Knicks not flustered by results amid latest losing skid: 'The sky isn't falling'

While a midseason losing streak from a championship contender is by no means indicative of how their season will end, the latest vibes surrounding the Knicks are nevertheless unnerving.

Just hours after Knicks owner James Dolan publicly reaffirmed sky-high expectations, his team stumbled in the national spotlight on Monday, dropping its fourth straight game in an ugly blowout road loss to the first-place Pistons.

The Knicks' woes stretch beyond their current four-game lull. Since their NBA Cup title win over the Spurs on Dec. 16, they've produced an uninspiring 5-6 record and lost four times by double-digits. They've also lacked physicality on both ends of the floor, causing their advanced metrics to slide.

But concerns outside the Knicks' locker room aren't bothering the players. Their leading scorer and catalyst, Jalen Brunson, isn't lifting the lid on some panic button.

"The sky isn't falling. We've lost four in a row," the Knicks' captain said following Tuesday's practice. "Obviously, we don't want to be in a position like that. We've got to be better, be positive. We've got to understand, we didn't start the season great and then we played well after that. It's just a stint we need to get out of."

Brunson, the NBA Cup MVP who earned Eastern Conference Player of the Month honors by averaging 30.6 points and 7.1 assists over 14 games in December, hasn't really missed a beat in the new year. He remains the Knicks' reliable go-to option, only now his challenge is receiving ample support from teammates.

In the midst of shooting slumps from three-point range and lingering injuries to key contributors, the Knicks are searching for a rhythm and swagger they once flaunted. When asked if the NBA's in-season tournament win triggered some sort of hangover, Brunson didn't agree with the label.

"I'm not calling it a hangover, I'm not calling it anything," Brunson said. "It's us not being where we need to be, so where do we go from here?... We just have to be better as a team. I could say it the same way a thousand different times. It's that plain and simple."

The Knicks sorely need Karl-Anthony Towns to deliver more consistent scoring, akin to the numbers posted last season as an All-Star alongside Brunson. The veteran center was ineffective against the Pistons, limited to just six points and responsible for a season-worst six turnovers.

What can't be disputed is Towns' far-from-seamless transition to head coach Mike Brown's system. He's already logged four games this season with single-digit points -- last season, he finished below 10 points only once.

"I lean on my experience, I've unfortunately had to adjust to a lot of head coaches and a lot of new teammates and situations," Towns said on Tuesday. "We've got to do what I've got to do to move forward."

Of course, the Knicks must demand more from Towns. But their most glaring issue over the past few weeks has been defensive vulnerability. In their 11-game stretch since the NBA Cup, they've been outscored by a whopping 5.6 points per 100 possessions.

The eventual return of Josh Hart from injury will be an energy boost, and Mitchell Robinson's brief three-game absence made the Knicks' lineup smaller and weaker in the paint. But toughness is a matter of will, and Towns blames the four-game skid on the defensive efforts.

"You've got to play defense to win games," Towns said. "We can't give up the amount of points we do and not score as much as them."

There was never any doubt of the Knicks' bar being set above another Eastern Conference Finals appearance. Perhaps the combination of welcomed reinforcements and on-court adjustments can rejuvenate a team still positioned to reach greater heights.

The Knicks will try to snap their losing streak at home on Wednesday, against the Clippers, before embarking on a four-game road trip out west.

Where Warriors star Steph Curry stands in second NBA All-Star fan vote returns

Where Warriors star Steph Curry stands in second NBA All-Star fan vote returns originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The second round of returns for NBA All-Star fan voting has arrived. 

Warriors star Steph Curry remains in third place in the Western Conference behind Los Angeles Lakers star Luka Dončić and Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokić. 

Curry stands with 1,844,903 votes in the second return. He has earned 813,448 votes since the first fan voting returns on Dec. 23

In the first fan voting returns, Curry trailed Jokić by 97,507 votes. The Nuggets star center has slightly extended his lead ahead of Curry to 153,657. 

Curry has extended his lead over Oklahoma City Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the reigning NBA MVP,  to 290,435 votes. 

