Tag: New York Knicks (Page 11 of 36)

Should the Nuggets wait to trade Carmelo?

Denver Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony (R) and Kenyon Martin congratulate each other as Anthony left the game with seconds left before winning Game 1 of their NBA Western Conference playoff series against the Utah Jazz in Denver April 17, 2010. REUTERS/Rick Wilking (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

Woody Paige says they should.

Karl, Anthony, Chauncey Billups, Nene and — I’ve decided, upon further review — Martin, Andersen and J.R. Smith have earned one more turn together.

Let’s find out if they can pick up where they left off six months ago and win again. If they can’t, six months from now, people can break up the Nuggets.

Carmelo can be traded.

At the end of the season, Martin and Smith’s contracts will expire; the Nuggets will have the option on Billups’ final year, and Anthony can walk away as a free agent if he’s not been traded by then. Let him go. Don’t burn jerseys. He will have given the Nuggets eight entertaining, controversial and winning seasons.

The Nuggets would be freed of almost $65 million in cap space (and Nene will have only one more season of an $11.6 mil salary) — and could start over, and go sign free agents and draft players in the first round once more. Besides, who knows what will become of the collective bargaining disagreement by then?

Sure, the Nuggets may be a 55-win team when everything goes their way, and maybe they have another Western Conference Finals run in them, but the big question is — are the Nuggets really a threat to the Lakers?

Because I know how this wait-and-see strategy is going to go. In February, the Nuggets are probably going to be somewhere in the #2-#4 range in the West, and they aren’t going to want to trade their best player away. Anthony will be happy because the team is winning and he’s resigned himself to another few months in Denver, and he won’t be talking about free agency.

But when the Nuggets inevitably lose in the playoffs, it will all start up again. At that point, the franchise will have lost whatever leverage they had. They will not be able to get anything (or much) in return because the Knicks will have the cap space to sign him.

So why not get the best deal you can now?

Want good young players? The Knicks have reportedly offered Danilo Gallinari and Eddy Curry’s expiring contract. Would they add Anthony Randolph to the deal if it meant they could lock up Carmelo long-term? I think they would.

Want draft picks? The Rockets could offer Kevin Martin and two first rounders that they got from the Knicks as part of the Tracy McGrady trade. If the Knicks don’t land Anthony, there’s a good chance that both of those will be lottery picks. If it all works out, there’s a chance the Nuggets could add three good players to a core that would presumably include Ty Lawson.

Knowing when to start the rebuilding process is one of the toughest things for a franchise to do and it’s often a painful, confusing process. If the Nuggets don’t trade Carmelo this summer, they may very well come to regret it.

It’s on — Nuggets reportedly willing to trade Carmelo

Denver Nuggets interim head coach Adrian Dantley (L) talks with forward Carmelo Anthony during the first quarter against the Utah Jazz in game one in the first round of the NBA playoffs at the Pepsi Center on April 17, 2010 in Denver.   UPI/Gary C. Caskey Photo via Newscom

Mark Kiszla of the Denver Post writes that the Nuggets don’t want to go the way of the Cavs or the Raptors and lose their superstar with basically nothing to show for it.

There is no way Denver can afford to lose the face of its franchise for nothing as a free agent.

The Nuggets are now considering a strategy to part ways with their 26-year-old star forward, according to a league source.

After quietly gauging trade interest in Anthony for weeks, the team’s consternation has only risen as he has made no move to accept a $65 million offer for a three-year contract extension that was formally presented more than a month ago.

The Nuggets don’t want to get LeBron’d.

Well if that doesn’t cause the trade offers to come flooding in, I don’t know what will. It should be noted that the Nuggets don’t even have a general manager at this point, so one would think that little piece of business should take priority. It’s hardly fair to the new GM to trade your superstar away before he takes his job.

What can the Nuggets get for Melo? Well, he’s obviously a coveted player, but with his reported interest in playing in the Big Apple and the leverage of a three-year extension in his back pocket, most teams won’t bother to give up the farm only to rent Anthony’s services for one year.

The two most serious offers will likely come from the two teams in the New York area — the Knicks and the Nyets. The Knicks could offer Danilo Gallinari, Anthony Randolph and maybe Wilson Chandler as well, while the Nets could put a package together that includes Derrick Favors and Terrence Williams.

The Knicks have the upper hand because they are reportedly Carmelo’s first choice.

So if you’re running the Nuggets, would you take Gallinari and Randolph in exchange for Anthony? Let’s not forget that the Knicks just traded David Lee away in order to land Randolph, who has shown a lot of promise and is just 21 years old. In eight games as a starter this season, he averaged 12-6 and 2.4 blocks in just 23 minutes of playing time. In 2008-09, he started 21 games as a rookie and averaged 10-9 and 1.4 blocks in 25 minutes of playing time. And that was playing for Don Nelson, who yanks guys out of the lineup faster than you can say ‘headcase.’

Meanwhile, Gallinari averaged 15-5 in his second season for the Knicks. He’s just 22 years old and is a 6-10 ‘stretch 4’ who hits threes at a 38% clip.

If the Nuggets can land both players and maybe get a future 1st round draft pick out of the deal, they can move forward and build around Randolph, Gallinari and Ty Lawson. That’s not bad. It’s better than the alternative, anyway.

But would the Knicks pull the trigger? Maybe they’d rather wait a year, sign Anthony outright and hold onto Gallinari and Randolph. A lot can happen in 12 months, and there’s a school of thought that they should strike while the iron is hot, but they could also bide their time if they feel like the chances are good that they’ll be able to sign Anthony next summer.

