Post#594 » by SelbyCobra » Thu May 22, 2025 2:38 pm
In the end I think I'm more annoyed than anything. My frustration and anger stems largely from annoyance that, straight out the gate, they've given life to the fictional Reggie Miller/Knicks nonsense and allowed another undeserving player in Haliburton to take a step forward in the media hype machine. They couldn't even go one damn game without allowing a - quite literally - 1 in 1000 type performance.
But it doesn't have to be more than just one game. For those who weren't alive or invested in this team 30 years ago, imagine this kind of failure/collapse, but across games 6 AND 7 of the NBA Finals. We all believed back then, but we learned the hard way something that was always lingering in the back of our minds - there was a chance despite all the heart, all the teamwork, all the grit and toughness, they would come up short in talent against someone who was just clearly better. It was usually Jordan against whom no lead was safe in the playoffs, but it sometimes worked in the inverse where the talent deficit got exposed against good but not great talent (Miller's Pacers, Hakeem's Rockets) because the Knicks own talent came up way short (Hot-headedness, emotional loss of focus, cold streaks). It was something that we always knew was lurking, and many of us have felt in the decades since.
For me personally, I fully believe in the talent of this roster as a champion. I know they have their flaws, but I totally believe that, if managed properly, they can absolutely win a championship. The ominous, looming aspect of THIS team though is, and has been since they began assembling a competitive roster, the coaching. Much like a guy like Starks as a player, Thibs has willed his way into "All-Star" status, and proven that he belongs in the NBA beyond a shadow of a doubt. But much like Starks, he has exploitable weaknesses. He also has the ability to get locked into his ways and not deviate from the "it's just around the corner, you just need to what you've always done, but harder" mentality, resulting in "meltdowns", whether it's at the end of the game, out of the half, or whenever. But it results in wild oscillations and inconsistency.
Thibs is certainly a master motivator. But to me last night the coaching deficit reared it's head and there was no one there to steward floundering players and schemes - it was just keep doing what we have always done, "take what the game gives you", and hopefully the blood will coagulate before we bleed out. Who knows what will happen, but one thing I've learned not to doubt about a Jalen Brunson led team is their resiliency. He's a winner, competitor, and can lift a team on his own. Here's to hoping they bounce back once again.