The 37-year-old Curry, who is averaging 28.7 points in 27 games played this season, seeks his 12th All-Star selection. 

Another Warrior, forward Jimmy Butler, slipped to 19th in the Western Conference in the second returns after receiving the 17th-most votes in the West for the first fan voting returns. 

Fan voting for the 2026 All-Star Game began on Dec. 17 and will conclude on Jan. 14. It will account for 50 percent of the final vote, while current NBA players and a media panel will each account for 25 percent to make up the other half.

This season, All-Stars will be selected without regard to position. The new United States vs. The World format will include 24 players split into three teams, with five players earning honors as starters from the two conferences. 

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Steph Curry lists NBA legends he wants with him at future Hall of Fame induction

Steph Curry lists NBA legends he wants with him at future Hall of Fame induction originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It’s a given that Warriors superstar Steph Curry will be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame one day, but who will be on stage with him for the big moment?

During an impromptu interview in Toronto for NBA on NBC, Vince Carter asked Golden State’s prolific point guard which Hall of Fame presenters he wants there for the special occasion. Curry hadn’t thought about it until that moment, he said, but he immediately fired off a short list.

“I mean, you,” Curry told Carter, “Steve Nash, Reggie Miller and Ray [Allen] are the names that I think off the top of my head. …

“Those are my guys, though. It’s crazy to even say out loud.”

Curry, of course, has a special connection and relationship with each of the players he named. He passed Allen for the most career 3-pointers made in NBA history during the 2021-22 season, and he credits Carter, who was Toronto Raptors teammates with his father Dell Curry, for changing the game during the Vinsanity Era.

The Curry-Nash parallels have been prevalent from Day 1, and the Warriors star has credited the former Golden State player development consultant for greatly influencing many parts of his game. Curry has described Miller, another 3-point legend, as his favorite player growing up, and the pair have shared a mutual respect throughout Curry’s iconic career.

It would take ages to dive into each of Curry’s friendships with the four NBA greats, but their impact on him is evident as he nears the halfway point of his 17th season in the league. It isn’t lost on Curry that he’s much closer to where they are, the Hall of Fame, than the start of his career.

“I guess the only thing is being able to embrace the fact that there are less days ahead on the court than there are behind, so I don’t run away from the fact of your mortality in the sense of your basketball mortality,” Curry told Carter. “I know that I don’t have that many years left, but the idea of just honing in on the now, and there’s a sense of urgency at the moment because I still have a lot to prove on the court.

“I don’t want to get too ahead of myself. We’ve got to hold on for as long as we can.”

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Trae Young Trade Rumors: Destinations, packages, ideas including blockbuster deal to Wizards

After more than seven seasons together, Trae Young and the Atlanta Hawks are ready to go their separate ways. It's mutual, with Young’s agents working for the Hawks to find the best trade partner and new home for the three-time All-Star.

The challenge is actually finding a trade that works.

There is not much of a market for Young, league sources have told NBC Sports. On the surface, one would think a lot of teams would be interested in a 27-year-old in his prime who averages 25.2 points and 9.8 assists a game for his career. They are not. Part of the hesitation is that the league is deep with good point guards, and not many teams are looking for one (for example, Young used to be linked to the Spurs, but they now have De'Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper). For the teams that need someone at the point, the challenges are Young's well-chronicled defensive shortcomings, his ball-dominant style and how that impacts team chemistry, and how those two items combine to put a ceiling on how good a team can be with Young. Add in the fact he makes a lot of money — $45.9 million this season, a $48.9 million player option for next season, and he is eligible for and wants a contract extension — and teams looking at tax aprons are hesitant. At best.

Which teams are interested? Who should be? Here are three teams to watch.

Washington Wizards

Washington is the clear frontrunner for a Young trade, with NBA insider Marc Stein first reporting their interest. The Wizards have a promising young core: Second-year center Alex Sarr is a defensive force who can shoot 3s and is the kind of big a lot of teams are trying to find; plus there is scoring on the wings with Tre Johnson and Kyshawn George, and the two-way potential of Bilal Coulibaly. Add Young to this group and suddenly the long-moribund Wizards — who have made the playoffs once in the last seven years and that will become eight this season — have an entertaining team with potential.

