The Hamilton Spectator

JACKSON OVER AND OUT.

- BRIAN MAHONEY

NEW YORK — Phil Jackson is out as New York Knicks president after he oversaw one of the worst eras in team history and feuded with star Carmelo Anthony. Days after Jackson reiterated his desire to trade Anthony and said he would listen to deals for Kristaps Porzingis, Madison Square Garden chair James Dolan reversed course and cut ties with Jackson on Wednesday. “After careful thought and considerat­ion, we mutually agreed that the Knicks will be going in a different direction,” Dolan said in a statement. “Phil Jackson is one of the most celebrated and successful individual­s in the history of the NBA. His legacy in the game of basketball is unmatched.” But his work as a first-time executive was awful. The winner of an NBA-record 11 championsh­ips as coach, Jackson couldn’t engineer one playoff berth while running the Knicks. The team was 80-166 in his three full seasons, including a franchise-worst 17-65 in 2014-15. His departure was quickly welcomed by Knicks fans such as film director Spike Lee, who posted a picture of himself on Instagram in a celebrator­y pose after it was first reported by The Vertical. The move comes less than a week after Jackson led the Knicks through the NBA draft and on the eve of free agency that opens Saturday. Dolan said general manager Steve Mills would run the day-to-day business of the team in the short term. Jackson was a Hall of Fame coach with the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers, delivering titles with some of the game’s biggest stars like Michael Jordan, Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant. He also played for the Knicks when they won NBA titles in 1970 and 1973. He was welcomed back to the organizati­on in March 2014, but it soon became clear the transition would be a poor one. His first coaching hire, Derek Fisher, lasted just 1 ½ seasons, and Jackson’s trades and free agency moves also failed to improve the club. “I had hoped, of course, to bring another NBA championsh­ip to the Garden. As someone who treasures winning, I am deeply disappoint­ed that we weren’t able to do that,” Jackson said. “New York fans deserve nothing less.” The turbulence he created off the court may have led to his departure more than the Knicks’ record on it. Jackson wanted to trade Anthony, the All-Star forward who has two years left on the fiveyear, $124-million deal that Jackson gave him shortly after taking the job. Anthony has a no-trade clause and has said he wants to stay in New York, and the stalemate that hung over the team for much of last season threatened to linger throughout the summer. Then he said before the draft that he was listening to offers for Porzingis, the 21-yearold forward from Latvia whom Jackson drafted with the No. 4 pick in 2015 in one of his few successful moves. Jackson believed the Knicks would compete for a playoff berth last season after he traded for Derrick Rose, signed Joakim Noah and Courtney Lee and hired Jeff Hornacek to coach. But after a solid start, they quickly spiralled toward their familiar position at the bottom of the Eastern Conference and finished 31-51. Despite all that, Dolan said during an ESPN Radio interview in February that he would allow Jackson to finish his contract. But the instabilit­y involving Anthony and Porzingis threatened to damage the team’s ability to lure free agents and may have spurred Dolan’s decision. Though he had been intent on keeping Jackson, the dysfunctio­n within the franchise showed no sign of ending even as Jackson, 71, largely stayed out of sight. He never spoke to the media last season after vowing openness upon taking the job and refused to provide Anthony with the communicat­ion he sought. “It’s like a total train wreck,” tennis great and Knicks fan John McEnroe told The Associated Press last week. “I mean, he’s known as the Zen Master, like a master talker, and then he’s not talking to anybody,” McEnroe said of Jackson. “So this whole thing seems to have gone completely off the rails.”

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 ?? RICHARD DREW, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this March 2014 photo, New York Knicks president Phil Jackson puts his hand on team owner James Dolan, seated, during a news conference where Jackson wasintrodu­ced.
RICHARD DREW, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this March 2014 photo, New York Knicks president Phil Jackson puts his hand on team owner James Dolan, seated, during a news conference where Jackson wasintrodu­ced.
 ?? LEAH KLAFCZYNSK­I, TNS ?? Phil Jackson’s tenure wascharact­erized byhis feud with Carmelo Anthony.
LEAH KLAFCZYNSK­I, TNS Phil Jackson’s tenure wascharact­erized byhis feud with Carmelo Anthony.

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