New York Knicks: 2013 NBA champions?

By Liam Quinn / Roar Pro

It’s June 2013, blue and orange confetti falls from the rafters at Madison Square Garden. The New York Knicks are NBA champions. Could it be so?

Picture Knicks Head Coach Phil Jackson embracing his star point guard Chris Paul at midcourt, as the long-suffering Knicks fan explode into pure jubilation.

Sure, in 2011 this may seem a little farfetched, but with a few tweaks this Knicks fantasy could become reality.

The first key move for the Knicks must be convincing Phil Jackson that finishing his career where it all began is the perfect ending.

We’ve heard all season that “The Zen Master” was absolutely, positively walking away after the 2011 season with the Lakers.

Of course ,the Lakers season has come to a close – all be it, a month earlier than many predicted – but that hasn’t stopped the rumour mill from spinning.

It’s not like we haven’t seen Jackson go back on retirement promises before in his career, the most recently being at the end of the 2010 season, which he had publically stated to be his last.

The only thing that appears to be certain in regards to Jackson’s coaching future, is that he is completely done with the Lakers.

Perhaps the biggest indicator to that came from comments in an interview with ESPN’s Bill Simmonds, in which Jackson said he doesn’t want to coach Kobe Bryant when he stops being Kobe Bryant.

Perhaps that’s already happened? If not completely, there is no denying that Kobe is certainly closer to the end than the start, or even the middle.

According to all reports Jackson would take the 2011-2012 season off, to give his body some time to recover, meaning that the 2012-2013 season would be the perfect return year. Especially considering that it marks the 30th anniversary since the Knicks last claimed the World Title.

In recent days Jackson has done nothing to quash the rumors, having refused to definitively call time on what is seen by many to be the greatest coaching career in history.

The next obvious step is the player roster.

Before even getting to the possibility of Chris Paul donning the famed blue and orange, the Knicks have other holes that drastically need to be filled.

The 2011 version of the Knicks showed glimpses of the potential in the line-up, turning in some amazing performances at times.

Unfortunately, for every elite performance, there was an equally poor effort. There was no greater example of this than the Knicks playoff exit at the hands of the Boston Celtics.

In the opening two games, the Knicks gave the Celtics all they could handle, and could consider themselves mightily unlucky not to have taken at least one of those contests.

However in games three and four, the Knicks were abysmal, as they were totally outclassed by a superior Celtics team.

When all was said and done, holes at the centre spot and overall squad depth are what did the Knicks in this season.

There are plenty of options available for the Knicks this off-season, especially considering that the Big Apple has suddenly become a much more attractive location for any potential free-agents.

In my opinion, Samuel Dalembert is the signing the Knicks should make this offseason, to address their issues in the middle. Although there are better players available in the position – Nene, Tyson Chandler and Marc Gasol – Dalembert is the best option.

The previously mentioned trio will be two of the most coveted players in this season’s free-agent class. There are no real out-and-out superstars, unlike the 2010 class, which means that great players could get elite player money.

Signing Dalembert – as long as they do not overpay him – allows the Knicks to have the best shot at reaching their other roster goals. Dalembert would give the Knicks the toughness they covet at Centre, without breaking the bank.

Another key signing would be Memphis’ Shane Battier. As an unrestricted free agent at the end of this season, Battier will be free to go wherever he likes, and should be a primary target for New York.

Anyone who has seen the Knicks play this year would agree that offensive firepower is hardly what the team is lacking. This should immediately rule out any of the higher profile names, such as J.R Smith, Shannon Brown, Jason Richardson or even the injury-maligned Michael Redd.

Battier possesses amazing toughness and elite defensive skills, two characteristics that were desperately lacking from the Knicks. He would provide an immediate upgrade at the two-guard spot for the Knicks, providing a much better option than Landry Fields.

However, the main play in New York must be to get Chris Paul to follow through on his much-famed toast at Carmelo Anthony’s wedding, and be the third superstar in New York.

Chris Paul – in my opinion – is undoubtedly the best player at the point guard position. Just look at the way he torched the Lakers in the opening round of these playoffs. Paul carried what was ultimately, a rather weak New Orleans Hornets roster, to the seventh seed in the uber-competitive Western Conference.

I believe the Knicks should get Paul via trade, and not take the risk of hoping to sign him in free agency at the end of 2012, a similar decision they faced with Carmelo Anthony this year. Furthermore, I believe the Knicks should try and get any potential trade done prior to the beginning of next season.

Any trade would likely mean that Chauncey Billups would definitely leave New York, which seems incredibly plausible, considering Billups wasn’t exactly overjoyed at being traded there in the first place.

A handful of other assets would have to be sent to New Orleans along with Billups, but the Knicks could easily justify sacrificing the majority of their draft picks in the near future, if it meant signing Chris Paul.

The Knicks could potentially have starting line-up of:

-PG: Chris Paul
-SG Shane Battier
-SF Carmelo Anthony
-PF Amar’e Stoudemire
-C Samuel Dalembert

With this line-up leading a bench roster with the likes of Landry Fields, Bill Walker and some other low-cost free agents signings, the Knicks would definitely have the potential to match any team in the NBA.

The Crowd Says:

2011-05-23T09:10:25+00:00

Liam

Guest


Agree, as much as the Heat are making it look like you dont need a bench, to win a title a strong bench is an absolute must. oh my mistake, chandler has potential to be a great player, and was the closest thing the Knicks had to a tough defender, was disappointed they let him go. not 100% sold on danilo...not sure if he's "tough" enough.

