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Mike D'Antoni - one
more time?
Photo
by AFP - Getty/File
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David Lee - hope for the future
Photo
by Ron Hoskins - Getty |
After
hearing a good deal of nonsense about how Mark Jackson was promised the
job,
and how it's somehow "confusing" that a bad team would hire a good
coach, I was happy to hear both Mike D'Antoni and Donnie Walsh debunk
those
rumors and express some difficulty in even understanding why a bad team
could
NOT hire a good coach.
The shock jocks on WFAN and YES did it
again though. I
keep thinking they can't say anything even more shocking than the day
before,
but they surpassed themselves today.
One key piece of research, I would
think, that one should do
before an interview is to know the interviewee's name. After two
or three
times calling the coach "D'Antonio", they finally managed to correct
themselves. They later excused themselves by saying that "a lot
of
people have gotten it wrong" and "it's a hard name".
I
keep asking myself WHY I continue to listen. The answer lies in
the fact
that their show gets ALL the important interviews. Their show has
become
so popular over the years that it has become a huge sports forum.
And
that's to every sports fan's benefit, but, still, for two
Italian-American
interviewers to botch another Italian-American's name is embarrassing
to me,
both as an Italian-American and as a New Yorker.
In
any event, so far so good with D'Antoni and Donnie Walsh too, for that
matter. D'Antoni made it clear that he can coach, he can be
flexible, that he didn't come to New York
just
for the money, that he and his family both love New York, and that he gets along
very well
with Stephon Marbury.
He
also explained that he coaches to the strengths of his team, and he had
very
skilled offensive players in Phoenix
as well as a 6'7" center. He also had to defend his record in
Phoenix, as if that record needed any defending, but he made it clear
that they
lost to San Antonio (THAT'S where they got the "D'Antonio" from, I
guess), arguably the best team in the NBA for years.
Mr.
Walsh made it clear that he NEVER offered the job to Mark Jackson, that
he
liked Mark Jackson very much, but that Mike D’Antoni was the most
qualified
person for the job. And nobody could
argue with that, not even those two. He
made it clear that, before making any big decisions on personnel, he
would
first determine his current player’s talents, in what scheme they would
be most
effective, and only then would he make decisions on acquisitions.
Walsh
also made it clear that he would never swap a player with just one year
left on
his contract for one with three or four years to expiry.
That, of course, was a discussion with
respect to Marbury, who, although he will earn (well, maybe “earn” is
too
strong a word) about 21 million dollars next year, it will only be for
one more
year, and, besides, he made no bones about the fact that he recognizes
that
Stephon is a very talented player.
Walsh
also answered the question as to whether he ever said that he wanted a
defensive coach. While he didn’t say
that, he clarified that defense is certainly important and stressed the
significance of point differential rather than points made or given up
on
either side of the ball.
Given
the stated process, it’s hard to believe that progress will come
quickly for
the Knicks. That being said, however,
Walsh has pulled rabbits out of a hat before with Indianapolis.
And
D’Antoni has had success at every stop. From West
Virginia
to the NBA,ABA
and Italian League as a player, than as a coach, he’s been part of
winning
teams and sometimes championships. Of
course, he had incredible success with Phoenix
of the NBA. And, judging from the
reactions
of the Nets’ Boki Nachbar to D’Antoni’s hiring, he’s also a dream to
play for.
So
what’s not to like? I’m not sure I like
his mustache, but I struggle to find anything else.
In fact, for as much flak as Knicks owner
James Dolan has had to take over the years, he seems to have hired the
best
possible choices for both GM and now coach.
Let’s
see what transpires though. Let’s see
what happens when D’Antoni runs smack into the horror of Eddy Curry as
center. That to me is a gigantic
problem, and will no doubt be D’Antoni’s biggest challenge. There are Marbury, of course, David Lee,
Jamal Crawford and Zak Randolph with talent, but the rest of the roster
is
expendable. Combined with the fact that
a few of those expendable players have a few years left on their
contracts,
some of the problems become long-term ones.
There’s
always hope though, especially with good people at the top. And that appears to be in place.
If they can sign their probable lottery pick
in this year’s draft, success could be right around the corner. After all, Isiah’s team was doing creditably
just two years ago before injuries to Crawford and Lee.
When
Crawford and Lee returned, however, there was Zak Randolph, who, for
whatever
reason, never worked out, although he should have been a big help. His stats had been among the highest for
power forwards in the entire league. Unfortunately,
the fragile Curry never seemed to
recover from the
challenge of having another inside scoring presence.
And neither player played defense.
Isiah
always seemed to think he could just acquire good players, and
everything else
would work itself out. Maybe they did to
his mind in Detroit. Isiah never flinched when asked about how
Marbury would mesh with another fine scoring point guard, or how
Randolph and
Curry would co-exist. Of course, they
never did, and I wonder to this day whether Isiah is worried yet.
Probably
not, he’s got some guaranteed money coming his way.
And, no doubt, he’ll still be useful as a
consultant. As long as the questions are
pointed to past experiences, everything should be just fine in
Knicks-land.
