Knicks Season Preview: Anthony, Jackson Gone, But Losing Likely To Continue
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) — Carmelo Anthony is gone. Phil Jackson is gone.
The losing appears here to stay.
The New York Knicks have entered a rebuilding mode, with new president Steve Mills and general manager Scott Perry touting the team's youth even before they had traded Anthony on the eve of training camp.
The young players might be ready to win in a couple years, but for now, it looks like another long season inside Madison Square Garden.
"The whole talk for us is it's a start for us to instill a culture of playing as hard as you can, trying to play together as a team," coach Jeff Hornacek said. "We don't necessarily have these superstars that have been in the league for many years carrying our team. We've got to do it collectively."
That will fall on players such as Kristaps Porzingis, Tim Hardaway Jr., Willy Hernangomez, rookie Frank Ntilikina and center Enes Kanter, who was acquired from Oklahoma City in the trade for Anthony.
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The Jackson-Anthony drama hung over the Knicks last season and into the summer, with the team president making it clear he wanted to move on from the All-Star forward. But before he could, the Knicks moved on from Jackson, who couldn't build a playoff roster in his three seasons. Mills was promoted, and he has taken aim at cleaning up the mess within the organization.
"Part of my job is to try to add some sense of calmness to what had been a little bit of a crazy environment that we've been going through," Mills said. "So I think that we have a good group of people here."
But it's a group that looks incapable of defending, and it will be hard to outscore its ineptitude on that end without the 40 points per game the Knicks lost when they traded Anthony and let Derrick Rose, now in Cleveland, leave in free agency.
So they could be even worse than last season's 31-51 finish, but at least some of the dysfunction could be gone. Fans seemed fed up with it under Jackson, so maybe they'll accept a team that loses quietly if they see growth on the court without the circus off it.
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"They want to see effort, they want to see tenacity, they want to see hard work, and they just want to see us not backing down from anybody," Hardaway said. "The icing on the cake is winning ballgames. That's what we want to do, and that's our goal, to win ballgames, and win as many as possible to see ourselves looking towards the end of the season where we can find ourselves in the postseason."
Some things to watch with the Knicks:
KRISTAPS' KNICKS: Porzingis left frustrated, blowing off his exit interview last season before returning to Latvia for the summer. The third-year forward came back as the face of the franchise, returning to New York the day Anthony left for Oklahoma City.
FRANK FROM FRANCE: Jackson's last big move was drafting Ntilikina, now 19 years old, with the No. 8 pick. It's hard to tell yet what the Knicks have in the French point guard, who missed summer league with an injury and then most of preseason when he was hurt again.
HARDAWAY'S HERE: Mills' first big move was to give Hardaway a $71 million deal to return to New York after Jackson traded the former first-round pick to Atlanta two years earlier. His game grew with the Hawks, and the Knicks believe he's ready for a bigger role now.
SPEED IT UP: Jackson's triangle system is mostly gone, with Hornacek saying the Knicks want to open up the offense more in hopes of getting more easy shots.
JOAKIM'S JOB: Joakim Noah's forgettable first season of a $72 million deal ended with him serving a suspension for violating the anti-drug policy. It continues into this season and it's unclear where he fits after that in a center rotation that also includes Kanter, Hernangomez, Kyle O'Quinn and sometimes Porzingis.
(© Copyright 2017 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)