and the establishment of a team vision and identity that (again hopefully) comes from strong effort, defense, and ball movement. As for the first, RJ, Mitch, and Frank all seem to be establishing themselves as genuine NBA players, maybe more. Knox is a little behind that, then DSJ, Dotson, Trier for whom there is still time (no matter what the knuckleheads say). I also see increasing competitiveness and effort. As for team identity I will stay tuned. wouldn't have to do with him wearing the same number? LOL. The bigger shoulders? Skin tone? He does have some Allan Houstan qualities! Have to consider Allan was a 22 year old rookie in Detroit avg 19 min a game and 8.5 pts his rookie campaign. Other than one 50 game season at age 27 he missed less than 5 games a season until he was 32. Age 31 he playd all 82 games for the 4th time in his career. Knox won't be 21 until August. He is avg. 22 min a game. https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/h/houstal01.html |
franco12
Posts: 34069 Alba Posts: 4 Joined: 2/19/2004 Member: #599 USA |
![]() Nalod wrote:franco12 wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:KnickDanger wrote:What are we expecting from this season...realistically? For me it is (hopefully) development of our young-uns, increasing competitiveness (and wins) as the season progresses, and the establishment of a team vision and identity that (again hopefully) comes from strong effort, defense, and ball movement. As for the first, RJ, Mitch, and Frank all seem to be establishing themselves as genuine NBA players, maybe more. Knox is a little behind that, then DSJ, Dotson, Trier for whom there is still time (no matter what the knuckleheads say). I also see increasing competitiveness and effort. As for team identity I will stay tuned.
I tried to find a good video, but not finding anything quickly. Even if Knox can develop into Hubert Davis 2.0, having the kind of shot he shows, even with the poor defense, we will be happy to have him on the team. |
Nalod
Posts: 71157 Alba Posts: 155 Joined: 12/24/2003 Member: #508 USA |
![]() franco12 wrote:Nalod wrote:franco12 wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:martin wrote:Vmart wrote:KnickDanger wrote:What are we expecting from this season...realistically? For me it is (hopefully) development of our young-uns, increasing competitiveness (and wins) as the season progresses, and the establishment of a team vision and identity that (again hopefully) comes from strong effort, defense, and ball movement. As for the first, RJ, Mitch, and Frank all seem to be establishing themselves as genuine NBA players, maybe more. Knox is a little behind that, then DSJ, Dotson, Trier for whom there is still time (no matter what the knuckleheads say). I also see increasing competitiveness and effort. As for team identity I will stay tuned. H20 was a very smooth fundamentally sound player. his footwork to create space and his delivery was a work of art. He was not explosively athletic either. His rise in the third year of his career coinciding with free agency was life changing for him and his family. He was just 25 and on the rise. I always believed his opt out and subsequent high end deal we gave him was a hand shake deal we lived up to despite the fact he could not live up to that money. That aside, he was an very good knick and had his indelible moment with "the shot". We stabbed Riley and Heat one more time and made our improbable run to the finals in 1999. The candidates were winnowed down to Miller and Allan Houston. Miller was a proven commodity under pressure, a natural attraction. Miller had the personality for the place. Houston was younger and more likely to sign without dragging the team through a series of negotiating ploys. Grunfeld and Dave Checketts didn’t want to be used as leverage. They might have ended with nothing, after all the maneuvering. The Knicks finally signed Houston, while Miller was in Atlanta for the 1996 Olympics. The Indiana player got the news at the U.S. team’s hotel, and went whining to U.S. teammate Grant Hill of the Pistons. “Your guy just ruined my plans,” Miller told Hill. Nobody really knew what Miller’s plans might have been, including Houston. “I didn’t care,” Houston said yesterday. “I did what was the best situation for me.” While hindsight might have told us that could have been the better value we did not know how much Reggie had left in the tank. He played to age 39 and still made two allstar teams. He might have just wanted to use knicks to gain a better contract? Thus we don't know if he really would have signed. |