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"Melo" Definitely In For Heat-Knicks Game

MIAMI (CBS4) - Newly acquired New York Knicks small forward Carmelo Anthony said he would "without a doubt" be in the lineup Sunday night when the Knicks visit LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh and the Miami Heat in a game that has all the makings of being far from another ordinary part of the NBA's marathon regular season.

Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said Anthony's current elbow pain, which flared up in New York's loss at Cleveland on Friday night, stemmed from a lingering bursa sac problem. Anthony went through New York's practice in Miami, which started about 13 hours after the loss to the Cavaliers.

"He should be fine," D'Antoni said. "He didn't take a whole lot of shots, let's put it that way, but he ran through everything. Most of the things we did was try to get our defense on the same page."

Anthony, nicknamed "Melo", said he doesn't plan on being 100 percent for a couple of weeks, but noted that since the Knicks have 26 games remaining before the postseason, there's little time for him to wait around.  They need to start clicking as soon as possible, he said, and finding a way to handle the likes of Wade and James in Miami would be a good start.

"For us, it should be a statement game to come out here and want to beat this team ... just make a statement right now going down the stretch," Anthony said. "I'm pretty sure it's going to be an exciting game."

Knicks-Heat games always seem that way.

It was a major rivalry a decade or so ago, after Miami played New York four straight times in the playoffs from 1997 to 2000. Each of those series went to a deciding game, and the Knicks won three of them -- all on the Heat home floor.

Sunday night may easily rekindle some of that Heat-Knicks bad blood.

"We know the Heat-Knicks rivalry goes way beyond our years," James said. "It basically started with the departure of the man upstairs, coming down here and leaving New York."

The man upstairs, as James put it, is Heat president Pat Riley -- who left the Knicks for Miami a decade-and-a-half ago and instantly became someone New York loved to hate.

He'll be low profile on Sunday, but the atmosphere should still be electric.

"It's going to be great. It's going to be great," Knicks forward Amar'e Stoudemire said. "There's a lot of New Yorkers here in Miami, proud of the Knicks. It's going to be fun to play."

New Yorkers, transplants in South Florida or otherwise, always show up for games at Miami. Tickets for Sunday were going for as much as $2,500 in the lower levels on the online fan-to-fan marketplace StubHub.com, and that doesn't even include the $9,000 asking price for some courtside spots.

(©2011 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press and CBS Sports contributed to this report.)

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