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We
Have Guys Like This-(Curry & Robinson)
Photo by
Nick Laham - Getty
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And Need Guys Like This-(Ginoboli)
Photo by D. Clarke Evans - Getty |
The onset of Spring usually means the
excitement of
March Madness, followed closely by some nail-biting NBA Playoffs
action. But not this Spring, not for New
Yorkers at
any rate.
What a wasteland has been this
2007-2008 basketball season
for New York
fans. Every New York
area men's basketball team is mediocre to bad, whether you're talking
professional or college teams. That would include the Knicks,
Nets, Seton
Hall or Rutgers.
While other cities teams can boast of
long winning streaks,
such as Houston, or tough-minded
do-everything
types of competitors, such as Manu Ginoboli of the Spurs, the New York fan
can only wonder what happened. How can the
Knicks manage the salary cap after
Isiah? How can the Nets replace Jason
Kidd? How can Bobby Gonzalez compete in
the Big East? How can Rutgers
do anything?
The Knicks season has been an arithmetic anomaly, 5 plus 1 somehow did
not make
6. Power forward Zach Randolph's acquisition did nothing for the
team as
Eddy Curry all but disappeared. The photo above left says a lot
about
Curry. It seems that Nate Robinson is lending him support, much
as coach
Isiah Thomas has been doing for too long.
Curry couldn’t handle having another
scorer to help him in
the post. He never could play
defense. So a one-dimensional player was
left with no dimensions. I’m hoping
he’ll be the first player to go under the new GM .
Curry defines soft. He
doesn’t rebound, doesn’t block shots,
doesn’t steal the ball. What he does is
watch opponents drive by, much like a “lookout block” in football.
The Knicks are loaded with
one-dimensional players. Even my favorite
Knick, Jamal Crawford, is
very often lost on defense. Even David
Lee, who rebounds like a crazy man, doesn’t have the quick feet needed
to stay
with his man. Even some of the alleged
defensive specialists on the Knicks, such as Jared Jeffries and Renaldo
Balkman
don’t seem quite up to the task.
You have to wonder whether Isiah is
capable of teaching
defensive basketball, although such a notion is hard to believe of a
“Bad Boys”
alumnus. Either that, or he has simply
acquired players who won’t play defense. Maybe
that’s what drove Larry Brown over the edge.
It hurt this Knicks team a lot,
though, to lose Stephon
Marbury. Another one-dimensional player,
at least he helped drive the offense, often so much so that the team
could
overcome its defensive liabilities. Nate
Robinson shows promise but he’s no Marbury.
Jamal Crawford has played too many
minutes this season. Recently, he’s lost
any spark he could, more
often than not, provide. Of course, he’s
hurt now too, nursing a bruised hand, rough on a shooter. Lee, Richardson, Randolph, they can’t do it by
themselves.
There is a recent report that Marbury
may be going to the
Pistons. Another report says that Curry
has torn cartilage but will continue to play. (Oh
joy…). That’s a nice display of toughness
from someone who
hasn’t shown much of
anything, but with only about 3 more years left on his 6-year 60
million dollar
contract, perhaps Eddy is beginning to see the end, especially in light
of the
fact that he’ll be losing his strongest supporter.
The Nets at least have a shrewd GM,
Rod Thorn, who brought
us Kidd for Marbury so many years ago. And
then picked up the young and talented point guard Devin Harris to take
the
point. But that move, while a good one
for the long haul, will not salvage this season. Not
with Vince Carter seeming to have
abandoned his breathtaking moves to the basket and Richard Jefferson
playing
inconsistently at best. Not with a team
that’s lost its reason for being, that seems to have given up in
mid-March.
Lawrence Frank needs to kick some
butt. He’s beginning to remind me of Jets
coach Eric
Mangini, so logical, so calm, so “professional”. Give
me a break ! These guys are just showing
up. Give me a coach who’ll get mad ! Give me a coach who’ll run these
gold-brickers into the ground !
I’m probably jumping the gun here but
I’m very tired of
watching lifeless basketball. And a
lifeless coach. (Lawrence did at least pick up a
technical
this night). The Nets have talent; they
just don’t appear to be really trying. I
know it’s a team game, and the Nets are assimilating new players, but
at least
give the appearance of effort !
Yes, the Nets too are playing soft. Very soft, like a Carvel double-dip on hot Bayonne asphalt
on the
Fourth of July. Complacent, all of them,
they can’t compete with the Ginoboli’s of the world, or Bowen, or Duncan, or
McGrady, or
Parker, or ANYBODY who’s trying.
Then there’s college ball. Seton Hall, I must say, always plays hard but
they
seem to be
over-matched in the Big East. Ranked 11th
for the Big East tourney, maybe they can turn it around but it’s pretty
unlikely. They’ll face 6th-ranked
Marquette
in
their opener tomorrow, the winner to take on 3rd-ranked
Notre Dame. Although nothing is impossible
in college
basketball, Marquette
beat the Pirates by six in January and by about 26 a month later. It’s almost inconceivable that the Golden
Eagles will falter in March.
All is not lost for the Pirates,
however, as they
successfully recruited one of the finest point guards in the country in
the
person of Jordan Theodore of Paterson,
NJ. Theodore is said to
be very quick, while able to knife
through traffic and make spinning moves to the hoop. That
should bode well for 2009 and beyond but
won’t help them tomorrow night.
Rutgers
of course couldn’t
even qualify for the tournament. They have
trouble in every aspect of the game, from shooting to rebounding to
defense.
Things can only get better, New York fans. The 2007-2008 season is just about over. The Nets are our only hope.
In the NBA East, they could possibly surprise.