2011-05-23T07:55:46+00:00

gfunk

Guest


agree about douglas, but you need guys like that coming off the bench like a vinnie 'microwave' johnson in detroit to make a run in the playoffs. sessions could be interesting. was talking about players the knicks have drafted like trevor ariza and channing frye (in addition to wilson and danilo) rather than guys who came here from elsewhere like crawford and z-bo.

2011-05-23T07:26:14+00:00

Liam

Guest


Douglas has the potential to be a great player, but he seems more like a 2 guard than a pure point. If he was to play point, he'd be in that Gilbert Arenas/brandon Jennings mold, a scorer not a distributor, and its hardly like the Knicks need another pure scorer. Completely agree, gave up some players early on who have gone on to form strong careers, obviously Z-Bo and Jamaal Crawford are the two most obvious examples. The talk in the last few days has the Knicks maybe making a run at Ramon Sessions - seeing the Cavs will most likely pick Kyrie in the draft - think he'd be a good fit. Quick, good passes, smart player. Could definitely add something, would just depends on what they' have to give up.

2011-05-23T03:39:27+00:00

gfunk

Guest


yeah they could make a trade, but i feel they've just spent too much to keep billups for one more year just to trade him. im pretty high on douglas too. through the dark years they have been pretty good at developing young players just to see them traded away so it would be good for them to hang onto landry and douglas this time, be patient and wait for the cap space when billups is off contract. walker is a good talent but notorious for being out of shape so jury is out there. if the hornets trade paul before his contract is up assuming he doesn't extend it then he still has the choice in free agency so its a risk for any team to rent him for half a season. who knows, anything can happen in the wonderful world of the nba!

2011-05-16T16:56:54+00:00

Christopher London

Guest


You forgot one other reason why Phil Jackson just might do it. To stick it to Pat Riley and be remembered in one year for doing what Pat the Rat could not do in several years.

AUTHOR

2011-05-16T11:39:19+00:00

Liam Quinn

Roar Pro


Swampy, it would definitely be a short term stop for Jackson, but from what he's said the last few days, he hasnt completely decided. And as you said, absolutely no guarantees, but a lineup built around Carmelo, Amar'e and Paul (who in my opinion are all top 15 in the league) would be a scary prospect. And yep, it'd be great for MSG, got courtside seats for a game a few years back, amazing!

2011-05-16T10:39:44+00:00

Swampy

Guest


Phil Jackson was 61 last time he retired - he would be 67 in 2013 and is a virtual cripple, would it really mean that much to him to go to New York? No guarantee with CP3 they would even get out of the East let alone compete for a ring, it's not like Miami and Chicago are going to get old in a hurry. Can you imagine D-Wade & Lebron after a year off from the lockout? Healthy and rejuvenated? I'd love to see it though - MSG rocking is one of the best experiences in sport. -- Comment left via The Roar's iPhone app. Download The Roar's iPhone App in the App Store here.

2011-05-16T09:13:49+00:00

jojo

Guest


I d like to see Andrew bogut in new york. Hopefullly they dont get a proper centre this off season and by 2012 Bogues becomes a free agent :-D

AUTHOR

2011-05-16T04:27:24+00:00

Liam Quinn

Roar Pro


Yep completely right, 40 years, sorry about the typo with that one! Personally think that Free Agent is too big a risk, plus the Hornets will be looking to trade and get something, rather than seeing Paul walk for nothing! Just quickly punching into the ESPN Trade Machine, it came up with this. KNICKS TRADE: Billups, Douglas and Balkman HORNETS TRADE: Chris Paul Now I know that this trade would obviously change - adding in extra pieces, cash, etc - but it would be a viable option. Douglas has proven that he has potential in the future, but I think the Knicks would rather lose him than Fields. Plus the knicks could try and draft a young point guard in this draft, which could cover Douglas's loss. Walker improved this year, so he could improve from the extra time. I'd have the Knicks making this trade this offseason, or during the season at the very latest. Definitely not waiting until 2012-13. Agree with you gfunk, feel you gave up a lot for the Carmelo trade, but it had to be done in my opinion.

2011-05-16T03:43:59+00:00

gfunk

Guest


it will be the 40th anniversary not 30th......1973 was the last. agree with mcsimmo that the only way to get chris paul to NY is via free agency. we (i'm a knicks fan) still have the cap space to do so since carmello came via a trade. i don't think battier is the answer and i doubt he will want to leave memphis after their playoff run. as a knick fan, im pretty high on landry fields and what he accomplished this past season...consistently in double figures in both points and rebounds, can hit the 3 (39%), has size and quickness will only get better. billups had his option extended for next season (over $10M from memory) and is not going anywhere this season leaving the spot for chris paul to potentially take the following season. though to be honest, i wasn't thrilled with the carmello trade. we gave up too much and now don't really have the depth we need, though we do have a bona fide match winner even if he is a bit of a bone-head.

2011-05-16T01:18:21+00:00

mcsimmo

Roar Rookie


Totally agree, Dalembert and Battier would be smart signings and match well with their existing players, although I don't think Battier is quick enough to play starting SG, maybe Douglas or another 3pt shooter who can spread the floor. A couple of problems though with getting Paul, the Knicks don't have the cap space and don't have any draft picks that they can trade until 2018! So all they have to offer New Orleans is Billups and that's not going to be enough. With Amare and Melo taking up the all the cap space they won't have room for Paul in free agency (although we don't know how things will be after the new Collective Bargaining Agreement). The Knicks need Paul if they want to compete for a championship. I'm waiting to see where Paul will end up, if he teams up with Dwight Howard somewhere that could be a winning tandem.

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