There are legitimate concerns that a trade could short-circuit the player development underway in Washington, but if owner Ted Leonsis just wants to get back into the postseason quickly, this is a path to it.

The Trade: Washington receives Trae Young; Atlanta receives C.J. McCollum, Corey Kispert and some picks.

McCollum is in this deal to make the money work, he has an expiring $30.6 million contract. That said, he is averaging 18.6 points per game this season, is a veteran leader, and could be a boost for the remainder of the season in Atlanta.

Kispert is a rock-solid rotation wing shooting 39.5% from beyond the arc this season — which is why the Hawks won't want to give him up and instead will push for something like the combination of Malaki Branham and AJ Johnson in the deal. That could be a sticking point.

The draft picks get interesting — there are front offices around the league that feel Atlanta should have to send picks out with Young to get a team to take on that contract. The Hawks do not see it that way. Washington should not give up its own pick this year or anything of real value, but it does control Oklahoma City's 2026 pick (technically, they get the worst of the Thunder, Rockets and Clippers, which will be OKC). That will very likely be the 30th pick, so the Wizards can throw it in and the Hawks can say they got a first-round pick. That's the most valuable pick the Wizards should give up, other than just a second-rounder or two.

Minnesota Timberwolves

And we're already into trades that I don't like and/or don't make much sense.

The argument for Minnesota to trade for Young is that they need shooting and a point guard, since Father Time quickly caught up with Mike Conley. The idea is that the team needs a boost if it is going to take a step forward from making the Western Conference Finals (as it has done the past two seasons), and Young could be that boost. Anthony Edwards, next to Young, has the potential to be explosive offensively, and with Rudy Gobert in the paint, they can cover up Young's defensive shortcomings.

The problem is how much money Young makes and how much Minnesota has to give up in any trade.

The Trade: Minnesota receives Trae Young; Atlanta receives Naz Reid, Donte DiVincenzo, Mike Conley and a player on a minimum contract.

What has made Minnesota so dangerous the past few years is its depth and versatility, and this four-for-one trade sacrifices it. Minnesota is a good 23-13 this season, and while that is still sixth in the West the Timberwolves are a game out of the top four and hosting a round in the playoffs, and 2.5 games out of being the No. 2 seed. This is not a team in need of a dramatic shakeup of roster and style, and that's what Young brings to the table.

While this trade can be manipulated to bring in a third team and maybe send out Julius Randle instead, the issue comes back to the reality that it's hard to see how any of these trades would make Minnesota better. This is not a deal they should be involved in.

Milwaukee Bucks

Milwaukee is buying, not selling, heading into the trade deadline — it wants to enhance a team that believes it can still be a threat in a wide-open East and in doing so impress Giannis Antetokounmpo. The Bucks need more talent — more shot creation and shooting around Antetokounmpo — and Young is the biggest name on the board. Sure, the Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard pairing didn't work, but the Bucks can try to convince themselves that this would be different, no matter how much they have to give up.

For Atlanta, they could get help along the front line and maybe a future first-round pick… is that enough?

The Trade: Milwaukee receives Trae Young; Atlanta receives Bobby Portis, Kyle Kuzma, another player (Gary Harris?), Milwaukee's 2031 first-round pick.

That pick becomes a big inflection point: would the Bucks give it up? I'm not sure why Atlanta would want to do this deal and take on the added years of Portis and Kuzma unless that pick was in the mix. If I'm the Bucks is Young really enough to give up the one first-round pick I can still trade?

Portis would help the front line in Atlanta and Kuzma can fit in the rotation. For Milwaukee, already a very thin team, this would hurt its depth even more. Can Young alone fix the issue of the non-Antetokounmpo minutes?

This feels more like a trade born of desperation and is not a great deal for either side, but are both teams desperate enough to do it anyway?

Other Teams mentioned

Here are quick thoughts on other teams that come up in rumors:

• LA Clippers: The idea is that Young would help the team in the non-James Harden minutes, except that Kawhi Leonard is healthy and doing that much better than Young would already. Plus, the Clippers are focused on a 2027 pivot and wouldn't want to extend Young.