Tony Parker to the Knicks? Just ask his wife…

Happy couple Eva Longoria and husband Tony Parker enjoy the USA vs France basketball game in NYC, NY on August 15, 2010 where they watched Hollywood husband Lamar Odom play and were joined in the seats by director Spike Lee. Fame Pictures, Inc

Per the NY Post

The couple was at sold-out Red Bull Arena last night in Harrison, N.J., to watch their friend Thierry Henry and the Red Bulls lose 1-0 to the L.A. Galaxy.

Asked if Parker’s presence meant he was coming to New York, she responded, “No, we’re just here watching [Henry].”

Asked if her husband wanted to come to New York, she quickly flashed a smile, nodded her head and said, “Yes.”

The Knicks’ dream would be to acquire Carmelo Anthony and Chris Paul, but unless Paul forces a trade, the earliest he could sign outright would be the Summer of 2012. Parker wouldn’t be a bad backup plan if it looks like Paul is going to stay put in New Orleans.

Parker will be 29 next summer and has had trouble staying healthy. He has missed 49 games over the last three seasons. He definitely has the speed to run D’Antoni’s system, though I don’t know if he has the vision. He has never averaged more than seven assists per game, and isn’t the traditional pass-first point guard.

However, if he’s the third wheel behind Melo and Amare, I’m sure he would adjust. It’s just that Stoudemire is so good on the pick-and-roll and Parker isn’t the greatest passer in those situations.

Parker just has one year left on his contract and will be a free agent next summer.

Is Carmelo trying to force a trade?

Apr. 25, 2010 - Salt Lake City, UTAH, USA - epa02132054 Denver Nugget's Carmelo Anthony (R) argues with official Dick Bavetta (L) after a foul in a game against the Utah Jazz's in the second half of their Western Conference first round playoff game at the Energy Solutions Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, 25 April 2010. The Jazz beat the Nuggets 117-106 to take a 3-1 lead in the series.

Ric Bucher was on SportsCenter today talking about the Carmelo Anthony situation, which has gone from simmer to red hot in a matter of days.

Clearly the Knicks are very attractive. He has a great relationship with Mike D’Antoni and he loves to play in an up-tempo system. His new wife Lala Vasquez is from New York. He was born in the area, so that’s the attraction.

But more than anything, my sources are telling me, that it’s not in Denver. That at the beginning of this season, he is hoping to be someplace else. The only question is — can he do that signing the three-year, $65 million dollar extension, or does not signing it give him the leverage to force the Nuggets to send him elsewhere?

This is the first I’ve heard about Anthony potentially forcing a trade. It looked like he was going to play out the year and probably become a free agent next summer and sign with the Knicks. But with that dark cloud hanging over the franchise, questions are asked of sources and news is generated. Now we have a prominent NBA writer saying that Anthony wants to be elsewhere at the beginning of the season.

For all the angry (or in denial) Nuggets fans out there, let’s not forget that we just went through this with Chris Bosh and the Raptors, and even then the signs weren’t that strong that he was leaving, at least not before the season started.

The writing is on the wall and the Nuggets’ job now is to get the best deal they can get. Given Melo’s reported love affair with NYC, the Nuggets will probably get the best offers Knicks or the Nets — the two teams who believe that they’ll be best able to re-sign him next summer.
The Knicks could offer Danilo Gallinari, Anthony Randolph and Eddy Curry’s expiring contract, but would that be enough for the Nuggets to bite? And [erhaps New Jersey would be willing to part with Derrick Favors and/or Terrence Williams, though it should be noted that the Nets don’t have an expiring contract like Curry’s to balance the deal.

Did Nike muzzle LeBron at Team USA event?

Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James pauses during the second quarter in Game 5 of their NBA Eastern Conference playoff basketball series against the Boston Celtics in Cleveland, May 11, 2010. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL HEADSHOT)

Via the New York Post:

While a host of Redeem Team members were interviewed on the Radio City stage during yesterday’s Team USA scrimmage, LeCon became the noticeable exception. Nike did not want its World Basketball Festival to turn into a boo-fest.

“We wanted to stay away from that,” a Nike official said.

First of all, you have to love the Post writer, Marc Berman, calling him LeCon. It’s clear that the Knicks faithful — even the beat writers — are not going to let this summer’s snub go anytime soon.

Chad Ford comments on TrueHoop:

We shall see where this goes from here, but IMHO James being muzzled and kept off-camera is a development that will be dissected and debated ad nauseum by the sports business media, and deservedly so. When the biggest basketball star in Nike’s stable is front and center yet silent and relatively unseen on one of the world’s most famous stages, it certainly qualifies as a strange circumstance.

It’s certainly an odd thing for a company to bench his biggest name even if it meant he was going to get boo’ed by the Knick faithful. This might just be a symptom of a bigger problem, which Charles Barkley alluded to on Fanhouse.

“This thing that he’s taking mental notes, I’m bothered by him taking mental notes,” Barkley said. “He thinks he can’t get criticized. Every player who ever played the game has been criticized. I played against Michael Jordan. They said he couldn’t win in the beginning (of his career before later winning six titles). It’s the notion you can’t get criticized I have a problem with.”

While Barkley doesn’t have a huge problem with LeBron’s decision to play in Miami, he thought “The Decision” was a ‘punk move,’ but told Fanhouse that it was a poor choice of words.

“I should have never used that word,” said Barkley, sounding at first as if was an apology. “It was bull (bleep). Bull (bleep) is a better word.”

Gotta love Charles. The guy always speaks his mind.

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