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<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">The Magic were practicing at Madison Square Garden on Monday morning preparing for a playoff-type showdown with the Knicks as General Manager Otis Smith watched the proceedings. "I've told you all along we'd make the playoffs," he said.
I'm not betting the house and camper just yet. I then asked Smith where his club would be if it still had Steve Francis and the Knicks did not.
Smith got one of those looks on his face, as if he had bit into a lemon.
He shook his head. "I can't fathom where we'd be," he said.
Oh, Smith knows: The Magic would be dealing with Francis' frequent missteps and also financially hamstrung by the $34 million left on his contract the next two seasons.
The Knicks never worry about finances, but they are frustrated enough with "Stevie Franchise" to make him "Stevie Disenfranchised."
<font size=""4"">They reportedly will try to buy out Francis' contract this summer, which, if true, will continue Steve-o's free-fall.</font>
The Magic might be holding the same backroom talks if they hadn't found a sucker in the Knicks last season (and stole away Trevor Ariza in a masterstroke of a trade, to boot.)
Francis has taken his hits, and deservedly so. But while the Magic cleared the financial and emotional costs of keeping Steve-o -- essentially, Tracy McGrady's replacement -- the fact is the move hasn't translated in the standings. (Neither has the Darko Milicic-Carlos Arroyo trade, for that matter, with Milicic still an enigma and Arroyo benched twice this season.)
The Magic went 36-46 in Francis' first season. They were 19-33 last season up until his trade and again finished 36-46 after a flourish.
This season, the Magic might finish only a few games better than that, probably still under .500 and fighting for playoff crumbs.
And turnovers are still their biggest problem. . . long after Steve Francis threw his last pass in Orlando into somebody's popcorn.</div>
Source
Steve Francis has been playing better, and he hit a game winner a few weeks ago. I know he's frustrated with his role on the team, but he should take advantage of Jamal Crawford being out, and just focus on getting back to the playoffs.
I'm not betting the house and camper just yet. I then asked Smith where his club would be if it still had Steve Francis and the Knicks did not.
Smith got one of those looks on his face, as if he had bit into a lemon.
He shook his head. "I can't fathom where we'd be," he said.
Oh, Smith knows: The Magic would be dealing with Francis' frequent missteps and also financially hamstrung by the $34 million left on his contract the next two seasons.
The Knicks never worry about finances, but they are frustrated enough with "Stevie Franchise" to make him "Stevie Disenfranchised."
<font size=""4"">They reportedly will try to buy out Francis' contract this summer, which, if true, will continue Steve-o's free-fall.</font>
The Magic might be holding the same backroom talks if they hadn't found a sucker in the Knicks last season (and stole away Trevor Ariza in a masterstroke of a trade, to boot.)
Francis has taken his hits, and deservedly so. But while the Magic cleared the financial and emotional costs of keeping Steve-o -- essentially, Tracy McGrady's replacement -- the fact is the move hasn't translated in the standings. (Neither has the Darko Milicic-Carlos Arroyo trade, for that matter, with Milicic still an enigma and Arroyo benched twice this season.)
The Magic went 36-46 in Francis' first season. They were 19-33 last season up until his trade and again finished 36-46 after a flourish.
This season, the Magic might finish only a few games better than that, probably still under .500 and fighting for playoff crumbs.
And turnovers are still their biggest problem. . . long after Steve Francis threw his last pass in Orlando into somebody's popcorn.</div>
Source
Steve Francis has been playing better, and he hit a game winner a few weeks ago. I know he's frustrated with his role on the team, but he should take advantage of Jamal Crawford being out, and just focus on getting back to the playoffs.
