Knicks · What is Melo getting at with his constant jabs at Phil (page 1)
Carmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his jobCarmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his job
Be careful what you wish for, Carmelo Anthony. You just might get it.Anthony reiterated his manifesto during last week’s Gillette Publicity Tour that he wants Knicks president Phil Jackson to interview more coaching candidates — not just stick with the status quo with triangle guru Kurt Rambis.
So Jackson and general manager Steve Mills met Monday with former Cavaliers coach David Blatt, whose icy relationship with Anthony’s buddy LeBron James led to Blatt’s January ouster in Cleveland. Would Anthony really prefer the Israeli coaching legend who faced a locker-room mutiny by James and friends J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert?
Blatt has told confidants he has a shot, though Rambis remains a front-runner. Luke Walton, Jackson’s preferred choice, is off the board. As expected, he took his dream job with the Lakers. Once the Lakers fired Byron Scott last week, Jackson knew the Knicks went from long shot to no shot.
Anthony’s insistence on seeking to help the coaching search seems counter-productive.
“If you don’t go through the process and you don’t at least look and see what’s out there, then we have a problem,’’ Anthony said on radio in another veiled threat.
It is more important Anthony is involved in July 1’s free agency, especially with his longstanding friendship with Kevin Durant, a fellow Maryland-area product. And even James.
The coaching situation should not be Anthony’s business. Anthony’s remarks to ESPN on Thursday that new Timberwolves hire Tom Thibodeau would have accepted a Knicks offer is borderline insubordinate and also untrue. Anthony knows Jackson didn’t see it as a fit on any level, didn’t pursue it. It’s best to drop the issue. The fellow CAA client struck it rich on a five-year, $40 million contract that gave him total control as president with no triangle orders. Jackson couldn’t match that.
To belabor wanting input and the need to interview more candidates (Mark Jackson?) is to send a clear message of his opposition to Rambis. Hence, if Rambis winds up with the job, it’s not a good look. As Anthony looks to recruit free agents, what’s his pitch? “Our head coach and 32-50 record are lackluster, but come to New York anyway?”
Anthony turns 32 on May 29. He needs to worry about his own stuff, getting the left knee stronger, becoming more explosive next season than he was this season. And becoming more clutch late in games. His late-game shooting statistics in tight contests has been atrocious the past three, non-playoff seasons.
In the past three years, Anthony has shot 8-of-47 in the final 30 seconds in which the score differential was three points or fewer. In the same period, he shot 23-of-75 in the final minute of games in which the score differential was five points or less.
Granted, Anthony, who has a heady grasp of the triangle, needs help in the backcourt to take pressure off him and to complement a solid trio of himself, Kristaps Porzingis and Robin Lopez.
“I don’t think there’s another frontcourt that’s better than that,’’ Anthony said. “You just have to put the right pieces around that … [We’re not] far away from taking that next step.’’
Maybe all this ends with Anthony traded to the Clippers for Blake Griffin after their first-round KO — the only place he would agree to waive his no-trade clause. But if Anthony truly wants to make this situation better, it’s best he clams up about coaches and lets Jackson do his job.
I think Melo is starting to undermine Phil. We can't keep chalking up to it as Melo being being Melo once maybe, twice ok but now it just getting stupid.
mreinman wrote:ah so berman is good when we agree with the content .... got it
I didn't say he was good so get that.
Vmart wrote:I don't usually agree with any reporter in NY but Berman is right in this case.Carmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his jobCarmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his job
Be careful what you wish for, Carmelo Anthony. You just might get it.Anthony reiterated his manifesto during last week’s Gillette Publicity Tour that he wants Knicks president Phil Jackson to interview more coaching candidates — not just stick with the status quo with triangle guru Kurt Rambis.
So Jackson and general manager Steve Mills met Monday with former Cavaliers coach David Blatt, whose icy relationship with Anthony’s buddy LeBron James led to Blatt’s January ouster in Cleveland. Would Anthony really prefer the Israeli coaching legend who faced a locker-room mutiny by James and friends J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert?
Blatt has told confidants he has a shot, though Rambis remains a front-runner. Luke Walton, Jackson’s preferred choice, is off the board. As expected, he took his dream job with the Lakers. Once the Lakers fired Byron Scott last week, Jackson knew the Knicks went from long shot to no shot.
Anthony’s insistence on seeking to help the coaching search seems counter-productive.
“If you don’t go through the process and you don’t at least look and see what’s out there, then we have a problem,’’ Anthony said on radio in another veiled threat.
It is more important Anthony is involved in July 1’s free agency, especially with his longstanding friendship with Kevin Durant, a fellow Maryland-area product. And even James.
