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More joke than a coach


Jet Moses

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http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=aw-isiahlaststand041508&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Isiah Thomas is a POS. He destroyed the CBA and has clearly shown himself to be a fraud as an NBA coach and GM.

NEW YORK – Isiah Thomas never did stop the relentless mythology of himself as the street fighter out of Chicago’s Westside. Through every indignity, he insisted that he was fighting for his job, his legacy, for a ticker-tape parade he still promised until the bitter end. Somewhere between delusion and delirium, the architect of a crumbled regime had never sounded so detached of reality.

Before his final night at Madison Square Garden, Thomas was still speaking of championship days with the New York Knicks and jabbed his finger toward the visiting locker room and declared of the Boston Celtics, “One day, that’s someone we want to be.”

He spoke of his love for the New York fans, and how they have flocked back to the arena to watch his Knicks, and all this great young talent that’ll someday see true his vision of Garden glory. The Knicks rewarded one more Garden sellout with complementary concessions Monday night, confining the “Fire Isiah” chants to modest decibels with mouths stuffed with so much free food.

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“I want to be part of the parade,” Thomas declared.

The only parade Isiah is getting will be over to LaGuardia Airport and out of town for good. The fans’ anger and angst of January and February had subsided to resignation here. Before the loss to the Celtics, New York had Uncle Junior of The Sopranos singing the national anthem and Big ***** in a celebrity courtside seat. For this hit job, there was no drama. Donnie Walsh, raised in the Bronx, has come home and everyone knows that Isiah’s getting whacked.

“As Denzel (Washington) told me,” Isiah said, “ ‘You’re going to get the Bronx cheer.’ If this is the bottom, with a sold-out house tonight, in the last game, then New York is a great town.

“And in a strange kind of way I’m honored to get the Bronx cheer. Because everybody gets it. If this is the worst, this ain’t bad.”

This is his way of saying that he made it out of New York alive, false bravado until he’s out the door. The final con job of Thomas’ disastrous run as Knicks president and coach has been that he wants to keep his job. Thomas is still getting the remainder of his $24 million contract extension. He’s done nothing to earn his pay but everything to protect future payments. The Knicks are 23-58 on the season now. Larry Brown will be rooting hard Wednesday night that Isiah doesn’t end up with one more victory than he did as Knicks coach two years ago.

Until Sunday, when Walsh happened to be in the gym, the Knicks hadn’t had a legitimate practice in a month. Shootarounds seldom lasted more than 15 or 20 minutes on gameday mornings. So much opportunity to develop the Knicks young players went to waste.

To the bitter end, Thomas was still selling. For a time, Dolan was the last man in New York buying it. Finally, Thomas lost him, too. These days, Thomas sounds like an old politician on the house floor, talking to an empty chamber just so his words will be recorded for the history books.

“We went from an aging older team to a young team with a lot of future,” he said. “A lot of possibilities here. When we first got here, there weren’t any. … Now the Knicks definitely have a bright future.”

This is the kind of garbage that people in New York stopped listening to months ago. They treat him like the crazy man they pass on the street corners here. He keeps talking gibberish and they just keep moving past him.

Had they seen Isiah fighting, backing his empty words with deeds, maybe it would’ve been a little different. Yet it wasn’t 10 games into the season when his players privately told people that they could see his heart wasn’t in it, that he was barely trying to coach them. Everyone could see it. Most nights, he never climbed to his feet. He never coached. Lately, opposing scouts came to the Garden and declared the Knicks the hardest team in the league with which to file reports back to their teams.

“They haven’t run any plays in over a month,” one NBA scout said.

Said another scout, “In all of my years, I’ve never seen anything like it. If (Thomas) is trying to get fired, he’s doing a good job of it.”

