New York Post

Benching Kemba proves Thibs is fearless when it comes to making the right moves

- Ian O’Connor Ioconnor@nypost.com

dealt him to Oklahoma City, which granted the point guard the buyout that allowed him to go home.

Rose signed a small, aging, injured player who wasn’t valued by a weaker team in his own division, so Thibodeau’s announceme­nt Monday was always a question of when, not if.

“It’s a tough decision to make,” the Knicks coach said, “but you always have to do what you think is best for the team. … I’ve got great respect for who Kemba is as a person, number one, and all that he’s accomplish­ed in this league.”

So does everyone who’s been a part of his basketball life. The ultimate pro’s pro, Walker has a generosity of spirit that makes him awfully easy to root for. At the Garden news conference called to introduce Walker and fellow newbie Evan Fournier — another player Boston didn’t keep — Kemba’s mother, Andrea, said that she was glad her son was joining the Knicks in his later years, and that the pressure of playing in New York would’ve been a lot for him to handle right out of Connecticu­t.

“I think he’s at a point in his life and career now that he’s ready for all of this,” Andrea Walker said that day.

The dream was for her son to make the kind of memorable Garden buzzer-beater for the Knicks that he once made for UConn against Pitt in the Big East Tournament. The reality was that Walker had lost the explosiven­ess that made him an NCAA champ in 2011, Michael Jordan’s first-round pick in Charlotte, and a four-time All-Star.

His plus/minus with the Knicks is -122 in 441 minutes, a ghastly stat made worse by the fact that his primary backup Derrick Rose weighs in at +113 in 390 minutes. So Thibodeau had to do something. In fact, with his starters at a combined plus/minus of -357 and his top five reserves at a combined +388, Thibs might have to make more changes beyond putting Alec

Burks in Walker’s place.

Burks is a bigger, better player on both sides of the ball, and his coach cited size and defense and a need to tighten up the rotation as reasons for demoting Walker to the end of the bench.

“I don’t like the way we’ve been trending,” Thibodeau said.

So he made a move that was trending on Twitter on a blockbuste­r baseball day. Thibodeau didn’t care that he was effectivel­y rejecting a deal made by Rose, his boss and former agent. He just made the Knicks better by proving he will not be afraid to coach them.

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