New York Post

Time will tell if RJ becomes star for N.Y

- Ian O’Connor ioconnor@nypost.com

OVER time, RJ Barrett could be an intriguing case study in fan behavior in this market. He is a hard worker and durable worker, and New Yorkers love nothing more than hard and durable workers. Barrett also carries himself with an advanced maturity that suggests he will be a model representa­tive of the Knicks for as long as they employ him.

What’s not to like about a homegrown player aspiring to be a Knicks lifer who helps end a championsh­ip drought that has covered half a century?

Good question. Here’s a better one:

How will the fans respond if the 22-year-old Barrett never ascends to the level of stardom that the Knicks were banking on when they drafted him third overall in 2019, and when they gave him $120 million this summer, rather than a one-way ticket to Salt Lake City in a deal for Donovan Mitchell?

That’s to be determined. As for Friday night, Barrett’s team offered up a relatively uninspirin­g 121-112 victory over a rail-thin Pistons team that was playing without Cade Cunningham. In their twelfth game of the season, the Knicks put in the requisite work to get back to .500, no more. It’s the least they could do after their no-show at the Nets on Wednesday.

But Barrett led all scorers with 30 points, including 20 in the first half, and he inspired Jalen Brunson, former teammate of the otherworld­ly Luka Doncic, to say the following about Barrett’s bid to become an elite player: “I think he can be an All-Star. I think he

can be a very impactful player, I think he can lead a franchise, and that’s what he was picked here to do. He can do it. I have the utmost faith in him. He works very hard. He has a great demeanor about how he plays. You never see when he’s frustrated, you never see when he’s having the game of his life. … It shows he’s not afraid of the moment, not afraid of anything. He’s capable of doing a lot of big things.”

Brunson was good for 26 points, seven assists, four steals and no turnovers, and yet that endorsemen­t was his most valuable contributi­on

of the night.

So far this season, the Knicks have been given a series of cold reminders about the necessity of high-end talent. Ja Morant. Giannis Antetokoun­mpo. Mitchell. Dejounte Murray. Jaylen Brown. Kevin Durant. Those are the men most responsibl­e for the Knicks’ half-dozen defeats to date, and coach Tom Thibodeau just doesn’t have that kind of firepower to lean on.

If you want to quibble with the inclusion of Brown in this group, well, he is an All-Star who has averaged between 20 and 25 points

the last four seasons, and who blitzed the Knicks at the Garden for 30, and who has a teammate (Jayson Tatum) far superior to anyone on Thibodeau’s side.

If you want to quibble with the inclusion of Murray in this group, well, he is an All-Star who stands among the league’s best defenders, and who blitzed the Knicks at the Garden for 36 points, nine assists and five steals, and also has a teammate (Trae Young) far superior to anyone on Thibodeau’s side.

Knicks president Leon Rose could have traded for Murray in the offseason, but he did not. He also could have traded for Mitchell in the offseason, but did not, before the Jazz sent Westcheste­r County’s finest to the Cavaliers, who beat these Knicks via Mitchell’s 38 points and 12 assists.

The good news? Rose kept all those first-round picks he has over the next five drafts to potentiall­y use in a future deal for a franchise player.

The bad news? The Knicks have a troubling history of clearing the decks for megastar recruits who never sign on the dotted line.

Thibodeau badly wanted the Mitchell deal done, and was deflated when it wasn’t. In the early hours of his Knicks tenure, he made his feelings on acquiring star power clear when he said the front office “needs to be very aggressive in seeking out those opportunit­ies. They just don’t happen by accident. You have to make them happen.”

Nobody knows if Rose can make it happen. The truth is, the league’s very best available players haven’t signed up with the Knicks in the past because they didn’t have a Donovan Mitchell on their roster. You need stars to lure even bigger stars, and Julius Randle, Brunson, and Barrett don’t quite cut it as inducement­s.

Unless Barrett explodes in a way that seems unlikely. Friday night, Thibodeau said his fourthyear wing is attacking the basket like never before. Barrett confirmed that pproach will be the centerpiec­e of his attempt to take a big leap forward. So be it.

After he agreed to his four-year, $120-million deal in late summer, Barrett said: “I feel honored and blessed. This is a place I wanted to be.”

Knicks fans wanted him back, too. They know a genuine pro when they see one. It’s a healthy working relationsh­ip right now, yet it’s one worth watching if Barrett remains a good player, but never develops into a great one.

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 ?? Getty Images ?? GOING FOR A DRIVE: RJ Barrett, who finished with 30 points, five rebounds and five assists, drives to the basket against Isaiah Stewart during the first half.
Getty Images GOING FOR A DRIVE: RJ Barrett, who finished with 30 points, five rebounds and five assists, drives to the basket against Isaiah Stewart during the first half.
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