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View Full Version : N.Y. Knicks Fire Layden, Hire Thomas


Baseball Guru
12-22-2003, 09:32 PM
By CHRIS SHERIDAN, AP Basketball Writer

NEW YORK - In a change of leadership that almost no one at Madison Square Garden saw coming, Scott Layden was fired Monday as president of the New York Knicks (news) and was replaced by Isiah Thomas (news - web sites).


The move comes after New York missed the playoffs the past two seasons with a roster largely assembled by Layden. The Knicks are 10-18 this season, and recent speculation centered on coach Don Chaney possibly losing his job.


Instead, the man forced out was Layden, who joined the Knicks in the summer of 1999 after they were coming off an appearance in the NBA Finals (news - web sites).


"I don't think there's any question that everybody is underperforming. Just look at our record," said James Dolan, the chairman of the team's corporate owner, Cablevision. "This is the thing we could do right now to most help the team. That's the bottom line of it."


Thomas has been out of the NBA since being fired over the summer by the Indiana Pacers (news), where he was the coach for three seasons. He received a phone call from Dolan and Garden president Steve Mills on Friday, then spent Saturday meeting with them.


He was introduced at a press conference in the same Garden restaurant where Layden made his first public appearance as the Knicks' general manager 4 1/2 years ago.


"We've got players and coaches probably a little bit unsure of what's going on, and my job is to come here and calm the waters," Thomas said.


Calming the waters, however, could be a tough task after Thomas emphasized in several recent interviews that his desire is to return to coaching. That might not bode well for Chaney, who has been coaching the Knicks throughout their decline into insignificance.


Thomas said everyone in the organization will be evaluated, providing no assurances to anyone. Chaney did not speak to reporters after practice Monday morning.


Thomas' first look at his new team will come Tuesday night when former Knick Latrell Sprewell and the Minnesota Timberwolves (news) visit New York.


The task confronting Thomas is a difficult one, whether he tries to tinker with or overhaul an underachieving roster with the league's highest payroll. The contracts of Allan Houston, Keith Van Horn, Howard Eisley and Shandon Anderson will take up almost all of the team's salary cap space for the next three seasons.


"Everyone who looks at the cap situation, the first thing they say is, 'You can't fix this, you can't do it,'" Thomas said. "We have to be a team that's very unconventional and very creative in going out and getting players."


Layden's last major move was the four-team trade that sent Sprewell to Minnesota and brought Van Horn to New York. The deal has appeared to favor the Timberwolves during the first two months of the season. Sprewell has averaged 17.2 points for Minnesota while Van Horn has struggled, averaging 14.8 points and getting benched for the fourth quarter of several recent games.


Before the Van Horn trade, Layden's biggest move came on draft night in 2002 when he sent Marcus Camby, Mark Jackson and the Knicks' lottery pick — which turned into Brazilian (news - web sites) center Nene — to Denver for Antonio McDyess.


McDyess fractured his kneecap in an exhibition game and missed the entire 2002-03 season, finally returning 11 games ago.


With the Knicks losing regularly and failing to draw the sellout crowds that were a staple during the 1990s, Layden became a lightning rod for criticism. The anti-Layden feeling was so strong in New York that when LeBron James was selected with the No. 1 pick in the draft at the Garden last June, commissioner David Stern's announcement of the selection was drowned out by a loud chant of "Fire Layden!"


"I'm going to commend Mr. Dolan because he surprised me the way he pulled the trigger," said film producer Spike Lee, the Knicks' most visible fan. "It was a cool Corleone move, straight up Corleone. It shocked me."





Layden, a native New Yorker and the son of former Jazz coach Frank Layden, spent 18 seasons with Utah before being brought to New York by former Utah executive Dave Checketts. At the behest of Checketts, Layden traded franchise stalwart Patrick Ewing to Seattle in the summer of 2000, a move that contributed to the current salary cap predicament.

Layden, who did not return a phone message, built his reputation in Utah through his ability to pluck obscure but productive players with low draft picks. But he did not enjoy similar success overseeing the Knicks, who now turn things over to an ex-player and ex-coach with a spotty record as a businessman and manager.

"I wouldn't be standing here if things were going well," Thomas said. "None of us like the situation we're in, and our job is to come in and change that."

bd811
12-23-2003, 07:27 PM
Good! Glad to see they got rid of him before NY turned into as big of a joke as the Bulls!

awefullspellare
12-23-2003, 08:54 PM
yea... good signing

milky_way
12-27-2003, 04:08 PM
About time the Knicks fired Layden. Although I don't know if Zeke will be much better...he has a tendency to screw up whatever organization he's with...http://forums.nyyfans.com/images/smilies/erm-ah.gif

Trots
12-27-2003, 05:07 PM
That's exactly what I was thinking. Isiah's management career has been less than encouraging. The Raptors deal didn't work out too well, the CBA went completely under with Zeke in charge and the Pacers do look better this year than last.

Thomas' hire is a bold move by the Knicks. I hope it works out, but history leans the other way.

sjnemeth3
01-02-2004, 12:46 AM
Thrilled to see Layden go!
Too many bad deals, too much youth moved for overpriced, mid level talent veterans. Though I don't think Zeke will be a better GM, he will come in and sell sell sell. The Knicks have already moved Spoon out of town, and more will come.
Expect McDyess to be the first to go, as well as Charlie Ward, but not in the same deal. McDyess is being shopped hard to Seattle right now, for a package that included Radmanovic, Ronald Murray and Jerome James.

I hope the fire sale happens soon. The Knicks need to break apart and rebuild. They have talent, but it doesn't work right. Don Nelson did this a while back, broke apart the Kidd/Mash/Jackson Mavs. Took a little while, but the team is back to prestige. Let's hope the Knicks follow a bit quicker suit though.