It has been a little over six weeks since the NY Knicks last lost an NBA game; they have now won 13 playoff games in a row and lead the Finals 2 games to none over the San Antonio Spurs. I saw the Knicks play a couple of times in the regular season and have seen them play more than a handful of times during this playoff run. What they have done – – and are doing – – here is noteworthy from two perspectives:
- It is highly unusual for an NBA team to win 13 games in a row in the regular season let alone in the playoffs. That feat alone deserves respect and mention.
- The Knicks have accumulated this record without being one of the “all-time great teams in NBA history”.
I have no intention here to denigrate what the Knicks are in the process of doing. In addition to winning those 13 games in a row, the Knicks are in a position to end the finals without the series even going back to San Antonio. Having said all that, this NY Knicks team is not a reincarnation of the “Showtime Lakers” or the “Jordan Bulls” or the “Bird/Parrish/McHale Celtics”. And yet, these Knicks have managed to do something that none of those all-time great teams were able to accomplish.
And as a sideshow, Knicks’ fans now have an interesting choice to make. It has been more than 50 years since the Knicks won the NBA championship; that is quite a drought for fans to endure. And now it sure looks as if the rain is coming … Season ticket holders have playoff game tix in hand but the secondary market for tickets for tonight’s game in Madison Square Garden presents some temptations for those season ticket holders:
- “Bad seats” in the upper corners of Madison Square Garden are listed at $4700 – 5500 per seat.
- “Not quite bad seats” in the corners of the lower bowl are listed at $5600 – 7600 per seat.
- “Sideline seats” in the lower bowl start at $7000 per seat.
- One courtside seat is available for $61,500.
Get thee behind me, Satan …
Moving on – – but staying with the NBA sort of … NBC has coverage of the NBA under a long-term media rights deal. That puts NBC in position to air a studio show proximal to the games and the network has done just that. And in my humble estimation, it needs help.
What I am about to say opens me to accusations of racism and misogyny neither of which I will plead guilty to. Nevertheless:
- I think Maria Taylor is not well suited to be the lead in a studio program.
The NBA studio show cast is good-not-great. Vince Carter and Tracy McGrady are solid; Jamal Crawford is good at doing color analysis of the live game but mediocre in studio. Brad Daugherty is good but is rarely part of the program. My problem with the program is that it comes across as scripted instead of as a conversation among knowledgeable people about a subject the audience should be interested in. And the reason it seems scripted is that Maria Taylor cuts off give-and-take among everyone on the program to move to another angle from another contributor.
When you go to the theater to see a play, the material is scripted. It is the actors’ job to make you believe you are listening in on an actual conversation instead of listening to several folks reading a script to you. In the case of a studio program, the opportunity is ripe for a conversation and somehow it doesn’t work. And here is why I blame at least some of this on Maria Taylor:
- She has the same role on Football Night In America and the same condition obtains there.
- Program contributors each say their piece and the program then lurches on to the next utterance with Maria Taylor conducting the orchestra.
Maybe I am being unfair; maybe there is an exec at NBC who thinks that is great sports studio programming and he/she can command the way the studio programs are structured and presented. What I observe however is that Maria Taylor is the agent that makes two studio shows into “choppy hodgepodges” and so I conclude …
Finally, I’ll close today with this from Knicks’ point guard, Jalen Brunson:
“I just feel like there’s a lot of things more important than just basketball, and I love basketball. It’s what I want to do for the longest time possible. It’s what I eat, it’s what I sleep about, it’s what I breathe, it’s in my lifestyle. I just really feel like there’s more important things than just putting the ball in the hoop.”
But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………