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Eddie Curry - shown awake
Photo by
Jesse D Garrabrant - AP
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Zak
Randolph - 6" vertical
Photo by Ron Turenne - Getty |
Why do I like the Knicks so
much? It's inexplicable
really. They have one guy who shows up every day, a veritable
superstar
in my mind, a guy who not only shows up every day, but does so in the
absence
of anyone else. That would be Jamal Crawford, of course.
Half
shooting guard, half point guard, he consistently does either job,
whichever
one is needed the most that night.
And, yes, there is David Lee grabbing rebounds left and right. He
does
his job, but at 6'9" and 240, really can't be a presence in the
middle. He rebounds and makes a lot of dunks, seldom showing any
propensity to shoot the ball from any distance, not because he can't
necessarily, but because he has to get in line.
Maybe this Knicks team reminds me of those Mets of the Sixties, those
lovable
oafs. Who can forget Marv Throneberry, early Eddie Kranepool,
Choo Choo
Coleman, Rod Kanehl, and over-the-hill stars such as Duke Snider,
Richie
Ashburn, Gil Hodges and Frank Thomas? How about Roger Craig
pitching just
well enough to lose 20 games?.
You
have to go back that far, and to another sport, to find anything that
quite
mirrors this bunch. I think you can even draw a remarkable
parallel
between Isiah Thomas and that first Mets Manager, Casey Stengel.
Try to
get a straight answer out of either of them.
The
Marv Throneberry of this Knicks team would have to be Eddie
Curry. I'm
not quite sure he's as lovable but he sure is colorful. He plays
hard
about one game out of every three. A giant of a man at 6'11" and
285
pounds, he has 23 blocks this season, four of them in one
game. Just for
perspective, let me add that the fine young center, Carlos Boozer of
the Utah
Jazz, has only 24 blocks but he has grabbed 595 rebounds to Curry’s 247. Boozer is also a fierce defender.
I
find it quite amusing now that Eddie seems puzzled by his absence from
the
lineup. And Isiah justifies it, not by admitting the guy
epitomizes
"soft" but by philosophizing about the way the game has changed, how
more and more, teams are going with smaller lineups. Casey
couldn't have
said it any better. Isiah is either a very nice man, or he
brought Eddie
to the Knicks. Or both.
Then
there is 6'9" power forward, Zach Randolph. He has 9 blocked
shots. I tried to find a picture that would show some kind of
vertical
leap. Shown above is the result. He could be 8" or so off
the
ground. Has anyone seen him dunk? Despite his inability to
get up
in the air, he shoots the ball quite well, and actually does get his
share of
rebounds, averaging a humongous 10.1. So he does at least serve a
useful
function on the floor.
Curry,
who used to score, can't even do that this year. The team suffers
with
both big men on the floor. Eddie apparently doesn't know what
else he
could be doing when the ball goes to someone else.
It’s
a shame really. Randolph could have been a great
addition
despite his defensive liabilities. If
only those two could have played together, the Knicks would have had
two big
scoring threats down low, a tough thing to defend.
But, no, Curry elected to pout.
The
rest of the team is no bargain either. Quentin
Richardson, the starting small forward, has
been incredibly
inconsistent, and, for one long stretch of critical games (they’re all
critical
when you’ve won so few), could not find the basket.
It seemed to have left the building.
It was like watching the Yanks Chuck
Knoblauch trying to find first base.
At
point guard, there had been Stephon Marbury, of course.
Flawed at best, his season started badly,
there was a death in the family and then some fairly serious injuries,
and
ended quite early. There is hope in Nate
Robinson, though, who, while small in stature, can jump through the
roof, can
shoot the ball, and can really be a spark plug when he is not throwing
the ball
away. I’d compare him to an early Mets
fellow named Ron Swoboda, who could be great, but was more often not in
his
formative years.
There
is hope still, however, if you show patience. A
starting lineup of Robinson, Crawford, Lee,
Richardson and Randolph is
not too shabby. Although I’d like to see
a more consistent small forward, Richardson
does play defense. David Lee also tries
to put in a good defensive effort, but doesn’t have those quick feet.
Yes,
this Knicks team is exciting to watch, if you don’t expect too much. Even the backups can be exciting.
Mardy Collins, listed as Robinson’s backup at
the point, can play defense and Renaldo Balkman does the same behind Richardson. Jared Jeffries has been spelling Zach
Randolph and is also a defensive specialist. Freddy
Jones backs up Jamal, and he shows flashes of
real ability.
James
Dolan apparently decided not to make any more moves under Isiah,
deciding
apparently not to send good money after bad, or, at the very least,
deciding to
let the next man do it. And, although
I’ll miss what a new ingredient could have added, in the person of a
legitimate
point guard, small forward or center, it’s heartening to get an
indication that
change is on the way.
I
have tried to support Isiah all the way. Isiah
was such a breath of fresh air over Larry
Brown, who did nothing
but whine, and seemed to try to lose games, no doubt, putting his bid
in for
the GM role. Isiah has been, if nothing
else, a gentleman, at least in the public eye. Even
his player moves could have worked out, if not
for Eddie Curry,
Isiah’s biggest mistake.
Curry
just never had it, and despite Isiah’s most fervent prayers, Curry
would never
get it. He now occupies the bench much
of most nights, a place he richly deserves.
