Category Archives: The Wheel House

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Wheel House Talks Lebron

by Tommy Dee on December 23rd, 2008 at 6:23 pm

Our boys talking Lebron…For me, I think the guy is coming here. You’ve read my thoughts and they haven’t changed. This is about Kobe and Lebron’s chase for Jordan-like immortality and it makes more sense for The King to have a NY-LA rivalry  Write it down, the NBA is as much about marketing as anything and Stern will do all he can to make Lebron to NY happen over the next 2 years.

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Trade Talks Stalling…For Now

by Tommy Dee on November 21st, 2008 at 3:44 pm

Just checking in …

So it’s been a crazy day and what we can tell you is that Donnie Walsh has been actively trying to put his stamp on the franchise with the hopes of pushing towards 2010.

So he made the Al Harrington for Jamal Crawford swap, and in the process made a huge step in getting under the cap. That in itself was an excellent move for this franchise based on the fact that Crawford had fallen out of favor with Mike D’Antoni starting in preseason and ending in Boston the other night.

It seems that no other deals will take place to day, as it appears, at least for today, that they’ve stepped away from the table.

This is not to say that the talks are dead, just don’t expect any deals today.

That leaves the question: what do the Knicks do with Marbury? We were told he was being activated, but if talks are done for today, does that mean Steph jumps into uniform?

Stay tuned….

I will be on Wheelhouse Tonight at 5:30 to discuss.

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WheelHouse

by Tommy Dee on November 18th, 2008 at 11:01 am


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Tommy Dee on Wheelhouse

by Tommy Dee on November 6th, 2008 at 11:29 am


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TKB on SNY’s TheWheelhouse

by Tommy Dee on November 5th, 2008 at 4:24 pm

Watch Tommy Dee on The WheelHouse today on at 5:45 on SNY.

We had a good chat about Eddy Curry, the Steph situation and the Knicks need for Sean Williams, despite the fact that they may not be interested.

We’ll post the video tomorrow.

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The Wheel House talks about the Marbury Situation

by Tommy Dee on September 30th, 2008 at 11:47 am

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The Big Questions in August

by Tommy Dee on August 8th, 2008 at 1:55 pm

1. The David Lee Situation
Donnie Walsh’s first huge decision moving forward will be how he handles the Lee situation. Lee has some trade value, but not as much as originally thought. Any team he gets traded to will have to be attractive enought to make him want to sign there, as Lee has openly stated his desire to remain in NY. Adding salary past 2010 is not in Walsh’s plans so how much does that impact signing one of his own? I look at a guy like Miami’s Udonis Haslem  or Houston’s Shane Battier, who are both making around 7 million per, as market value for Lee.

2. Same question for Nate Robinson
Like Lee, Robinson has a qualifying offer for 2009-10. What does this mean? According to the CBA, “for any other player to be a restricted free agent, he must be at most a three-year NBA veteran, and his team must have made a Qualifying Offer for either 125% of his previous season’s salary or the minimum salary plus $150,000, whichever offer is higher.”
This means that both Lee and Robinson will be restricted Free Agents and the Knicks have the option to match any offer. Not sure what Robinson would garner, but should he have a monster year under D’Antoni, Walsh faces a similar situation. Robinson is a fan favorite, and proven dynamic scorer, albeit without a true position. Moving forward with Robinson, dealing him, or facing the prospects of losing him via free agency, will be another decision Walsh has to make.

3. Alright, what the heck is going on with Marbury?
We’ve heard there is no chance Marbury will suit up, and that Walsh has until September to finally let him walk. It makes no sense to trade Marbury, as taking on several salaries does not make sense since the team has little roster space, so the inevitable 3 for 1 plus picks for Steph doesn’t appear likely to happen.    On the trade front would Atlanta consider moving Mike Bibby and, say Marvin Williams for Marbury’s deal considering they will have to match Josh Smith’s offer from the Grizzlies? Doubtful, but when you look at the prospects of moving the contract, there’s little more than that. Either way, the Stephon Marbury Era seems to be finally at a close.

