Video |
Mad Dog Minute: D'Antoni sucker for money May 12: Christopher Russo calls out the Suns for getting rid of Mike D'Antoni and calls out D'Antoni for going for the cash in NY. |
That’s when D’Antoni will wonder why he ever signed with the Knicks when there were so many more enjoyable things he could have been doing, such as perforating his skull with a power drill or gargling with hydrochloric acid or going down into the subway and throwing himself across the third rail.
It could be that at some point, Dolan will ask himself why he keeps throwing money away on big-name coaches for his lousy teams. All he has to do is check the team’s history. He’ll notice that the last guy who took the team to the NBA Finals was Jeff Van Gundy, a former assistant whose first head coaching job was with the Knicks.
The Knicks need players first, not a big-name coach. Before D’Antoni entered the picture, one of the leading candidates for the job was former point guard and local hero at St. John’s Mark Jackson. He’d never coached before, but he understood the game, and he wanted the job in his home town. The fans would have loved him and would have cut him a lot of slack.
D’Antoni will get no grace period. And if his team is as bad as all the others, he’ll get no rest. He’ll have a pile of money, but the odds are good that sooner rather than later, he’ll wonder if it’s worth it.
PBT: Boston's Rajon Rondo continues to be named in trade talks, which is madness. The Celtics guard creates offense and makes everyone around him better, which was evident in Sunday's win over the Bulls.
Paul Pierce has been around long enough to know what Rajon Rondo's performance can mean for the aging Boston Celtics.
ProBasketballTalk tweets |
|
Source: Twitter. For more, follow @basketballtalk. |
Video: NBA from NBC Sports |
Knicks, Lin still streaking Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni and point guard Jeremy Lin discuss the team and Lin's recent success. |
Slideshow |
more photos |
Special feature |
Who will be MVP? Interactive: Rank each player on a scale of 0 to 10 (10 = best player, 0 = barely worthy of consideration). NBCSports.com |
Slideshow |
more photos |
Special feature |
NBCSports.com |