Tom Thibodeau’s Knicks are broken

Mets can't afford to hire wrong team president

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It’s 46 games now. We’re way past the small-sample-size blues. We’re well beyond the point where you can talk about the drag of the long season. This isn’t a slump. This isn’t a blip. This is who the Knicks are. This is what the Knicks are. 

And what they are is this: 

They are broken. 

They got stomped at home by the Pelicans Thursday night, 102-91, and while it sometimes feels like a necessary afterthought to add “… in a game that wasn’t as close as the final score indicated …” in this case it happens to be true. The Pelicans, now 11 games under .500 for the year, schooled the Knicks across just about every inch of this mess. The Pelicans are not a good team. 

Which begs the question: What adjective do you use to describe the Knicks? 

Broken. 

That’ll do fine. 

“We played hard but didn’t play with the toughness we needed to fight through things,” Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said after leading off his press conference with a sigh that probably spoke louder than any words could. “Our last six games we’ve had this inconsistency that we have to fix.” 

Tom Thibodeau reacts during the Knicks' loss to the Pelicans.
Tom Thibodeau reacts during the Knicks’ loss to the Pelicans.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Can they be fixed? Thibodeau has those two NBA Coach of the Year trophies on his mantel. He is paid more than $4 million a year to do things like fix messes precisely like this, to provide a compass for teams that have lost their way. It is easy given how last year’s Knicks finished, closing out the regular season at 16-4, to forget that at various points of the season they were also 9-13 and 25-27. 

They’re 22-24 now, sitting south of the play-in cut line, with the teeth of their schedule still to come. This four-game homestand this week, on which they’re now 0-3, was supposed to be a chance for the Knicks to fatten up their record, give them a buffer for what’s to come, a brutal 49-day, 22-game stretch that includes two western swings, 15 road games and no fewer than 19 games against teams currently in postseason position. 

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