- Jan 19, 2007
- 20,586
- 18,888
[h1]Bye-bye To Mr. Wrong Nelson Quit On Knicks Long Before He Was Fired[/h1]
BY MIKE LUPICA
Saturday, March 09, 1996
DAVE CHECKETTS AND ERNIE GRUNFELD fired Don Nelson yesterday, but they had plenty of help from the Knicks, especially from Patrick Ewing. There were a lot of other things going on here, none of them very nice. One is that Nelson started to look more and more like a burn-out case, on his way to getting fired for the second season in a row. But the biggest problem was the one between him and Ewing. Nelson created it and never did anything to solve it and that is why you have to say he really fired himself.
Whatever Nelson says the rest of the way, he believes Ewing quit on him. Whatever the people who run the Knicks are saying, they believe Nelson quit on them a little bit. Now Nelson is gone. He was hired to hold things together at Madison Square Garden until free-agent reinforcements got here next season. He goes before he can scare away the reinforcements. This time he loses more than a job and his reputation as a top coach. What happened yesterday is the end of Nelson's career.
People who know Nelson very well were saying this yesterday: he came into this job thinking Ewing was a once-great player in decline, thought the Knicks were crazy to keep thinking they could build a championship team around him, thought the Knicks were crazy to throw any more money at him after next season. Ewing knew it better than anyone, and from the start. They were never together for a day. It is why Nelson spent the season worried that Ewing would stop playing for him. Last week, he was sure Ewing finally had.
I like Don Nelson. But you have to wonder now why he took the job in the first place, especially given his opinions about Ewing. Maybe in the end, Nelson took the Knicks' job for the same reason Joe Torre took the Yankees' job: Because it was the only one being offered him. At $1.5 million a year. Nelson waited his whole career to have a center like Ewing and then didn't seem to want a center like Ewing.
In the end, and the end was really Tuesday night's loss to the Clippers, it was clear to the world that Nelson did not like any of these players with the possible exception of Hubert Davis and they did not like him. By Tuesday night, Nelson looked as if he had given up trying to reach them. Or just given up. More and more, he seemed to be detached from all of them, as if the problems he had with Ewing and other veterans like John Starks and Derek Harper would go away. They did not. He does. The Knicks gave Nelson a three-year contract and got half a season out of him. They were 28-15 five weeks ago. It seems like five years.
Here is something Nelson told a close friend a week ago, when the Knicks were in the process of getting punched around on the West Coast by four opponents i n a row:
"I can't kiss their %!% anymore. I tried that. Sometimes I did it so much I made myself sick. This is the hardest team I've ever had to coach in my life."
He gave up trying. When real trouble hit his team, he did not seem to have the energy and inclination to fight back. An assistant coach who once worked for Nelson watched the Knicks play the Suns on television a week or so ago.
"I was just watching him on the sideline," the guy said. "And it wasn't the Nellie I worked for, that's for sure. It wasn't the Nellie I used to know."
Maybe that Nelson no longer exists. Maybe all the people who thought that Don Nelson died in Golden State by his own hand, and by Chris Webber's were absolutely right.
Maybe it would have all been different if Nelson had Ewing on his side from the start. He did not. Nelson started to fire himself right there, even though things did not get out of hand until March. Because it is Nelson's job to make sure he has his star player on his side, even if he believes that star's best days are gone. If Nelson believed he could kiss up to his players and succeed, he had an odd way of trying with Ewing.
BY MIKE LUPICA
Saturday, March 09, 1996
DAVE CHECKETTS AND ERNIE GRUNFELD fired Don Nelson yesterday, but they had plenty of help from the Knicks, especially from Patrick Ewing. There were a lot of other things going on here, none of them very nice. One is that Nelson started to look more and more like a burn-out case, on his way to getting fired for the second season in a row. But the biggest problem was the one between him and Ewing. Nelson created it and never did anything to solve it and that is why you have to say he really fired himself.
Whatever Nelson says the rest of the way, he believes Ewing quit on him. Whatever the people who run the Knicks are saying, they believe Nelson quit on them a little bit. Now Nelson is gone. He was hired to hold things together at Madison Square Garden until free-agent reinforcements got here next season. He goes before he can scare away the reinforcements. This time he loses more than a job and his reputation as a top coach. What happened yesterday is the end of Nelson's career.
People who know Nelson very well were saying this yesterday: he came into this job thinking Ewing was a once-great player in decline, thought the Knicks were crazy to keep thinking they could build a championship team around him, thought the Knicks were crazy to throw any more money at him after next season. Ewing knew it better than anyone, and from the start. They were never together for a day. It is why Nelson spent the season worried that Ewing would stop playing for him. Last week, he was sure Ewing finally had.
I like Don Nelson. But you have to wonder now why he took the job in the first place, especially given his opinions about Ewing. Maybe in the end, Nelson took the Knicks' job for the same reason Joe Torre took the Yankees' job: Because it was the only one being offered him. At $1.5 million a year. Nelson waited his whole career to have a center like Ewing and then didn't seem to want a center like Ewing.
In the end, and the end was really Tuesday night's loss to the Clippers, it was clear to the world that Nelson did not like any of these players with the possible exception of Hubert Davis and they did not like him. By Tuesday night, Nelson looked as if he had given up trying to reach them. Or just given up. More and more, he seemed to be detached from all of them, as if the problems he had with Ewing and other veterans like John Starks and Derek Harper would go away. They did not. He does. The Knicks gave Nelson a three-year contract and got half a season out of him. They were 28-15 five weeks ago. It seems like five years.
Here is something Nelson told a close friend a week ago, when the Knicks were in the process of getting punched around on the West Coast by four opponents i n a row:
"I can't kiss their %!% anymore. I tried that. Sometimes I did it so much I made myself sick. This is the hardest team I've ever had to coach in my life."
He gave up trying. When real trouble hit his team, he did not seem to have the energy and inclination to fight back. An assistant coach who once worked for Nelson watched the Knicks play the Suns on television a week or so ago.
"I was just watching him on the sideline," the guy said. "And it wasn't the Nellie I worked for, that's for sure. It wasn't the Nellie I used to know."
Maybe that Nelson no longer exists. Maybe all the people who thought that Don Nelson died in Golden State by his own hand, and by Chris Webber's were absolutely right.
Maybe it would have all been different if Nelson had Ewing on his side from the start. He did not. Nelson started to fire himself right there, even though things did not get out of hand until March. Because it is Nelson's job to make sure he has his star player on his side, even if he believes that star's best days are gone. If Nelson believed he could kiss up to his players and succeed, he had an odd way of trying with Ewing.