4. Can Randolph and Curry play together?
It’s interesting that D’Antoni has given an approval for Curry, as he’s said he can see Curry being effective in his offense. And it makes sense, Curry’s best stretch this season were against Western Conference teams, San Antonio (25 and 12) and Sacramento (24 points on 10-17 shooting). If D’Antoni can create similar space, Curry should flourish in a one-on-one situation offensively. Defensively, well, that’s another story.
Randolph hasn’t received the same vote of confidence, so one has to wonder where he fits. It’s essential that Walsh moves his contract, but how can he if Curry is somewhat of a focal point on offense? Should Randolph defer to Curry, proving to be unselfish, and the team wins, maybe his trade value will increase.

5. Can Jamal Crawford take his game to an All-Star level?
D’Antoni thinks so. And having a distributor in Chris Duhon should allow Crawford to get more touches off the ball, a la Allen Iverson and Eric Snow. Crawford is not a great decision maker, but coming off screens and being forced into quicker decisions, should help. I’d like to see him get to the free throw line instead of settling for jumpshots, and so would D’Antoni, who knows how to get him in the right position in half court sets.  When you rip at 86%, it should be more of a focus. Crawford only got to the line 10 times or more six times, and consider his 12-14 FT performance against the Nets on 7-17 shooting netted him 29 points, but more importantly, it netted the team a solid W. Granted the team was just 1-5 in those games where he got at least 10 FTs, but each time except one Crawford shot more than 20 FG attempts. This shows a lack of balanced offense. High teens in shots, and double digits in FTs is a great formula for offensive balance and production out of your lead guard.

6. What can we make of Chris Duhon?
As I said on The Wheelhouse, Duhon is a Charlie Ward-type. This team needs a guy to get the ball to the right spots, even for 20-25 minutes. He can score when he needs to, but more importantly, he can’t turn the ball over. He’s a stop-gap until they get an ideal D’Antoni point guard, to which Duhon would serve as a solid backup.

7. Are Wilson Chandler and Gallinari the future?
Absolutely. Chandler, as I said last year, may be the best two-way player on the team. He’s the total package who will continue to improve. Let’s hope that his offensive skills can catch up with his defensive presence, then he’ll be something. Galli is raw, as we saw in the first half of his only summer league appearance, but he is as pure a shooter as I’ve seen in sometime. The net doesn’t even move. The good news is that at 6’10 with a high release point he’ll be able to get looks without having to rely on getting it off the dribble. at 19 he is polished in offensive sets, meaning he can post, catch in the high post, or pick and pop, so he’ll get his looks and he’ll make them. Defensively he’ll be a liability at first, but that shouldn’t prohibit him from getting 15-20 minutes a night. He makes others better too, what a concept.

8. When will Walsh dump Jared Jeffries?
There’s no question that Jeffries has been lost, and frankly he wasn’t that good to begin with. He’s a role player at best. That said, I think Jeffries could be a nice surprise and one who’s trade value could increase as the season goes on. Look, he’s horrible offensively, but at $6 million why wouldn’t a playoff team desperate for perimeter defense look to acquire JJ2? The length of his contract stinks so you’d have to get back a player with an equal deal, or one that expires after 09. But as I’ve always said coaches covet length, particularly in this day and age, so Jeffries, who has playoff experience, could be an important piece to a team that needs a guy to guard a perimeter big for 10-15 minutes a night. And Jeffries is willing to. We’ll see, but I think because this Knicks team has been so scattered, Jeffries real value as a “glue guy” has diminished tremendously.

Glue doesn’t stick on sh*t.

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TD on with the Boys from The Wheelhouse

by Tommy Dee on July 2nd, 2008 at 10:17 am


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SNY Wheelhouse: NBA Ref Scandal

by Tommy Dee on June 12th, 2008 at 10:57 am


Chris Mannix of Sports Illustrated discusses the NBA referee scandal.

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SNY Videos

by Tommy Dee on May 14th, 2008 at 1:26 pm


Brandon Tierney and Scott Ferrall discuss the D’Antoni situation on SNY’s “Wheel House”



Hear from the coach himself…

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