Whenever Kristaps Porzingis touches the basketball now it’s become must-watch television.
A “very comfortable” Porzingis has been torching the league since the start of the season. The Knicks have been the benefactors of his emergence as their go-to guy.
The narrative for the basketball landscape in New York City lately has centered around the Knicks and Nets heading in different directions.
The Knicks are under new management with team president Steve Mills and general manager Steve Perry. On the court, the trade of Carmelo Anthony signaled the official beginning of the Kristaps Porzingis era.
Brooklyn is in year two of a massive rebuild which has caught the attention of everyone around the league.
Where the Knicks have struggled with cohesion, the Nets have thrived. For proof of this, all you would have to do is take a quick look at the standings.
Coming into Friday night’s matchup at Madison Square Garden, the Nets were 3-2 and coming off of an impressive home win over LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Meanwhile, not only were the Knicks looking for their first win of the season –- they were also looking to silence any whispers of their team heading in the wrong direction.
There was plenty to feel encouraged about for Knicks fans, starting with the play of point guard Frank Ntilikina.
A league source told ESPN’s Dave McMenamin that Jerry West – who once tried to hire ex-Cavaliers Gm David Griffin in Memphis – planned to reach out to Leiweke, who like West has former ties to the Los Angeles Lakers from his time working for AEG, to endorse Griffin as candidate to replace Jackson.
Griffin has long coveted a big job like the Knicks and considers all of his experience in two-plus decades in the league was an apprenticeship for such a challenge. – Ramona Shelburne of ESPN
The Leiweke, mentioned by Shelburne, would be Tim Leiweke of the Oak Hill Group. Leiweke, along with Knicks general manager Steve Mills, are running day-to-day operations of the team on an interim basis. Leiweke will have strong input on who the next team president will be.
David Griffin Is Available and Ready To Mingle
The Knicks need stability and, for the sake of everyone’s sanity, someone who knows what they’re doing. Griffin brings credibility to the table. Unlike Jackson, he has front office experience.
The Knicks could get Griffin without having to worry about compensation, he’s a front-office free agent. The same can’t be said for Toronto Raptors president Masai Ujiri, who’s very much under contract. The Knicks would almost certainly have to give up draft picks to get him. That’s not ideal, no matter how much respect they have for him.
During his time in Cleveland, Griffin was instrumental in transforming the Cavaliers from contenders to a championship-level franchise. Cleveland went to the NBA Finals in each of the last three seasons with Griffin as their GM. They won the championship in the 2015-16 season, the team’s first ever title.
Griffin’s departure from the Cavaliers also didn’t go over well with LeBron James, according to reports. James stepped up for Griffin, that’s a strong indication of the level of respect he’s earned.
If no one appreciated you Griff I did, and hopefully all the people of Cleveland! Thanks for what u did for the team for 3 yrs! We got us 1🏆
It can’t hurt to pickup the phone and see just how interested Griffin is in the position. This would be the big-market gig he reportedly has been looking for. It would also likely come with a significant pay raise, which he couldn’t secure in Cleveland.
The Knicks can’t afford to get this next hire wrong. Griffin’s available and ready to mingle.
The Knicks finally pulled the plug on Phil Jackson. The team announced both sides would be parting ways, effective immediately.
The news comes at a time where, once again, the Knicks were dangerously close to forcing their fanbase to pull their plug on supporting them. Has there ever been a team, like this, that can find more ways to blow it?
Jackson is already in the history books as one of the greatest NBA coaches ever, it’s just too bad he was unable to transfer some of that over to the front office. He’ll go down arguably as one of the worst team presidents in history.
Knicks and President Phil Jackson are expected to announce that they’re parting ways early Wednesday morning, sources told ESPN.
If Jackson needed a reason for being shown the door, all the Knicks had to do was point to the numbers. In just his first ever role in a front office position, Jackson finished with a record of 80-166. It was three seasons of destroy and rebuild during his tenure, no playoff games, and the complete opposite of the stability fans were hoping a man with his resume would bring.
Numbers never lie but, in the Knicks case, there was so much more which led to the end.
Phil Jackson, The Triangle, The Drama
Jackson’s insistence on having the Knicks run the triangle offense, a system none of the players seemed to ever buy into, stunted any progress they tried to build off of. The Knicks, during Jackson’s three-year run, revamped their roster three times to try and find the right mix of players for the triangle — it never worked.
Jackson came away with $60 million dollars for running the Knicks further into the ground. I’d find it very hard to believe he’d ever say he had trouble sleeping after all this. If anything may haunt Jackson it could be when he decided to give Carmelo Anthony a no-trade clause. Anthony’s still around, at least for now, while Jackson’s not.
There was the triangle, the Carmelo saga, the exit meeting with Kristaps Porzingis which never happened and it’s aftermath. The list reads like a manual on what not to do as team president. Perhaps someone should have given Jackson one before he said yes to the job.
Remember when all Jackson had to do was draw up a play then put his hands up to signal the triangle? He’d then tell his team to give the ball to number’s 23, 34, 8, or 24.
But Michael Jordan, Shaquille O’Neal, and Kobe Bryant were not coming through the doors of Madison Square Garden. Neither was Steve Kerr, Jackson’s first choice to teach the Knicks about the triangle.
The Knicks hiring Jackson sounded like a good idea, then quickly became another mess. It was another toxic situation for the Knicks with no end in sight.
The argument can be made Jackson never really wanted the job to begin with. He was inept at hiring a head coach to do the job he wanted no parts of.
Three years, three head coaches, and $60 million dollars later – the Knicks find themselves right back in familiar territory.