• Toronto Raptors: Is Young really a fit with a team that is winning thanks to its defense and depth? The trade likely would require RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley plus a first-round pick or two going to Atlanta, and it's hard to see why Toronto thinks this makes them better (taking the ball out of Brandon Ingram's hands).

• Sacramento Kings: Let's put aside the fact that this trade does not make much sense for either side (when has that stopped Sacramento in the past), instead focusing on the fact that Sam Amick at The Athletic has already reported the Kings have zero interest in such a trade. That's smart by the Kings.

• Dallas Mavericks: Multiple reports out of Dallas say there is no interest in the team trading for Young. There will be no swap of problems with Anthony Davis.

Fantasy Basketball Waiver Wire: Aaron Nesmith's time to shine

The New Year is here, and with it have come new injuries and new opportunities. The biggest storyline of the last week is Nikola Jokic’s hyperextended knee that will cause him to miss at least a month. Denver will have to fill the void with a committee approach, and multiple Nuggets appear in this week’s column.

Aaron Nesmith has played great since returning to Indiana’s lineup, and he tops the list. With key injuries in Chicago and Washington, Bulls and Wizards feature prominently here, too. Multiple frontcourt injuries in Detroit should mean plenty of run for Isaiah Stewart for at least the next week.

Here are the top fantasy basketball waiver wire adds for Week 12.

→ Watch the NBA Coast 2 Coast Tuesday on NBC and Peacock, as the Heat take on the Timberwolves at 8 p.m. ET before the Mavericks and Kings square off at 11 p.m. ET. Both games are available on Peacock. Check your local listings for the NBC game in your area.

NBA: Philadelphia 76ers at New York Knicks
Fantasy managers expected big things from Maxey, and he has delivered thus far.

Priority Adds

1. Aaron Nesmith
2. Isaiah Stewart
3. Jake LaRavia
4. Peyton Watson
5. Quentin Grimes
6. Justin Champagnie
7. Isaiah Collier
8. Ayo Dosunmu
9. Caleb Love
10. Luke Kornet

Quentin Grimes, Philadelphia 76ers (35 percent rostered)

After a rough stretch of games, Grimes is back on track with four straight strong performances. Over the last week, he’s averaged 13.3 points, 4.5 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.8 steals, 1.3 blocks and 3.0 triples across 33 minutes. Despite improved availability across the roster, Grimes is surging as one of the first guys off Philly’s bench. His 40 minutes in Monday's OT loss highlight Philadelphia's faith in him late in games.

Aaron Nesmith, Indiana Pacers (27 percent rostered)

After returning from a six-week absence, Nesmith has found his groove, and he’s worth a look off the waiver wire. Across his last four outings, he’s averaged 14.3 points, 5.0 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 0.8 steals, 1.3 swats and 3.0 triples across 29.6 minutes. Nesmith is a top-75 fantasy player over the last week, and his role could increase significantly with Bennedict Mathurin (thumb) set to miss substantial time. Indiana is still looking for answers in its starting five, and Nesmith certainly delivered on Sunday with a 25/4/8 line including two swats and five triples across 34 minutes.

Peyton Watson, Denver Nuggets (27 percent rostered)

Watson has started 21 straight games, filling in for Aaron Gordon and Christian Braun. Gordon and Braun both returned on Sunday, with Braun rejoining the starting five and Gordon coming off the bench. Watson remained with the first unit and logged his third straight 20-point game in 29 minutes. Watson’s playing time and production may be scaled back with Gordon and Braun back, but the Nuggets are still without Nikola Jokic, Jonas Valanciunas and Cameron Johnson. Rotation minutes will be available, and Watson has done enough to earn at least 25-30 for the foreseeable future. DaRon Holmes II has started at center with Jokic and Valanciunas sidelined, but he isn’t worth a look in most fantasy leagues due to his limited minutes. Tim Hardaway Jr. is a viable add thanks to his scoring and three-point shooting.

