Jeff Van Gundy has been mentioned as a possible candidate if the Knicks make a coaching change, but his brother wonders how serious their interest is, relays Al Iannazzone of Newsday.
After his Pistons defeated New York Saturday, head coach Stan Van Gundy noted that the organization has only recently begun to acknowledge Jeff on the jumbotron when he comes to town to broadcast its games. He coached the Knicks for nearly seven seasons and took them to the NBA Finals in 1999. Stan compares Jeff’s situation to Patrick Ewing‘s.
“I used to walk in here and Patrick would be sitting next to me on the bench [as an assistant in Orlando] and they would put him up on the jumbotron and everyone would clap and then he could never get an interview for any freakin’ job they had,” Stan said. “That’s sort of fake appreciation in my opinion. I don’t know what it is in Jeff’s case. If it’s genuine appreciation then that’s great. If it’s just a way for them to appease their fans, a little bit different.”
There’s more today out of New York:
- The Knicks will regret trading young center Willy Hernangomez for a pair of second-round picks, Iannazzone writes in a separate story. Hernangomez got a measure of revenge this week with 12 points and five rebounds in 17 minutes against his former team. “He’s been so much better,” Hornets coach Steve Clifford said. “What I’ve talked to him about is the team part. Everybody views player development as the shot, the post move, the one-on-one ‘iso’ play. None of that matters if the team can’t function when you’re out there.”
- Another 50-loss season is taking its toll on Lance Thomas, notes Marc Berman of The New York Post. Thomas, who was acquired in a January 2015 trade, has been with the Knicks longer than anyone on the current roster. He’s also a native New Yorker who grew up in Brooklyn. “I hate losing,’’ he said after Saturday’s game. “Anyone who has God-given ability to make it to this level hates losing. Myself being the long-tenured Knick here, I’ve been part of some losing teams and it doesn’t sit well with me. I want to find a way to turn it around. I lose sleep when we lose.”
- Trey Burke‘s connections with Knicks GM Scott Perry helped him earn another shot at the NBA, writes Vince Ellis of The Detroit Free Press. Perry is a Detroit native and former assistant coach at the University of Michigan, where Burke played two seasons. They bonded over their Michigan connections while Burke was preparing for the 2013 draft and Perry was an executive in Orlando, so Burke reached out to him earlier this season when he was looking for a G League contract. “I knew that he would give me a fair shot, fair opportunity to reinvent myself,” Burke said, “to come in and go through a process where I would have an opportunity to play consistent minutes at the highest level.”
Honestly, I’m not sure who’s worse between Phil Jackson or Scott Perry and Steve Mills. Hernangomez is already as good as Kanter, a couple years younger, significantly cheaper, and a good friend of KP yet is traded for two 2nd round picks. The Mudiay trade was awful since Perry gave up a solid rotation wing (which they need) and created a pg log-jam. In regards to free agent signings, THJ’s contract is bad. He an inconsistent shot-chucker whose best role is as 6th man. An Eric Gordon type contract should’ve been the one he signed, not $17MM annually. Lastly, Ron Baker’s contract was just laughable. Full room exception plus a player option is the second year? I pity Knicks fans
Agreed. The two second round picks is basically the equivalent of a basketball and pair of Air Jordan’s. Second-rounders rarely ever pan out. The whole thing is just beyond puzzling.
Perry did not sign either Hardaway or Baker, that was Mills Philly Fan.
Yes, the Willy trade was stupid, but he ain’t Kanter yet bud. Finally, I don’t like the Mundiay deal either, but it ain’t horrible either. Perry may not be the answer, but he’s better than Jackson.
“Hoping out loud” that Trey Burke is honestly a “keeper” …
Really like him & his game; so far ….