GONYK wrote:mpharris36 wrote:GONYK wrote:
Even if we don't beat Philly, but just play better, we're fine.
Yesterday was about effort, not about missing shots or Kemba's defense, or whatever.
We just didn't feel like playing and expected Orlando to roll over eventually. By the time we got some urgency, it was too late.
I think we will be fine but in context we still struggle at the same things. Teams can center there attention around Julius and make him inefficient. And we pretty much have to rely on old man Rose to carry us down the stretch to get a good look.
Winning is great and we have been starving for it...but this was some people concern (and I wouldn't even call it treadmill) because thats too negative of a term for what the Knicks are building. But I think we can see a capped out ceiling with this team because the sum of its parts is better than its individual talent which is fine in the regular season. But a trade for a star (and the right star) is pretty much where we have limited ourselves to make that next jump. We shall see where that goes.
I think that's a bit fatalistic. We can get better on offense and defense over time. The team has to gel.
Bigger picture, the treadmill vs. not treadmill discussion is sort of a pointless one, IMO.
The Knicks under Leon Rose were built, from the ground up, to trade for a star. That's the plan. Period.
Now it's just a matter of which one they pull the trigger for.
In the meantime, we get to watch a good team, but I don't think anyone in the FO is deviating from the original plan just because we're potentially good enough to be a 45ish win team.
oh I agree. I know we get a post on here about the knicks not enjoying this team and can't break up the team chemistry.
But the eye should still be on the prize which is a STAR player to cast Randle and the rest into there better fitting roles, which I agree is still the FO goal right now.
The player they trade for needs to be the right star too because assuming they want to keep some of there more key pieces most of there draft picks/swaps will go in the trade so that basically will be our squad going forward.
So you are right in the meantime we get to generally see good competitive basketball waiting for that "next move".
The problem is. If Beal/Lillard are both dead set on not leaving and LaVine now is happy because CHI is a good team now. The options are kinda pushed back and then our tradable assets become less valuable because one you draft a player its like taking a car off the lot.
So while the eye is still on the prize...there is a internal clock that is ticking now that the value of our assets could potentially decrease.