The loss of the sexual harassment suit to Anucha Browne Sanders destroyed Thomas with the Knicks. Through training camp, he moped. He felt sorry for himself. He played the victim. He climbed into a shell and these Knicks never had a chance. Beyond the disastrous four years with the Knicks, including a 56-107 record as coach these past two seasons, the sexual harassment suit and depositions that showed a Garden run amok promise to make him a toxic hire anywhere else in the NBA.

Within the league, Thomas was already unpopular and loosely trusted. His days in a high-profile executive or coaching job are over. He’s made too much money and has too immense of an ego to ever see himself taking a low-level scouting position. He’ll probably go back to Detroit, where he’s still beloved as a Piston great, and be Isiah Thomas. He’ll get a chance to return to television, but the analysts’ chair won’t be able to rehab his broken basketball image.

Yes, the “Fire Isiah” chants started in the final moments Monday night but died down in New York. This dysfunctional basketball franchise has tired everyone out. They just want it over, just want him gone for good. He coaches his final game Wednesday night, in Indiana, where Walsh and Thomas were united as GM and coach all those years ago.

Just a month ago, in one more Knicks loss, Pacers fans watched him sitting listlessly and started riding him. “Hey Isiah,” one was heard to growl, “why don’t you coach your team!”

One more night for the empty suit on the Knicks bench, one more indignity on the job, and Isiah Thomas was closer to that parade everyone else has dreamed for so long in New York. Just him, just a one-man cavalcade out of town.

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I can't even comment on some of the stuff here. He is so delusional about what he has done here it isn't even funny.

The Knicks were playing before sellout crowds every night. Well if they all came back under his watch then alot of them came back disguised as empty seats.

Hopefully Walsh blows this team to bits and starts clearing out the stench or douchebags like Marbury, Curry, Randolph and builds this team from the bottom up.

Walsh has one heck of a rebuilding job in front him. I hope he doesn't try to shortcut anything the way Layden and Thomas did.

All Walsh has to do in order to rebuild is sit on his ass and do nothing for the next two years until summer 2010 when the Knicks will be far enough under the cap to sign one of the many superstar free agents opting out of their contracts that summer.

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Today should be the day Isiah gets the axe from Walsh. Back to Indiana.

This will be a day of great joy.

The beheading of what might be the absolute WORST coach in New York sports history is upon us.

Isiah Thomas needs to be banned from EVER stepping foot in NYC again. Go back and sit in Detroit where you are still worshipped and adored.

We don't want you

We don't need you

Just go away. Never come back and let the healing begin.

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This will be a day of great joy.

The beheading of what might be the absolute WORST coach in New York sports history is upon us.

Isiah Thomas needs to be banned from EVER stepping foot in NYC again. Go back and sit in Detroit where you are still worshipped and adored.

We don't want you

We don't need you

Just go away. Never come back and let the healing begin.

I never thought I'd say thi2, but Ernie Grunfeld/Dave Checketts were the good ol' days. I wonder how different things would be for the Knicks today if they had given Riley the deal he wanted?

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I never thought I'd say thi2, but Ernie Grunfeld/Dave Checketts were the good ol' days. I wonder how different things would be for the Knicks today if they had given Riley the deal he wanted?

I don't know. Riley probably would have done everything he could to get Ewing a wingman.

Jordan and the Bulls were so great I don't know if the Knicks would have been able to win a title even if Riley had stayed.

The thing about Riley is that when he came in he basically threw in rings on the table and said "If you want one of these listen to me". They did and they became one of hardest working teams in the NBA. They took their defense to a new level (and quite often over the line) but defense is what Knicks basketball has always been about.

John Starks had a great story about Riley's first practice where he set up a garbage pail on one end of the court and one on the other end. He put them there so the players could throw up after he worked them so hard that first day.

Somehow I can't imagine guys like Marbury and Curry even wanting to put up with that.

Checketts and Grunfeld did a real nice job but at this point I would take Al Bianchi and Stu Jackson, Moe, Larry, Curly anyone over Dolan and Thomas right now.

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