[情報]老湯你真是夠了@@
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/10/sports/basketball/10knicks.html
Fairy Tale or Not, Knicks Call Malone
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老湯打電話給老龍的經紀人
想請他老人家來紐約破賈爸大熱狗的得分紀錄................
Fairy Tale or Not, Knicks Call Malone
By HOWARD BECK
Published: December 10, 2004
ASHINGTON, Dec. 9 - In the fairy-tale version of the Knicks' season,
Allan Houston gallops triumphantly back from his extended vacation, lifts
the spirits and play of his teammates and rekindles a dormant love affair
between New York and its beleaguered basketball franchise.
In the fairy tale, Houston is still the shooting ace whose clutch play put
the Knicks in the N.B.A. Finals in 1999. He is the leader they need, the
anchor they have lacked.
But the Knicks do not really do fairy tales, Willis Reed notwithstanding,
and no one knows what Houston has to offer after spending eight and a half
months recovering from knee injuries.
They do expect Houston to make his season debut Friday night against the
Wizards in Washington. And they will soon know if the man with the $100
million contract is still their best player, or merely their highest paid.
Yet even as they welcome Houston back and brace for repercussions throughout
the lineup, the Knicks are exploring more dramatic changes.
Isiah Thomas, the team president, continues to pursue Toronto's Vince Carter,
monitor Chicago's Eddy Curry and explore any and all moves that might push
the Knicks, who are 9-9, beyond the ranks of the mediocre.
To that end, Thomas made a call Wednesday to the agent for Karl Malone, the
disillusioned former Los Angeles Lakers forward. A free agent, Malone is
nearly ready to play again after recovering from off-season knee surgery.
But because of a recent publicized rift with Kobe Bryant, he no longer wishes
to play for the Lakers.
"Isiah was very forward yesterday," Dwight Manley, Malone's longtime agent,
said in a telephone interview.
Even at age 41, the bruising Malone would be an asset to any team with
championship aspirations. He could make the Knicks contenders in the East
just by signing a contract.
Of course that, too, is probably a fairy tale. As Manley admitted, Malone's
joining the Knicks "would be a long shot."
Malone's priority has been to win a championship before he retires, and a
number of true contenders, including San Antonio, Minnesota and Miami, are
courting him.
The Knicks would become infinitely more attractive to Malone if they acquired
Carter or another player of his caliber. But that's the fairy tale again.
In reality, the Knicks may have to stand pat for a while. They have offered
Houston to Toronto, but the Raptors are not intrigued by an aging shooter
with a history of knee problems and a hefty contract. Toronto has instead
asked for 24-year-old Jamal Crawford, whom the Knicks will not part with.
Indeed, while half the Knicks roster has been mentioned in trade speculation,
only two players - Stephon Marbury and Crawford - have been deemed untouchable
by the Knicks, according to a prominent player agent.
So the Knicks will place their hopes and their faith in the players they have
and hope Houston can approximate his old self. But his presence will force
adjustments and potentially bruise some egos.
By the time Houston steps on the MCI Center court Friday night, the Knicks
will have played 31 straight games without him and 48 of the past 57 games,
counting playoffs.
Since Houston succumbed to knee injuries, the Knicks have reworked the
offense around Marbury and Crawford and have sent away most of the teammates
Houston had known. He has barely played with Marbury, Tim Thomas and
Nazr Mohammed and has never played with Crawford.
"Allan's a big part of what we do," Coach Lenny Wilkens said Wednesday.
"I'm anxious to get him back. Listen, I also understand it's going to take a
few games. He can't step out there, and all of sudden you've got the same
Allan that you had three or four years ago."
The Knicks surely need the Houston of old who routinely scored 20 points a
game and was one of the best 3-point shooters in the league.
For months, the Knicks have boasted about the firepower of a three-guard
rotation of Houston, Marbury and Crawford. Now comes the difficult part:
making it work.
Crawford and Houston have said they will not quibble over who starts, but
Crawford has been a starter throughout his pro career and Houston is a former
All-Star who has started 582 games for the Knicks since 1996.
Once Penny Hardaway recovers from a hamstring strain, the Knicks will have a
three-position logjam, from point guard through small forward.
"You know how guys are: everybody wants to play," Marbury said. "No one wants
to sit on the bench, despite what people say. I wouldn't want to sit on the
bench. So I don't think anybody else would want to. Guys get paid a lot of
money, but guys also want to play."
Sacrifice will soon become the Knicks' buzzword. Crawford, Marbury, Hardaway
and Tim Thomas will all have to sacrifice minutes. It is possible that
Crawford or Thomas will eventually have to sacrifice his starting job.
Crawford has already declared that he will focus more on playmaking and
defense than scoring, although he said it was not because of Houston's return.
Crawford has, however, become mildly irritated by the speculation about his
role and suspicious of questions he believes are designed to provoke
controversy.
Marbury said there should be no debates.
"Allan's one of our best players, if not our best player," he said.
"When Allan comes back, if he wants to play 40 minutes and he can, he's
going to play 40 minutes, period. I don't even know why we're talking about
this, to really be honest. I mean, that's just how it is."
--
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