The coaching situation should not be Anthony’s business. Anthony’s remarks to ESPN on Thursday that new Timberwolves hire Tom Thibodeau would have accepted a Knicks offer is borderline insubordinate and also untrue. Anthony knows Jackson didn’t see it as a fit on any level, didn’t pursue it. It’s best to drop the issue. The fellow CAA client struck it rich on a five-year, $40 million contract that gave him total control as president with no triangle orders. Jackson couldn’t match that.
To belabor wanting input and the need to interview more candidates (Mark Jackson?) is to send a clear message of his opposition to Rambis. Hence, if Rambis winds up with the job, it’s not a good look. As Anthony looks to recruit free agents, what’s his pitch? “Our head coach and 32-50 record are lackluster, but come to New York anyway?”
Anthony turns 32 on May 29. He needs to worry about his own stuff, getting the left knee stronger, becoming more explosive next season than he was this season. And becoming more clutch late in games. His late-game shooting statistics in tight contests has been atrocious the past three, non-playoff seasons.
In the past three years, Anthony has shot 8-of-47 in the final 30 seconds in which the score differential was three points or fewer. In the same period, he shot 23-of-75 in the final minute of games in which the score differential was five points or less.
Granted, Anthony, who has a heady grasp of the triangle, needs help in the backcourt to take pressure off him and to complement a solid trio of himself, Kristaps Porzingis and Robin Lopez.
“I don’t think there’s another frontcourt that’s better than that,’’ Anthony said. “You just have to put the right pieces around that … [We’re not] far away from taking that next step.’’
Maybe all this ends with Anthony traded to the Clippers for Blake Griffin after their first-round KO — the only place he would agree to waive his no-trade clause. But if Anthony truly wants to make this situation better, it’s best he clams up about coaches and lets Jackson do his job.
I think Melo is starting to undermine Phil. We can't keep chalking up to it as Melo being being Melo once maybe, twice ok but now it just getting stupid.
How is he undermining him exactly? Only thing he has said is that he hopes the proper process is conducted and the best man available gets the job? How dare he! And if your quoting a fat guy who knows more about donuts than basketball and writes for a fake paper that only stirs the pots of the stupid, you should add factual information to make your point.
Vmart wrote:I don't usually agree with any reporter in NY but Berman is right in this case.Carmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his jobCarmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his job
Be careful what you wish for, Carmelo Anthony. You just might get it.Anthony reiterated his manifesto during last week’s Gillette Publicity Tour that he wants Knicks president Phil Jackson to interview more coaching candidates — not just stick with the status quo with triangle guru Kurt Rambis.
So Jackson and general manager Steve Mills met Monday with former Cavaliers coach David Blatt, whose icy relationship with Anthony’s buddy LeBron James led to Blatt’s January ouster in Cleveland. Would Anthony really prefer the Israeli coaching legend who faced a locker-room mutiny by James and friends J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert?
Blatt has told confidants he has a shot, though Rambis remains a front-runner. Luke Walton, Jackson’s preferred choice, is off the board. As expected, he took his dream job with the Lakers. Once the Lakers fired Byron Scott last week, Jackson knew the Knicks went from long shot to no shot.
Anthony’s insistence on seeking to help the coaching search seems counter-productive.
“If you don’t go through the process and you don’t at least look and see what’s out there, then we have a problem,’’ Anthony said on radio in another veiled threat.
It is more important Anthony is involved in July 1’s free agency, especially with his longstanding friendship with Kevin Durant, a fellow Maryland-area product. And even James.
The coaching situation should not be Anthony’s business. Anthony’s remarks to ESPN on Thursday that new Timberwolves hire Tom Thibodeau would have accepted a Knicks offer is borderline insubordinate and also untrue. Anthony knows Jackson didn’t see it as a fit on any level, didn’t pursue it. It’s best to drop the issue. The fellow CAA client struck it rich on a five-year, $40 million contract that gave him total control as president with no triangle orders. Jackson couldn’t match that.
To belabor wanting input and the need to interview more candidates (Mark Jackson?) is to send a clear message of his opposition to Rambis. Hence, if Rambis winds up with the job, it’s not a good look. As Anthony looks to recruit free agents, what’s his pitch? “Our head coach and 32-50 record are lackluster, but come to New York anyway?”
Anthony turns 32 on May 29. He needs to worry about his own stuff, getting the left knee stronger, becoming more explosive next season than he was this season. And becoming more clutch late in games. His late-game shooting statistics in tight contests has been atrocious the past three, non-playoff seasons.
In the past three years, Anthony has shot 8-of-47 in the final 30 seconds in which the score differential was three points or fewer. In the same period, he shot 23-of-75 in the final minute of games in which the score differential was five points or less.
