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Jason Kidd Tough as Always
Photo by
Mark Dadswell-Getty
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Nate Robinson Up and
Coming ?
Photo-Rick Stevens - AP
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Not
totally lost amongst the drivel that surrounds our nation's biggest
football
game is some huge basketball news, foremost of which is the trade Jason
Kidd is
trying to orchestrate out of New
Jersey. The world's greatest point guard,
who'll be 35 in March, has asked/demanded that he be traded to a
winning
team. He maintains that he can't help this Nets team win anymore,
even if
he does get another triple-double.
It's
truly a shame that it has come to this. I can still recall the
sheer
elation of watching Kidd transform the Nets from doormat to contender
in those
wonder years of 2001 and 2002, leading a go-for-broke team of natural
wonders
who just needed a leader. The young K-Mart, Kenyon Martin,
provided the
power inside, Kerry Kittles the speed and grace on the wing, Keith Van
Horn
posting up, Lucious Harris firing from the outside, the rookie Richard
Jefferson, but also hard working young men like Aaron Williams and
Jason
Collins.
What
a joy to watch them ! Running and gunning, all of them having fun
playing
basketball. Kidd provided whatever was needed, the pass through
traffic,
the rebound to start still another fast break, even the 3-pointer
behind the
arc when nobody else could find the rim. Ably led by Byron Scott,
I
watched from the second deck as this improbable bunch of heroes
dismantled the
Pacers, then the Hornets, and then the Celtics in the final round of
the
Eastern Conference Playoffs. That they eventually lost to the
Lakers in
four straight was no reflection on Jason Kidd or that team. It
was more
an NBA predilection for the plodding style of Shaquille O'Neal rather
than the
speed and flash of the Nets.
What a difference from today’s team of
malcontents. What should be still a fairly
good team, with
Richard Jefferson and Vince Carter providing the other points of a Big
Three,
has become a defensive sieve, a team that can’t make the big stop,
score the
big buckets, a team that has become no fun to watch.
<>
Who could blame Kidd for wanting to leave ?
Not me, certainly.
In
fact, I hope the team can find a spot for
him, and can obtain some value in return.
The
alternative is unthinkable.
To watch this
unhappy group slog through a whole
season like this is not
a happy vision.
They’ll undoubtedly be
better with the return of Nenad Krstic, their injured center, but I
doubt that
he could provide enough to make them much better than mediocre.
This team has given up.
It is a shame, though, that Kidd could
not go about this a
little more smoothly. As much as Kidd
has helped New Jersey, I think New Jersey has
also
helped him. He should try to show the
same patience off the court as he does between the lines.
This heavy-handedness doesn’t become him.
<>
The counterpoint to Kidd in the
New York area
is the mercurial guard of the
New York Knicks, Nate Robinson.
While
Kidd is always under control, Robinson can’t seem to find a working
transmission, he’s always in high gear.
While
that can be entertaining to watch, and it can
also provide a spark
to the team, he unfortunately can also check their momentum in a
heartbeat,
either by throwing the bad pass, or even losing his dribble, as he did
in the
last Knicks loss to
Golden
State.
In a game that was winnable, Nate would throw
the game away, then bring it back, like a yo-yo on a string.
Although I can’t say he lost the game, poor
shooting down the stretch did that, he didn’t play nearly as well as I
know he
could. <>
The Knicks have talent, undoubtedly, to my mind.
They are beginning to show signs of figuring
out how to play together.
Jamal Crawford
has been a joy to watch, hitting the open man and the open shot, most
nights
anyway, not against
Golden
State.
Curry can play center, but it’s become
obvious that he can’t do it all the time.
Zach
Randolph has helped in that respect, providing
a guy who can post
up down low.
They don’t seem to play
together well.
Neither of them seems to
play enough defense to allow them to both occupy the court together.
But there are enough role players in that
lineup to get them over the hump.
I’m
beginning to think they need a firmer hand. <>
It hasn’t helped this Knicks team that Isiah Thomas
has been
under the gun all season.
On almost
every occasion that Isiah has cracked a much-needed whip, against
Marbury,
Randolph and Curry, at different points in the season, it seems to have
worked
against him, but not on the court itself.
It
has worked wonders on the court.
Thomas is
anything but heavy-handed, and voices his
displeasure mostly
in the form of playing time.
In fact, he
may be unsuited to this job if only because he does treat his players
with kid
gloves.
<>The Knicks will finish this season strongly.
Much as they did last year before the
unfortunate injuries to Jamal Crawford and David Lee, they’ll play much
better,
but they do need a more controlled Nate Robinson, one who can choose
his spots
for providing that spark.
If his game
can mature, even a little bit, I think the Knicks will get back to the
.500
mark, maybe even better.
Isiah needs to
provide that consistent message to each of his players though,
something that
doesn’t seem natural to him.
I’m personally rooting for Isiah (and
the Knicks) to pull it
off. I’d also like to see Jason Kidd get
his wishes, if only for all he’s given to New Jersey over the years. But a little less heavy-handedness, please,
from Kidd and a little more from Isiah.
