San Antonio Express-News

Despite upswing, Thibodeau believes team ‘can do better’

- By Ben Golliver

March is somehow here again, and its return promises to bring bleak anniversar­ies and ominous reflection­s. Joy has been an especially rare commodity during this full year of pandemic life, and the ongoing NBA season has largely been defined by its disruption­s and financial losses rather than growth or progress.

Yet there were the longsuffer­ing fans of the New York Knicks on Saturday, dancing in the Manhattan streets to celebrate two months of basketball that still feel too good to be true. The Knicks somehow enter March on a threegame winning streak and with an 18-17 record, good enough for the No. 4 seed in the Eastern Conference. A year ago, by contrast, they were 18-42 — one game out of the East’s basement — and only beginning to pick up the pieces after firing their coach and president. Rather than slogging through another aimless rebuilding campaign, the Knicks are above .500 after 35 games for just the third time in the last 20 years and threatenin­g to make the playoffs for the first time since 2013.

Sharp turnaround­s like this are usually driven by superstar acquisitio­ns, but the Knicks barely made a peep in free agency. They went more than nine months between games because they weren’t invited to the Disney World bubble, and their biggest offseason acquisitio­n was Tom Thibodeau, the veteran coach known for his gruff intensity.

Indeed, Thibodeau’s fingerprin­ts are all over New York’s improvemen­t. This has long been his identity: unglamorou­s, demanding, defensivem­inded and obsessed with the here and now. After the Knicks put away the Detroit Pistons on Sunday to claim their seventh win in their last nine games, Thibodeau stuck to his familiar script, whether he was asked about the recent play of center Nerlens Noel or about his team’s performanc­e relative to history.

“One, I’m never happy.

Two, I always think we can do better,” Thibodeau said. “It’s a proud organizati­on. I was here during the 1990s. That doesn’t have anything to do with today. Just like I don’t want us looking ahead, I don’t want us looking behind. Our focus has to be exactly on what’s in front of us.”

New York’s winning formula can be traced to its defense, which has improved from 23rd last year to second this season. Thibodeau made his name screaming himself hoarse while coaxing maximum effort and aggressive­ness on the defensive end, and he’s done that again this season despite juggling a roster full of youngsters and journeymen.

Offensivel­y, the Knicks have been the Julius Randle show. The 26-year-old forward has averaged 23.4 points, 10.9 rebounds and 5.5 assists — all career-highs — and landed his first allstar selection. Much like Jimmy Butler, Thibodeau’s previous centerpiec­e in Chicago and Minnesota, Randle has reached new heights by embracing a heavier workload, which has seen him play every game this season and lead the league in minutes.

“I take pride in being durable and being available for my team every night,” Randle said. “That’s what the summer training is for, the running, lifting weights

and pushing yourself every day when you don’t feel like it. Really, honestly, this is the easy part.”

Now in his seventh season, Randle has become a more refined playmaker and a more efficient scoring threat. During previous stops with the Los Angeles Lakers and New Orleans Pelicans, his offensive game was heavily reliant upon hard drives into traffic, which could turn wild or lead to contested shots, and mid-range jumpers. With experience, Randle has picked his spots more carefully and learned to stretch the defense with an improved outside shot. He’s shooting 41.9 percent from beyond the arc, and he’s taken more threepoint­ers already in 35 games than he did in his first three full seasons combined.

“Move like a guard and finish like a big,” Randle said, when asked about his offensive growth. “I know how to get to my spots and, when the three is there, I’m going to take it.”

Randle’s chief running mate has been R.J. Barrett, a scoring-minded wing who has been steadier in his second season. Barrett often looked lost and overwhelme­d as a rookie, and the 20-year-old’s progress remains central to New York’s long-term hopes. Ditto for Immanuel Quickley, a 21-year-old guard who

has played his way into all-rookie considerat­ion after being selected with the 25th pick in the draft.

There are plenty of ways that momentum could shift against the Knicks in the coming months. They are currently part of a seventeam pack that is separated by less than two games in the standings, meaning that a short swoon would send them tumbling. That morass includes the Miami Heat, Toronto Raptors and Boston Celtics, three teams with proven playoff cores that can be expected to make runs down the stretch.

What’s more, the Knicks have the third-toughest remaining strength of schedule in the East, according to Tankathon.com, and they will need to survive a six-game road trip through the Western Conference in May.

Knicks fans shouldn’t dwell on the possibilit­y that rain might be coming to ruin this parade. Spike Lee told the New York Times this week that he is “optimistic” and that his fellow die-hards “see hope,” and Randle has dismissed talk that the Knicks are defying expectatio­ns.

“In our locker room, it’s expected,” Randle said. “I’m not really surprised where we’re at as a team. We have a certain level of focus that gives us a shot every night.”

 ?? Elsa / Getty Images ?? Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau wants his team to remain focused on the road ahead instead of celebratin­g the successes up to this point in the season.
Elsa / Getty Images Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau wants his team to remain focused on the road ahead instead of celebratin­g the successes up to this point in the season.

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