Leon Rose’s big swing with Knicks looks like a miss



This isn’t about what we saw this week from the Knicks, especially against two more teams better than they are. This isn’t about the way the Warriors got them at the Garden on a night when the Knicks didn’t have Karl-Anthony Towns, or about the way the Lakers of LeBron and Luka came back on Thursday night and finally beat them in overtime in Los Angeles. This isn’t really about what the Knicks have — or haven’t — done lately. This is about what they’re supposed to be and who they’re supposed to be, at least when Jalen Brunson is back on the court. That means right now, not next year.

It’s still fair, now that we’re in March, to once again ask a question we’ve asked a lot this season when the Knicks have gotten knocked all over the ring by the Thunder and Cavs and Celtics and Lakers (with and without Luka) and by Steph and the Warriors:

If they aren’t going to make a deep run into the playoffs now, then when?

Leon Rose didn’t trade for Towns or give up a pocketful of first-round draft choices for Mikal Bridges to simply hold the place his team made for itself last season, no matter how much fun they have provided this season. The Knicks were supposed to close the gap on Celtics, though Rose had no way of knowing, because no one did, that it would be the Cavs who not only closed the gap, but have passed the Celtics the way they have in the regular season.

Of course, there is still so much more of this Knicks story to be written. We have already seen how fast the story can change, the way it changed the other night when Brunson — once again playing offense like an all-time great Knick — rolled his ankle. Up until he did it looked, for one night anyway, as if the Knicks were finally about to flip the narrative on how they’ve looked against elite teams and knock off a Lakers team with LeBron and Luka that looks as if it is more than capable of making a deep run in the playoffs.

But then the Knicks fell apart down the stretch the way they did the same thing in Oklahoma City earlier in the season, on a night when it looked as if they were going to get the Thunder and get them good. They blew a 10-point lead with seven minutes to go against the Lakers, and after that it just looked as if LeBron and Luka had ganged up on Brunson, even though Brunson did make that tough and-one to tie things near the end of regulation.

And the team that Rose thought would get better still has to get a lot better over the rest of the regular season and then into the playoffs. Good for Rose for not standing still after last year. But now this is the team he wanted, and this is the team he’s getting and we’re getting, the one sitting five games behind the Celtics and a mile behind the Cavs. Has Towns put up Patrick Ewing-like numbers in points and rebounds? He has. He sure did get 14 rebounds against the Lakers. He also shot 3-for-13 from the floor and ended up with just 12 points in 42 minutes on a night when the Knicks needed more for him.

Then there is Bridges, so rarely looking like the player the Knicks thought they were getting. He played 43 minutes against the Lakers and scored a grand total of six points. So that was another night when Bridges did what Tom Thibodeau has been asking him do for most of the season. He ran to the corner and stayed there and waited for somebody to throw him the ball. He was better on Friday night against the Clippers with 22 points. Maybe he can build on that now with Brunson out for a couple of weeks.



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