Tonight the Los Angeles Lakers head to the World Famous Madison Square Garden. Even when the Knicks were terrible, and even during the 3-5 seasons of disappointing Laker basketball in my 30 years, MSG games were always something different and something to feel excited about. NY vs. LA. The established primary US city vs. the city that continues to erode the primary city's importance. East vs. West. Biggie vs. Tupac. Tonight's game feels much different.
Forget the fact that the Knicks are undefeated at home this year. Forget the fact that D'Antoni is heading in to coach his first game against his former team. Forget the fact that two future Hall of Famers are not playing. After all, this isn't about playing against a hot team, isn't about taking time to implement an offense, and isn't about a lack of chemistry on the offensive end or of offensive production components. We can look back at various stretches of the 2003-04 season to draw comparisons, and at no point did the Lakers look as lifeless and beatable as they do right now.
The game isn't until 5 on the West Coast tonight, but I'm already recouping from what will be the Lakers' fourth straight loss. Of course I'm still going to tune in and hope that they actually show up and play, but I also try to be a realist. There is no heart, and no fight in this team (exemption, Kobe), and they are absolutely going to miss the playoffs at this rate. With four future Hall of Fame first-ballot inductees.
It's gut check time, Lakers. I know fans are giving you the excuse of blaming the front office, but I don't buy the whole notion of pigeon-holing a professional basketball coach into a single, monochromatic style. Phil and Jerry are exceptions, not the rule, so a Mike D'Antoni team can play defense. Any other excuse is complete B.S. and needs to be treated as such. Better defense leads to run-and-gun offense, so the two can absolutely compliment each other. Maybe we run Shell Drill all damn practice to drive the point home, but the latest disappointment in Cleveland clearly shows that it's time for everyone in the locker room to have a long look in the mirror and ask themselves what they are doing to earn their paycheck. Mitch has done plenty, so don't let him (and the rest of us) down.
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