The Record (Troy, NY)

Beaten often but not beaten down, Fizdale eyes Knicks future

- By Brian Mahoney AP Basketball Writer

GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP) » David Fizdale went to his office one day last week and got right to work as usual.

He wrote ideas on a board. Met with other staff in the building.

After about 45 minutes, something dawned on him.

“I had to, like, stop myself. Wait a minute, you don’t have to get it all done right now,” Fizdale said.

There’s plenty to do when it comes to fixing the New York Knicks, but it can’t happen yet.

So Fizdale convinced himself to go home for some family time, but he’ll be back to work as a coach this week. He expects to get started pouring over film of college players, and of course there will be months of discussion­s about potential free-agent targets.

He was beaten often during the worst season in the NBA, but he certainly doesn’t seem beaten down.

A 17- 65 finish was tied for the worst in the history of

a franchise that has lost plenty for nearly two decades, yet Fizdale said fans have been great to him. Part of that, he figures, is because the Knicks made it clear they would be focusing on growth and developmen­t and never pretended they were going to contend this season.

“We tried to make a real point of that early in the press conference­s,” Fizdale said. “Just be brutally honest and don’t make it seem like we’re going to be better than we are, we’re going to do something magical, sprinkle pixie dust and all of a sudden we’re winning. Like, that’s not real and we wanted to be real.”

The plan this season may ultimately serve the organizati­on but 65 losses stain a coach’s resume. Fizdale, though, had enough success before coming to New York, both as a championsh­ip-winning assistant under Erik Spoelstra in Miami and then reaching the postseason in his first head coaching job in Memphis, that he’s able to shake it off as a sacrifice.

“I’m not some like steel beam. I’m human and I have my moments of doubting myself obviously and the one thing I’ve learned as I’ve gone through this, been lucky enough to work with some really good coaches and players, is you eliminate doubt through work ethic,” Fizdale said.

“I’ve been lucky enough to be around this thing long enough to have won. So I’ve done that enough to know that I belong and I’m not here saying I’m the best coach or the worst coach, but I definitely belong. And so knowing that and having that belief in myself, I don’t let that record faze me.”

Nor, he said, will it make him lobby team president Steve Mills and general manager Scott Perry to fast-track the turnaround, to sign players who could help the Knicks get better next season but not stay good much beyond that. He signed on agreeing to a plan he won’t try to alter now.

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Knicks coach David Fizdale gestures during the first half of the team’s NBA basketball game against the Chicago Bulls on Tuesday, April 9, 2019, in Chicago.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Knicks coach David Fizdale gestures during the first half of the team’s NBA basketball game against the Chicago Bulls on Tuesday, April 9, 2019, in Chicago.

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