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Carmelo Anthony: Knicks Behind Mike D'Antoni '100 Percent'

NEW YORK (WFAN/AP) -- High hopes have given way to high anxiety in New York.

Thought to be a contender, the Knicks are the runaway leaders as the NBA's biggest bust thus far. The superstars haven't been super, the offensive guru coach can't fix the offense, and the team is closer to last place than first in the Eastern Conference at 7-13.

Despite the disappointing start, coach Mike D'Antoni said he isn't worried about his job status, or lobbying management to upgrade the Knicks' talent -- which wouldn't be easy anyway because they traded away most of their assets last February to get Carmelo Anthony.

"We need to maximize what we got right now on the floor," D'Antoni said. "That's my job, that's hopefully what we can get done and we need to do it."

But D'Antoni, whose offense was once the envy of the league when he coached in Phoenix, seems just as baffled as anyone by the Knicks' struggles on that end. They are in the bottom half of the league with 93.7 points per game and 41.4 percent shooting, wasting their improved defensive play with Tyson Chandler, who said he never could have expected his new team to struggle to score.

"Any time teams are losing, that's the first thing that comes to mind is the coach, but we don't talk about that," said Anthony. "We support Mike 100 percent. He's here with us, we're here with him. We're going to roll with that."

After the Knicks' latest loss, Chandler challenged his teammates to stop with the excuses and "man up."

"It's not a great feeling. The whole purpose of playing is to contend for a championship, and right now we're not on that pace, on track right now to contend, so we've just got to keep getting better," forward Amar'e Stoudemire said. "It's a long season, but we can't have any excuses. We've got to start winning now, we've got to start playing top-notch basketball right now, so we've got to get it going."

That won't be easy this week, when the Knicks play three games in three nights. Even worse, they don't know if Anthony and Baron Davis will be available.

Neither practiced Monday, and D'Antoni said both would probably be considered doubtful to play Tuesday against Detroit. The Knicks would like to get that one, because they face Chicago and Boston during their back-to-back-to-back that starts Thursday.

"We've got to get going now," Stoudemire said. "It's an important part of the year where we've got to get going. We've got to try to win by any means right now, so we don't want to get too behind to where we have to dig out of deep hole. We've got a deep enough hole as it is now."

The Knicks have lost three straight and nine of their last 10 games, with Anthony missing the last two because of injuries to his right ankle, right thumb and left wrist. He said the latter two are feeling better and he hoped to play Tuesday because his team is struggling, but then again doing that the first time made the nagging injuries worse.

"If we was winning, I would try to take my time, but right now I want to try to push and see what I can do," said Anthony, who will work out Tuesday before a decision is made.

Davis still hasn't played because of a herniated disk in his back, and the Knicks believe he's the key to getting their offense going whenever he is ready. They hoped that would have been last week during their four-game road trip, but D'Antoni said the plan is now to have him practice Wednesday and see how he feels from there.

New York was expected to be a playoff team after acquiring Chandler to play between Anthony and Stoudemire, and maybe even good enough to unseat Boston in the Atlantic Division. But while the newcomer has been solid, Anthony has made just 31.7 percent of his shots in six games since he was originally hurt, and Stoudemire continues to suffer without a playmaker, with a 17.7 points per game average that's his lowest since his rookie year on a career-worst 42.8 percent shooting.

"Given (D'Antoni's) history, the success has always been on the offensive end, more so lacking the defensive end," Chandler said. "The defense has picked up but we're struggling offensively. We have to find a way to make it work."

The Knicks knew their offense wouldn't be right until Davis played, giving them the veteran point guard they lack. But in the meantime, they've blown an easy part of their schedule, dropping home games against sub-.500 teams such as Charlotte, Toronto and Milwaukee, and there's no telling how long of an adjustment there will be once Davis plays.

Chandler won a title with the Dallas Mavericks last season, so he knows what an elite team looks like. And he still sees one in the locker room, even if the Knicks aren't one in the standings.

"In all honesty, I still feel like this is a team that can win a championship," he said. "You know, I feel like we definitely have the pieces, I feel like we haven't came together yet, and it's a process. I feel like guys are going to have to step up and play roles that they're not necessarily used to, and when we get everybody back healthy and get everybody on the floor at one time, we can really see what we got."

Do you support D'Antoni "100 percent"? Be heard in the comments below...

(TM and Copyright 2012 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2011 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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