Ayo Dosunmu, Chicago Bulls (23 percent rostered)

All of Dosunmu, Kevin Huerter and Tre Jones have seen increased run and production over their last four games, and all are worth adding off the waiver wire with Coby White on a minutes restriction and Josh Giddey still sidelined. Jones is the best add for managers in need of assists, while Huerter is the better rebounder and three-point shooter. Dosunmu is the best of the group in all-around production, so he's the preferred add here. Huerter is best reserved for deeper leagues, while Jones and Dosunmu are worth rostering in standard leagues.

Isaiah Stewart, Detroit Pistons (23 percent rostered)

Jalen Duren and Tobias Harris will be out for at least a week, freeing up Stewart to take on a larger role for Detroit’s next three games, and potentially longer. Stewart has recorded a blocked shot in 10 straight games, averaging 2.4 swats in that span. He started Sunday’s win over the Cavaliers, delivering a full 8/3/2/2/3 line across 31 minutes.

Jake LaRavia, Los Angeles Lakers (21 percent rostered)

LaRavia continues to shine for the Lakers, and he should stay heavily involved in the rotation until Rui Hachimura and Austin Reaves return. Even when the pair return, LaRavia has been too good to see his minutes cut dramatically. Over his last two games, LaRavia has averaged 23.5 points, 7.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists, 1.5 steals, 0.5 blocks and 3.5 triples. He needs to be rostered in all standard leagues.

Isaiah Collier, Utah Jazz (16 percent rostered)

Collier offers strong numbers in a scarce waiver wire category - assists. He’s averaging 6.6 on the season, but over his last 11 games, he’s dished 8.5 per game to go with 9.8 points, 3.1 boards and 1.0 steals. Collier has been excellent as Keyonte George’s primary backup at PG, but if the latter is forced to miss time or Utah mixes up its starting five, Collier would be in line for big stat lines. In his last start, Collier went for 16/6/10 with a block and a triple across 37 minutes.

Luke Kornet, San Antonio Spurs (15 percent rostered)

Kornet had his best game of the season on Saturday, delivering 23 points, eight rebounds, three assists and five blocked shots across 31 minutes. He’s enjoyed a strong run of games as of late, and he should retain value even after Victor Wembanyama returns. Wemby could come off the bench or see a reduced workload in the games ahead, especially with San Antonio playing a Tuesday-Wednesday back-to-back set.

Caleb Love, Portland Trail Blazers (13 percent rostered)

Jerami Grant (Achilles) will miss a 10th straight game on Monday, which means Love should continue to see meaningful minutes. Across his last seven appearances, the rookie out of Arizona has posted 17.3 points, 2.9 rebounds, 2.3 assists, 0.7 steals and 3.9 triples across 29.7 minutes. He’s worth a look as a points and threes specialist.

Justin Champagnie, Washington Wizards (12 percent rostered)

Over his last four games, Champagnie ranks just outside the top 100 in per-game fantasy value with averages of 12.5 points, 7.0 rebounds, 1.0 steals, 1.3 blocks and 1.0 triples across 25.5 minutes. Kyshawn George is without a timeline for return, and Champagnie should continue to be involved in the rotation until he returns. If you miss out on Champagnie, Bilal Couliabaly is a worthwhile add, as is Tre Johnson, who has started each of the last four that George has missed.

Other options:Cam Spencer (18%), Bilal Coulibaly (27%), Tre Johnson (10%), Tre Jones (26%), Kevin Huerter (11%), Tim Hardaway Jr. (17%), Julian Champagnie (15%)

Draymond Green gives hilariously self-aware take on Steve Kerr's fiery ejection

Draymond Green gives hilariously self-aware take on Steve Kerr's fiery ejection originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Whether it’s smashing a clipboard or sharing disapproval with a referee’s call, Warriors coach Steve Kerr is not one to shy away from expressing anger. 

Kerr’s latest heated moment came in the fourth quarter of the Warriors’ 103-102 loss to the LA Clippers on Monday, as he demonstratively argued against a no-call on a goaltend by Clippers forward John Collins

Warriors star Draymond Green was asked after the game if he had ever seen his coach that angry, to which he provided a hilarious and astutely self-observant example. 