Granted, Anthony, who has a heady grasp of the triangle, needs help in the backcourt to take pressure off him and to complement a solid trio of himself, Kristaps Porzingis and Robin Lopez.
“I don’t think there’s another frontcourt that’s better than that,’’ Anthony said. “You just have to put the right pieces around that … [We’re not] far away from taking that next step.’’
Maybe all this ends with Anthony traded to the Clippers for Blake Griffin after their first-round KO — the only place he would agree to waive his no-trade clause. But if Anthony truly wants to make this situation better, it’s best he clams up about coaches and lets Jackson do his job.
I think Melo is starting to undermine Phil. We can't keep chalking up to it as Melo being being Melo once maybe, twice ok but now it just getting stupid.
this is primadonna melo slash entrepreneur/businessman melo speaking. he may have a no-trade clause but he is still an employee working under jackson. he cannot help himself. he was great this season for about 30 games but now that the season's over he seems to have gone back to his old ways.
i would like him to stay and continue improving as a team-ball knick but if he goes to a better situation for him personally the knicks that's okay too.
either way the knicks are moving ahead with a plan that is bigger than melo.
dk7th wrote:Vmart wrote:I don't usually agree with any reporter in NY but Berman is right in this case.Carmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his jobCarmelo needs to quiet down and let Phil Jackson do his job
Be careful what you wish for, Carmelo Anthony. You just might get it.Anthony reiterated his manifesto during last week’s Gillette Publicity Tour that he wants Knicks president Phil Jackson to interview more coaching candidates — not just stick with the status quo with triangle guru Kurt Rambis.
So Jackson and general manager Steve Mills met Monday with former Cavaliers coach David Blatt, whose icy relationship with Anthony’s buddy LeBron James led to Blatt’s January ouster in Cleveland. Would Anthony really prefer the Israeli coaching legend who faced a locker-room mutiny by James and friends J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert?
Blatt has told confidants he has a shot, though Rambis remains a front-runner. Luke Walton, Jackson’s preferred choice, is off the board. As expected, he took his dream job with the Lakers. Once the Lakers fired Byron Scott last week, Jackson knew the Knicks went from long shot to no shot.
Anthony’s insistence on seeking to help the coaching search seems counter-productive.
“If you don’t go through the process and you don’t at least look and see what’s out there, then we have a problem,’’ Anthony said on radio in another veiled threat.
It is more important Anthony is involved in July 1’s free agency, especially with his longstanding friendship with Kevin Durant, a fellow Maryland-area product. And even James.
The coaching situation should not be Anthony’s business. Anthony’s remarks to ESPN on Thursday that new Timberwolves hire Tom Thibodeau would have accepted a Knicks offer is borderline insubordinate and also untrue. Anthony knows Jackson didn’t see it as a fit on any level, didn’t pursue it. It’s best to drop the issue. The fellow CAA client struck it rich on a five-year, $40 million contract that gave him total control as president with no triangle orders. Jackson couldn’t match that.
To belabor wanting input and the need to interview more candidates (Mark Jackson?) is to send a clear message of his opposition to Rambis. Hence, if Rambis winds up with the job, it’s not a good look. As Anthony looks to recruit free agents, what’s his pitch? “Our head coach and 32-50 record are lackluster, but come to New York anyway?”
Anthony turns 32 on May 29. He needs to worry about his own stuff, getting the left knee stronger, becoming more explosive next season than he was this season. And becoming more clutch late in games. His late-game shooting statistics in tight contests has been atrocious the past three, non-playoff seasons.
In the past three years, Anthony has shot 8-of-47 in the final 30 seconds in which the score differential was three points or fewer. In the same period, he shot 23-of-75 in the final minute of games in which the score differential was five points or less.
Granted, Anthony, who has a heady grasp of the triangle, needs help in the backcourt to take pressure off him and to complement a solid trio of himself, Kristaps Porzingis and Robin Lopez.
“I don’t think there’s another frontcourt that’s better than that,’’ Anthony said. “You just have to put the right pieces around that … [We’re not] far away from taking that next step.’’
Maybe all this ends with Anthony traded to the Clippers for Blake Griffin after their first-round KO — the only place he would agree to waive his no-trade clause. But if Anthony truly wants to make this situation better, it’s best he clams up about coaches and lets Jackson do his job.
I think Melo is starting to undermine Phil. We can't keep chalking up to it as Melo being being Melo once maybe, twice ok but now it just getting stupid.
this is primadonna melo slash entrepreneur/businessman melo speaking. he may have a no-trade clause but he is still an employee working under jackson. he cannot help himself. he was great this season for about 30 games but now that the season's over he seems to have gone back to his old ways.
i would like him to stay and continue improving as a team-ball knick but if he goes to a better situation for him personally the knicks that's okay too.
either way the knicks are moving ahead with a plan that is bigger than melo.
