Glenn
03-07-2008, 09:28 AM
Pistons at Knicks Gameday
:langlois:
by Keith Langlois
TV: TV20 Detroit (HDTV) | Radio: WDFN 1130 AM - The Fan
Last Meeting: New York won 89-65 (January 13, 2008)
The skinny: The Knicks take an 18-43 record into tonight’s game, another disastrous season under the reign of GM-coach Isiah Thomas. They’ve lost four straight games, including one Wednesday night to Cleveland when LeBron James scored 50 and broke open a tight game with four 3-point baskets in the final four minutes. Thomas has had a revolving door to his starting lineup all season. Zach Randolph has missed the past three games with a bruised right foot and is listed as day to day. Nate Robinson and David Lee started against the Cavs along with Eddy Curry, Quentin Richardson and Jamal Crawford, who leads the Knicks in scoring at 20.8 points a game, though Crawford shoots just 41 percent. The Curry-Randolph experiment failed miserably with Curry’s stats (13.1 points, 4.7 rebounds) suffering more dramatically. Numerous reports suggested Thomas was aggressively shopping both of them at the trade deadline but found no takers. Richardson has had a lousy year, averaging 7.5 points and shooting 36 percent. Rookie Wilson Chandler is getting a late-season audition at Richardson’s small forward spot. The Stephon Marbury situation – Thomas apparently told him to stay home, but Marbury is showing up anyway – continues to hover over Madison Square Garden like a mushroom cloud. At least the Knicks haven’t traded away their lottery pick this season – the last two went to Chicago for Curry.
What to watch: The Pistons’ energy level will be telling coming off their tough loss at Boston. Working in their favor – they’ve already laid one stink bomb at MSG this season. The 89-65 loss to the Knicks in January was the Pistons’ worst performance of the year by a wide margin. Against a really lousy team, they shot 31 percent – Tayshaun Prince was 0 of 10 – and trailed by 31 at one point. That’s not the kind of impression any prideful team likes to leave in a building NBA players still widely view as basketball’s Mecca. It’s also their last tuneup before a stretch of meaningful games. First up is a five-game homestand against Chicago, against which the Pistons are 0-3 this season; Philadelphia, perhaps the likeliest first-round playoff opponent; defending NBA championship San Antonio; Western up-and-comer New Orleans on national TV; and Denver, clawing for the West’s final playoff berth. And then comes a trip to Cleveland. In other words, it’s the beginning of the home stretch, and that should grab everyone’s full attention.
:langlois:
by Keith Langlois
TV: TV20 Detroit (HDTV) | Radio: WDFN 1130 AM - The Fan
Last Meeting: New York won 89-65 (January 13, 2008)
The skinny: The Knicks take an 18-43 record into tonight’s game, another disastrous season under the reign of GM-coach Isiah Thomas. They’ve lost four straight games, including one Wednesday night to Cleveland when LeBron James scored 50 and broke open a tight game with four 3-point baskets in the final four minutes. Thomas has had a revolving door to his starting lineup all season. Zach Randolph has missed the past three games with a bruised right foot and is listed as day to day. Nate Robinson and David Lee started against the Cavs along with Eddy Curry, Quentin Richardson and Jamal Crawford, who leads the Knicks in scoring at 20.8 points a game, though Crawford shoots just 41 percent. The Curry-Randolph experiment failed miserably with Curry’s stats (13.1 points, 4.7 rebounds) suffering more dramatically. Numerous reports suggested Thomas was aggressively shopping both of them at the trade deadline but found no takers. Richardson has had a lousy year, averaging 7.5 points and shooting 36 percent. Rookie Wilson Chandler is getting a late-season audition at Richardson’s small forward spot. The Stephon Marbury situation – Thomas apparently told him to stay home, but Marbury is showing up anyway – continues to hover over Madison Square Garden like a mushroom cloud. At least the Knicks haven’t traded away their lottery pick this season – the last two went to Chicago for Curry.
What to watch: The Pistons’ energy level will be telling coming off their tough loss at Boston. Working in their favor – they’ve already laid one stink bomb at MSG this season. The 89-65 loss to the Knicks in January was the Pistons’ worst performance of the year by a wide margin. Against a really lousy team, they shot 31 percent – Tayshaun Prince was 0 of 10 – and trailed by 31 at one point. That’s not the kind of impression any prideful team likes to leave in a building NBA players still widely view as basketball’s Mecca. It’s also their last tuneup before a stretch of meaningful games. First up is a five-game homestand against Chicago, against which the Pistons are 0-3 this season; Philadelphia, perhaps the likeliest first-round playoff opponent; defending NBA championship San Antonio; Western up-and-comer New Orleans on national TV; and Denver, clawing for the West’s final playoff berth. And then comes a trip to Cleveland. In other words, it’s the beginning of the home stretch, and that should grab everyone’s full attention.