(Go: >> BACK << -|- >> HOME <<)

New York Magazine

Skip to content, or skip to search.

Skip to content, or skip to search.

’Melo Out

The Knicks are finally sticking to a smart long-term plan. A quick-fix trade is just what they don’t need.

ShareThis

Carmelo Anthony
Illustration by André Carrilho  

One year ago next week, the debate raging on our city’s back pages was whether the New York Knicks should sign Allen Iverson. This was mostly because we were all pretty bored. The team, in Year Two of its Fumigate the Isiah Era Project, was lousy and dull, 2-9, listless, and wretched to watch. That was part of the plan; last year’s Knicks roster was full of expiring contracts just serving out the rest of their sentences. Winning wasn’t the point; it almost would have gotten in the way.

Which is why Iverson, who had sulked his way out of Memphis and was well en route to sulking his way out of the NBA, became such a local curiosity. If the Knicks were going to lose, shouldn’t they lose with the flair of one of the league’s most marketable and thrilling players of all time? What did they have to lose? Give us something.

The Knicks, to the dismay of some fans, demurred, citing the team’s long-term interests. “With the development of some of our young guys and with Gallo [Danilo Gallinari] and Wilson [Chandler] and Toney Douglas,” coach Mike D’Antoni said at the time, “we just didn’t think right now we wanted to have that dominant force on the team.” On one hand, this was a polite way of saying, “Iverson’s a crazy person,” but the underlying message was, “We have a plan here. Let us stick to it.” Signing Iverson would have been an admission that the plan wasn’t working, that the Knicks were on par with the Grizzlies, bringing in a guy just because he’d help out at the turnstiles. Stunting the growth of young players, turning them into bit players in the Iverson Odyssey, would not have been the move of a confident organization. Signing Iverson was something Isiah Thomas would have done.

The plan hasn’t worked exactly as D’Antoni and team president Donnie Walsh drew it up—unless LeBron James is playing at the Garden right now, and someone just forgot to tell me—but they remain committed to it. The Knicks are amassing assets, and they are hanging on to them. This matters. And it matters more, really, than wins and losses. Which is good, because so far, in this season of Amar’e Stoudemire and the rediscovery of hope, there have been more of the latter than the former. That doesn’t mean the plan isn’t working. It certainly doesn’t mean it’s time to panic. Nor does it mean the Knicks should dump everything to trade for Denver’s Carmelo Anthony, however loudly the tabloids call for it or how tantalizing the prospect appears.

The irony of the first ten games of the New New Knicks is that their strengths are the exact opposite of what they were supposed to be. For all the excitement of D’Antoni’s “Seven Seconds or Less” quick-draw, scream-down-the-court-on-the-fast-break offense, the Knicks have looked confused and bewildered when they have the ball. Stoudemire is still waiting for his first superstar breakout game; he has shown surprising passivity in the lane and is turning the ball over at an alarming rate. New guard Raymond Felton has been a lovely improvement at the point, but he seems frustrated with his teammates’ inability to get in the flow of the offense and, specifically, his inability to get the pick-and-roll to work with Stoudemire. He has a perpetual “Hey, I thought this was going to be the easy part” look on his face. Douglas and Chandler have been better than advertised, but nothing is quite meshing. In D’Antoni’s third season as Knicks coach, we are still waiting for the offensive laser-light show we were promised.

But the Knicks are staying in games because of a shockingly strong defense, using their length and tenacity to take advantage of individual matchups. The Knicks are oddly fun to watch on the defensive end; they are among the NBA leaders in blocks and in steals. It makes them as entertaining as they are erratic; this is a team of young players still figuring out their abilities and how to interact with those of their teammates. The first half of their first game—a win over the Raptors—was a glittering example of what this could all be, a high-energy, hawking defense and a layup line of dunks in transition. The Knicks haven’t played as good a half since. This is a work in progress. But it’s a fun one. The energy at the Garden in the season’s first fortnight is the best it’s been in five years. This is a likable team, even when they’re losing.

Of course, that was part of the plan as well. The inconsistency—blistering wins over the Bulls and Wizards, followed immediately by sluggish losses to the 76ers and Bucks—was to be expected. The Knicks have six exciting young players who are improving with every game—Gallinari, Douglas, Chandler, Anthony Randolph, Timofey Mozgov, and breakthrough rookie Landry Fields—which is exactly six more than they’ve had at almost any point in the past decade. (Considering how many first-round picks Isiah traded away, this is rather amazing.) In the past, those players would have been traded away for past-their-prime stars in an ill-fated, undignified, quixotic stagger toward elusive postseason dreams. Now they’re here, and they’re ours. The Knicks have gone from one of the oldest, most slothful teams in the NBA to one of the youngest and most spry. The growing pains are sort of the point.


Related:

Advertising

Most Popular Stories

Current Issue
Subscribe to New York
Subscribe

Give a Gift

Advertising