What a great day to start a fresh new blog for the NY
Knicks. Through the turmoil that is the end of the Jeremy Lin
saga, Knicks fans have been jumping ship to the Linsanity Part II: Houston or the new
brand of Brooklyn basketball. I, for one, am firmly planting my flag as a true
Knicks fan. A true fan never waivers.
This is a true fan’s blog.
For the first blog post, I could not think of a topic better
than the Lin vs. Felton debate. Let’s look over what has transpired and try to
see into the Knicks’ brass point of view…
Back in February 2011, Jeremy Lin pushed Tebow-mania aside
and took over the sports world with Linsanity by leading a Meloless Knicks team to a 7 game “Linning”
streak, torching teams like the Mavericks and Lakers. But as we all know, “It
was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” Soon Carmelo Anthony would
return, and D’Antoni would run away from the Dolan drama taking his point guard
friendly offense elsewhere. Teams started scouting Lin, putting extreme
pressure on the 23 year old point guard and eventually his knees would give out
on him. This let the Knicks continue to the playoffs with the aging Baron Davis
and Mike Bibby to control the show. Ultimately, the Knicks would be crushed by
the Miami Heat in 5 games of a 7 game series, and Lin would infamously state he could
not play while 85% healthy.
Fast-forward past the Miami Heat title and the Bird Rights
arbitration (which was assumed to be a miracle for the Knicks) to the start of
NBA free agency. The Knicks began by not re-signing Lin right away and watching
Fields sign an enormous offer sheet with the Toronto Raptors while they pursued
the 2-time MVP Steve Nash. It was widely assumed the Knicks did not want to low
ball Lin with the max $24 mil 4 year deal they could offer him. So, they told
Lin to find his market value and the Knicks would match. Well the Rockets put
the young Asian star’s value at about $30 mil for 4 years (4th year
not guaranteed) paying around $5 mil for the first two and about $10 mil for the last two.
The Knicks showed their hand right away letting word leak that they would match
that offer and any offer up to $1 billion dollars. At the 11th hour,
Houston called NY’s bluff. They reformatted the offer to 3 years $28 mil with a
$14 mil paycheck in the 3rd year.
Now begin the controversy. Most sources will report the
Knicks weary of the luxury tax they would spend in 2015 with Lin, Chanlder,
Melo, and Amare set to make a combined $76 mil and exceed the salary cap on
their own. That story does not seem to make sense in my mind. As a Knicks fan
through the 90’s, I watched Dolan spend ridiculous amounts of money and pay
luxury tax on teams that would finish in the bottom on the division. Tons of money went to Eddy Curry and Stephon Marbury. He would
pay top dollar for Larry Brown to coach not even an entire season. Why were
they hesitant now to spend money on a player fans across the world came to
love?
Next, came the Raymond Felton trade. The player who was
certain the Knicks would not match Houston’s offer sheet to Lin and stated for
certain he was the Knicks starting point guard coming into the 2012-2013 season.
Turmoil brews and Knicks fans are split. Half say the Knicks are making the
blunder of the millennium letting a future star walk for nothing in return. The
second half saying it is the best thing the Knicks could do and Lin is nothing
more than a back-up.
How should I, a longtime Knick fan, handle this dilemma? I
can’t deny that I was captivated by Linsanity throughout the 2011-2012 season.
There is also no conceivable way to jump ship to Brooklyn or follow Lin to
Houston. So, I dug into everybody’s story a little deeper to understand the situation
from the decision makers’ point of view.
The Knicks roster without Lin looks as follows:
PG- Felton, Kidd, Prig
SG- J.R., James “Flight" White
SF-Melo, Chris Copeland
PF- Amare, Kurt Thomas
C- Chandler, Camby
SG- J.R., James “Flight" White
SF-Melo, Chris Copeland
PF- Amare, Kurt Thomas
C- Chandler, Camby
Mike Woodson stated at the start of free agency that veteran
ball clubs win championships. Well, it looks like he got what he wanted. But,
why Lin over Felton? Jeremy’s miraculous run lasted through the end of D’Antoni’s
term as head coach and ended when Woodson took over, Melo came back, and Lin
was injured. Lin, who played his best games under D’Antoni, averaged 15 points
and 6 assists in the fast pace, guard friendly offense. Remember Felton’s campaign
with the Knicks in the preMelo days? He too played in D’Antoni’s offense, but averaged
17 points and 9 assists. It was the same offense, but better numbers. Also,
remember when Felton was drafted by Charlotte? Larry Brown was coaching. The
same Larry Brown carried Woodson as an assistant coach before Atlanta wanted
him as a head coach. In turn Woodson has near the same coaching style and
system as Brown. Felton was undoubtedly an above average point guard under
Larry Brown.
Now people say Felton’s (28 years old) prime is behind
him and he is not motivated to be a solid starter anymore. I say Felton never wanted
to play anywhere but NY. When he was traded to Denver, he played decently, but
then he was exiled again to Portland. Who wouldn’t be angry about uprooting a
family and a life halfway across the country… twice? I would be fed up with
the business too. In Portland he was unmotivated, playing to get out of his
contract at the end of the season. When free agency came along, he had one team
in mind to play for: NY Knicks.
So, as Glen Grunwald, the Knicks GM, what are you thinking
now? Lin is going to cost the team a fortune and make it hard to acquire new
talent in the future with a heavy contract. Felton seemed to put up somewhat
better numbers than Lin in the same system. He has also proven himself in a
system similar to Woodson’s with Larry Brown when Jeremy barely played in
Woodson’s system at all. Felton has also shown a desire and passion to play
with the Knicks. Jeremy hasn’t been so adamant. Between the fact that he couldn’t
play against the Heat at 85% and reworking a contract with Houston at the last
hour, is he really a dedicated player that will put it all on the line for our
club and play at a $30 mil level?
There is no way to predict that Lin would be worth the money
he will make. It is however, safe to say that the Knicks will be getting a bargain in Felton. Paying him close to $20 mil less than Lin for a product they can be more
certain of. Lin is just too much of a gamble. Felton makes Basketball sense and
Business sense.
So there you have it. That is the best logical path I could
take to the decision to let Lin walk to Texas. As a Knicks fan, I am sad to see
him go, but not angry at him or the Knicks’ execs. I feel that it was the best
move for both parties. I hope Lin does well in his future with the Rockets, and
I am hopeful that the Knicks will be able to make deep runs into the playoffs
with this blueprint.
Orange and Blue, through and through.
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