“Yeah,” Green responded during his postgame press conference. “When he was ready to kill me the other day in the huddle.” 

Green referred to the clash between Kerr and himself during a Warriors win over the Orlando Magic in December. Green left the bench and did not return to the game, saying it was “best to remove” himself. 

It’s a good sign for morale that Green can chuckle about the incident in hindsight. 

The team responded well after Kerr’s ejection, and his players appreciated the fire that he showed after receiving some unfavorable officiating. 

“To be honest, I was going to do that and [then] I saw him…” Warriors star Steph Curry said to reporters after the game. “… I love that fired-up Steve for sure. Somebody had to do it tonight.” 

Jimmy Butler felt the same way, noting how powerful it is to see Kerr’s anger in person. 

“You see it sometimes on the internet,” Butler said after the game (h/t The Athletic’s Nick Friedell). “But I really get to see it face to face. Like I always tell you, I like confrontation when motherf—ers start yelling so that’s definitely good.” 

Players always appreciate a coach who will stick up for them, especially when it seems like all the calls are going against them. 

As long as that anger isn’t directed at each other during a timeout like the clash with Green, Kerr’s fire could continue to be beneficial for the Warriors. 

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Nuggets reportedly optimistic Nikola Jokic will be back playing by the All-Star break

Denver was not exactly forthcoming around Nikola Jokic's knee injury, aside from the good news that no ligaments were damaged. The team called it a hyperextension, although that is what happened to the knee, not a diagnosis (something Jeff Stotts pointed out at In Street Clothes, adding Jokic's case has the markings of a bone bruise).

As for a return timeline, the Nuggets said only that the three-time MVP would be re-evaluated in a month. Fortunately, reporting from Tony Jones at The Athletic fleshed that out.

According to team sources, the hope is that Jokić is back and playing by, at worst, the All-Star break. On Sunday night in Brooklyn, Jokić was in Denver's locker room in good spirits. While he hasn't returned to the court yet, he's well underway in his rehabilitation and has been able to be aggressive with it.

If Jokic's return falls near the All-Star Game, it will be interesting to see how he and the Nuggets handle it. While Jokic says it's an honor to be voted in by fans, and this year will feature a USA vs. World format for the game as it returns to NBC during the middle of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics, it's no secret Jokic doesn't really love playing in the exhibition All-Star Game itself. He and the Nuggets are not going to delay a return just to avoid it, but if his return is on that bubble, there will be conversations.

The return timeline impacts a few other things as well, including Jokic meeting the 65-game threshold to be eligible for any postseason awards (if he is not back by the Jan. 30 game against the Clippers he will not make it to the pointless 65-game threshold set by the league).

It also impacts seeding in a deep, bunched-up Western Conference. Denver is working to keep its head above water and is 2-2 without Jokic so far. At 24-12, the Nuggets sit fourth in the West, but only 4.5 games separate the No. 2 seed Spurs and the No. 7 seed Suns, who would be in the play-in. Any kind of slump can quickly put a team in the play-in, where they face good teams to get out of it (then have a much tougher road through the postseason).

There has been good news on the injury front for Denver with both Aaron Gordon and Christian Braun returning to the rotation over the weekend. However, another starter, Cam Johnson, remains out, also with a knee hyperextension.

What the Nuggets really need is the return of Jokic, and so far his recovery appears to be going well.

SMU’s Kevin ‘Boopie’ Miller is The Associated Press men’s college basketball player of the week

The 6-foot senior from Chicago had 27 points, 12 assists and four rebounds to help SMU beat then-No. 12 North Carolina last week, securing the program's first win against a ranked team under second-year coach Andy Enfield. Miller was 10 of 13 from the field, hit a trio of 3-pointers and finished with just two turnovers in 33 minutes in the emphatic 97-83 win over the Tar Heels.

Knicks owner James Dolan: 'We want to get to the Finals, and we should win the Finals'

Nothing puts Knicks fans on edge like James Dolan stepping into the spotlight. Except maybe seeing their team get blown out by the Eastern Conference leaders.

