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Remember in math class we learned two negatives equal a positive?
The acquisition of Steve Francis becomes a boom or bust situation for the Knicks. He's been criticized for a lot of the same things Stephon Marbury has been criticized for. Both have been called ball-hogs, me first players, and franchise killers. Could this commonality actually spawn a change in attitude from both players and help turn around the Knicks?
Once upon a time ago, Chauncey Billups was referred to in the same manner. Originally drafted by the Celtics he spent his early career being traded to Toronto, Denver, and Minnesota. The rejection toughened Chauncey Billups, and the Pistons took a chance on him as a free agent. Chauncey Billups said the key difference Detroit made for him was believing in him and providing a stable environment around him. He also matured after being humbled by his early experiences in the NBA, and is now an MVP canidate.
I'm not saying Steve Francis has the same mental makeup as Chauncey Billups, but Francis has never lacked talent.
Now he comes to New York and joins a group of unwanted, overpriced talent and a coach his a master at psychological war games.
Larry Brown is armed with a roster loaded with offensive talent, and players who carry around a chip on their shoulder.
This chip is going to be the key for the Knicks finally turning around their losing ways. Larry Brown has sacrificed this season to find out how each player on the roster ticks. He'll spend the second trying to figure out what makes Francis tick.
This is classic Larry Brown, he's made a career out of being his player's best friend and then worst enemy. This group has been his toughest task, because they are very stubborn players and haven't cracked yet under Larry. Eventually the players will breakdown and then Larry Brown will start molding them into specific roles. This has been his blueprint for success and even though it's a frustrating process the end result is more wins and team ready to contend.
Intially everyone's first thought is how are these two guys going to share the ball? Defensively they both suck.
This might be the beauty of the trade, because both players are going to realize they are benefitting by being on the court at the same time. Contrary to popular belief, Steve Francis is very willing to give up the basketball. He had no qualms about deferring to Yao in Houston, or Dwight in Orlando.
Larry's offense has always been an equal opportunity scoring one, and he puts players in areas of the court to succeed.
I think Larry is going to find a way to have Marbury and Francis feed off one another. He's going to remind them everyday what the critics have said about them and offer himself as the person to change their misfortunes. Adding Francis allows Marbury to slide to SG, the role he's been salivating over since Brown arrived. Marbury has wanted the freedom Iverson had when Brown coached him, and with Francis on board, it opens the opportunity for it.
With Marbury scoring more, it's going to give him energy to be a better defender. All it takes is your leader stepping up on defense and all of a sudden it becomes contagious. Just look at the effects Artest is having in Sacramento. All of sudden, everyone of the Kings are playing better on the defensive end.
The backcourt duo presents other teams with plenty of mismatch problems. Before teams had the luxury of putting their best perimeter defender on Marbury and making everything difficult for him. Now with Francis, you have a second scorer on the floor, capable of dropping 40 a night if you leave him open.
The Knicks are definitely not done dealing. Their next moves will be toughening up their interior defense to allow Francis and Marbury to gamble more on the perimeter to force turnovers leading to transition baskets.
The acquisition of Steve Francis becomes a boom or bust situation for the Knicks. He's been criticized for a lot of the same things Stephon Marbury has been criticized for. Both have been called ball-hogs, me first players, and franchise killers. Could this commonality actually spawn a change in attitude from both players and help turn around the Knicks?
Once upon a time ago, Chauncey Billups was referred to in the same manner. Originally drafted by the Celtics he spent his early career being traded to Toronto, Denver, and Minnesota. The rejection toughened Chauncey Billups, and the Pistons took a chance on him as a free agent. Chauncey Billups said the key difference Detroit made for him was believing in him and providing a stable environment around him. He also matured after being humbled by his early experiences in the NBA, and is now an MVP canidate.
I'm not saying Steve Francis has the same mental makeup as Chauncey Billups, but Francis has never lacked talent.
Now he comes to New York and joins a group of unwanted, overpriced talent and a coach his a master at psychological war games.
Larry Brown is armed with a roster loaded with offensive talent, and players who carry around a chip on their shoulder.
This chip is going to be the key for the Knicks finally turning around their losing ways. Larry Brown has sacrificed this season to find out how each player on the roster ticks. He'll spend the second trying to figure out what makes Francis tick.
This is classic Larry Brown, he's made a career out of being his player's best friend and then worst enemy. This group has been his toughest task, because they are very stubborn players and haven't cracked yet under Larry. Eventually the players will breakdown and then Larry Brown will start molding them into specific roles. This has been his blueprint for success and even though it's a frustrating process the end result is more wins and team ready to contend.
Intially everyone's first thought is how are these two guys going to share the ball? Defensively they both suck.
This might be the beauty of the trade, because both players are going to realize they are benefitting by being on the court at the same time. Contrary to popular belief, Steve Francis is very willing to give up the basketball. He had no qualms about deferring to Yao in Houston, or Dwight in Orlando.
Larry's offense has always been an equal opportunity scoring one, and he puts players in areas of the court to succeed.
I think Larry is going to find a way to have Marbury and Francis feed off one another. He's going to remind them everyday what the critics have said about them and offer himself as the person to change their misfortunes. Adding Francis allows Marbury to slide to SG, the role he's been salivating over since Brown arrived. Marbury has wanted the freedom Iverson had when Brown coached him, and with Francis on board, it opens the opportunity for it.
With Marbury scoring more, it's going to give him energy to be a better defender. All it takes is your leader stepping up on defense and all of a sudden it becomes contagious. Just look at the effects Artest is having in Sacramento. All of sudden, everyone of the Kings are playing better on the defensive end.
The backcourt duo presents other teams with plenty of mismatch problems. Before teams had the luxury of putting their best perimeter defender on Marbury and making everything difficult for him. Now with Francis, you have a second scorer on the floor, capable of dropping 40 a night if you leave him open.
The Knicks are definitely not done dealing. Their next moves will be toughening up their interior defense to allow Francis and Marbury to gamble more on the perimeter to force turnovers leading to transition baskets.