Nobody knows what this so called plan is. Amazed at the blindness being displayed on here.
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I found Melo's reaction to Phil's quote funny.
smackeddog wrote:Javascript is not enabled or there was problem with the URL: https://twitter.com/IanBegley/status/726764646036832256
Click here to view the TweetI found Melo's reaction to Phil's quote funny.
yeah ... for all you optimiso's, the relationship "seems" peachy
gonna be hard for the pjax lovers and melo lovers to deal with them sparring. Maybe they can just make believe that there is no rift and it is again, peachy
smackeddog wrote:Awesome. Thanks for posting this.Javascript is not enabled or there was problem with the URL: https://twitter.com/IanBegley/status/726764646036832256
Click here to view the TweetI found Melo's reaction to Phil's quote funny.
CrushAlot wrote:Phil: We want you here. Melo: What can I go off but another man's word? That was a good interview.smackeddog wrote:Awesome. Thanks for posting this.Javascript is not enabled or there was problem with the URL: https://twitter.com/IanBegley/status/726764646036832256
Click here to view the TweetI found Melo's reaction to Phil's quote funny.
fishmike wrote:CrushAlot wrote:Phil: We want you here. Melo: What can I go off but another man's word? That was a good interview.smackeddog wrote:Awesome. Thanks for posting this.Javascript is not enabled or there was problem with the URL: https://twitter.com/IanBegley/status/726764646036832256
Click here to view the TweetI found Melo's reaction to Phil's quote funny.
Uh, the interview quoted Phil saying the Knicks were better without Melo even tho they couldn't win and Melo said he told him to his face he wanted him here and if he looked in him in the eye and lied "that's another story".
So you have Phil saying he doesn't want Melo here and Melo calling Phil a liar.
Not sure how you get things being hunky dory from that interview.
crzymdups wrote:fishmike wrote:CrushAlot wrote:Phil: We want you here. Melo: What can I go off but another man's word? That was a good interview.smackeddog wrote:Awesome. Thanks for posting this.Javascript is not enabled or there was problem with the URL: https://twitter.com/IanBegley/status/726764646036832256
Click here to view the TweetI found Melo's reaction to Phil's quote funny.
Uh, the interview quoted Phil saying the Knicks were better without Melo even tho they couldn't win and Melo said he told him to his face he wanted him here and if he looked in him in the eye and lied "that's another story".
So you have Phil saying he doesn't want Melo here and Melo calling Phil a liar.
Not sure how you get things being hunky dory from that interview.
#1 The interviewer quoted only part of what Phil said. The context wasn't Phil claiming that the Knicks were a better team without Melo. Phil was defending the roster he built due to a question a reporter asked him about how important is it to land another star since they couldn't win without Melo.
#2 Phil knows the Knicks aren't a better team without Melo and told this to Melo.
#3 Melo stated that Phil told him how important he was so that's all he could go by. Then stated "now IF he lied then that's another story".
#4 Melo stated that he didn't know how to take it and didn't want to insinuate anything. Which is smart, leave the insinuating to agenda driven fans and media. And if he wants to he could find the Phil press conference and see that the context of Phil's quote would have a different tone then the way the interviewer stated.
newyorknewyork wrote:crzymdups wrote:fishmike wrote:CrushAlot wrote:Phil: We want you here. Melo: What can I go off but another man's word? That was a good interview.smackeddog wrote:Awesome. Thanks for posting this.Javascript is not enabled or there was problem with the URL: https://twitter.com/IanBegley/status/726764646036832256
Click here to view the TweetI found Melo's reaction to Phil's quote funny.
Uh, the interview quoted Phil saying the Knicks were better without Melo even tho they couldn't win and Melo said he told him to his face he wanted him here and if he looked in him in the eye and lied "that's another story".
So you have Phil saying he doesn't want Melo here and Melo calling Phil a liar.
Not sure how you get things being hunky dory from that interview.
#1 The interviewer quoted only part of what Phil said. The context wasn't Phil claiming that the Knicks were a better team without Melo. Phil was defending the roster he built due to a question a reporter asked him about how important is it to land another star since they couldn't win without Melo.
#2 Phil knows the Knicks aren't a better team without Melo and told this to Melo.
#3 Melo stated that Phil told him how important he was so that's all he could go by. Then stated "now IF he lied then that's another story".
#4 Melo stated that he didn't know how to take it and didn't want to insinuate anything. Which is smart, leave the insinuating to agenda driven fans and media. And if he wants to he could find the Phil press conference and see that the context of Phil's quote would have a different tone then the way the interviewer stated.
Phil is playing mind games. He's well known for this. I saw Phil's full press conference where he made that quote. He's trying to force Melo out.