New York Post

On team of kids, a wily 26-year-old leads way

- Mike Vaccaro mvaccaro@nypost.comm

HE IS easy to forget about, because so much of the talk is of the kids, the Knicks’ first-year and second-year and third-year players, all of whom maximized the preseason in their own way. If we weren’t talking about RJ Barrett and Obi Toppin, we were speculatin­g about Immanuel Quickley and Mitchell Robinson and Kevin Knox.

Such is life in the NBA dustbin, as well as at the family photo session:

The babies get the most attention.

So it is that Old Man Julius Randle — who turned all of 26 years old on Nov. 29 — feels like the George Blanda of this bunch, white-haired and gray-bearded, even as it is likely that he is entering the very prime of his career.

Randle finished 18 rebounds shy of averaging a double-double last season, settling for a nightly output of 19.5 points and 9.7 boards. He was the Knicks’ best player, even if at times he could frustrate the Garden crowd with his shot selection, with his Carmelo-esque ball-stoppages, with his turnovers. Nobody ever said he was an MVP.

But he was certainly the most outstandin­g Knick.

And he is almost certainly going to be that again this season, which begins Wednesday night in Indianapol­is and will feature so many moving Knicks pieces and so much youth. Yet it is Randle who, more nights than not, will fill up the stat sheet in ways you probably won’t even notice until the game’s over.

“It’s always foggy, the first start to a new seasson,”, Randle said Tuesday, a day before the Knicks will match with the Pacers at Bankers Life Fieldhouse and we’ll get a first chance too gauge if the generally feel-eel-good 3-1 preseason can have any kind of translatio­n to the real thing.

“We’re excited.

We like what we’ve found so far and we hope to keep it going,”

Coach Tom Thibodeau likes what he’s found so far, among Randle and the other corps of veterans on whom he’ll lean to help spread his message and his lessons. Thibodeau specifical­ly mentioned point guard Elfrid Payton, Reggie Bullock and newcomer Alec Burks among those older players — and none of them is 30 yet, either — who have shown a willingnes­s to be his lieutenant­s on the floor.

“I like the way Julius has been from summer on, to all the practices,” Thibodeau said. “But we a team of leaders. We have some really positive veterans and sometimes that’s not always the case. They all come in, practice hard, play for the team, they’re really good for our young guys.”

“I don’t want to lean on one guy, I want to have a team of leaders and you’re starting to see that.”

It is an excellent ambition, and the others will surely be given every opportunit­y at mentoring and tutoring and advising.

Still, it is Randle who is the most accomplish­ed player on the team, lifetime averages of 16.1 and 9.0, a borderline All-Star in New Orleans in 2018-19. For all the potential that infiltrate­s the roster, lurks there, loiters there, it’s Randle who feels the most like a reliable old pro, capable of getting 20 and 10 whenever the mood strikes.

He is not spectacula­r, but he doesn’t need to be. He needs to be 20 and 10, needs to be Old Man Julius while the kids get their sea legs, while some adjust to NBA life for the first time and others try to take a meaningful leap up.

Randle admitted he’s been a little salty, being away from the game so long. He broke his leg as a rookie with the Lakers, but even then, as he recovered and rehabbed, he could be around the team around his teammates. When the pandemic sent everyone scattering in March — and when the Knicks weren’t invited to theth NBA bubble — there was nobody with whom Randle could share his daily basketball rituals. It wore on him.

“This was different,” he said. “This time we were separate, and away, and so I’m definitely excited to get started.”

Randle himself knows the narrative of the season — “We have a lot of young guys,” he said — and so he probably recognizes that as those basketball toddlers become a greater part of the nightly conversati­on, he may well become less of it.

Of course, Old Man Julius, at 26, is a pretty wily figure. He’ll figure it out as he has to.

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Julius Randle
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