Monday, Knicks fans had to suffer through both. Dolan made an appearance with WFAN’s Craig Carton and set the bar high for his team — Finals or bust — and said not to expect any big roster changes at the trade deadline. Here are a few of his comments, via Stefan Bondy of The New York Post.

"We want to get to the Finals. And we should win the Finals. This is sports and anything can happen. But getting to the Finals, we absolutely got to do."

"We love our team right now. They have chemistry, they all like each other. I've never seen a locker room more copacetic. There's a lot of energy there. Leon can always overrule me. But I don't see us making a big change. Because we got to keep building up this group. This group can win a championship. I believe that."

All that felt a little awkward a few hours later, after the East-leading Detroit Pistons easily handled the Knicks on Monday night, beating them 121-90 behind 29 from Cade Cunningham, who was easily the best player on the court. A January regular-season game is not a May playoff game, but this was the Knicks' fourth straight loss as the team has hit a slump. If nothing else, the timing of Dolan's comments felt odd.

In the interview, Dolan praised former coach Tom Thibodeau but said he was not collaborative or dedicated to player development the way a coach and team need to be in the modern NBA.

Dolan also spoke about the Knicks not hanging an NBA Cup banner, via Christian Arnold of The New York Post (the Knicks are 5-6 since winning the Cup in Las Vegas).

"We are going to raise the banner. We're going to raise the NBA championship banner. That's the banner we want to raise. We want an NBA championship, we don't want some consolation prize."

The Knicks are still the betting favorite to come out of the East at DraftKings and reach the NBA Finals (the Knicks are +290 to the Pistons' +400), living up to Dolan's prediction. The thing he said that should make Knicks fans happy was that team president Leon Rose "could overrule him" on player/personnel decisions (Dolan getting involved in roster decisions is the worst possible outcome).

Still, Dolan has spoken and set the bar high — exactly where most Knicks fans wanted it and believed it should be before the season tipped off. It's just always a little concerning when Dolan steps into the spotlight.

Mazzulla: Josh McDaniels drew up ‘pre-snap motion' plays for Celtics

Mazzulla: Josh McDaniels drew up ‘pre-snap motion' plays for Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Joe Mazzulla will do anything to find an edge, and that includes taking best practices from other sports.

So, when members of the New England Patriots came to TD Garden last month to take in a Boston Celtics game, Mazzulla couldn’t let them leave without picking a few brains.

During his weekly interview on 98.5 The Sports Hub’s Zolak & Bertrand, the Celtics head coach revealed that Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels spent some time with his team prior to a Dec. 19 game against the Miami Heat — and dove into some Xs and Os for Mazzulla’s benefit.

“He came to a game a couple of weeks ago, and he actually drew up a couple of pre-snap motion plays for us, for me to kind of visualize and see how we could use them as sets,” Mazzulla said Tuesday. “But his mind is amazing.”

How exactly can McDaniels’ pre-snap motion plays help Mazzulla coach his basketball team?

“It can definitely translate (to basketball),” Mazzulla responded. “(McDaniels) was kind of explaining some of the stuff that they do. Did you guys see the answer Kirk Cousins gave about how the quarterback position has changed, and how reads have changed? I mean, it’s very similar. That’s kind of where basketball is as well.

“There’s obviously game plans and details that you have to develop, but over the course of the game, defenses, offenses, spacing, coverages — things are changing so much that you have to be able to adjust on the fly.”

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins recently went viral for the lengthy dissertation he gave during a press conference on how to read coverages, and the chess match that goes on between QBs and defenses prior to the snap.

As Mazzulla explained, there are lessons to be taken from that pre-snap chess match that directly apply to basketball.

“I think that it’s the pre-snap stuff and the ability to recognize whether they’re disguising man or zone (coverage) and how you go about making the defense tell that, so you know beforehand, and then having to read in real-time — that’s right where basketball is,” Mazzulla added.

Mazzulla’s connection with the Patriots goes way back — he’s attended multiple training camp practices at Gillette Stadium and made a trip to Foxboro this past August to chat with head coach Mike Vrabel. It appears that connection remains very strong, as Mazzulla leaves no stone unturned in his never-ending quest for improvement.