New York

Mike Lupica: Laugh at the Nets if you like, but unlike the Knicks they gave their fans a chance at a title

[ad_1]

There is this narrative, now that the Nets have blown things up again, now that Kevin Durant is in Phoenix and Kyrie Irving is in Dallas, that this version of the Nets, the one that began when Durant and Irving got to Brooklyn, is one of the great disaster movies in the history of New York sports. Especially now that it ends the way we always suspected it would, which means badly.

Only it’s not some Titanic-like failure, even though Durant and Irving finally played just 74 games together in Nets uniforms. It’s not that kind of failure for this one big reason, as much of a clown car as they could sometimes be, and as easy a target as they are right now:

As brief as this all was, and sometimes you feel as if you had blinked you would have missed the whole thing, the Nets did the one thing that fans ask their teams to do, here or anywhere:

They gave them a chance.

And did something else in the process:

It only lasted 74 games, but Kyrie Irving (l.) and Kevin Durant had the Nets title contenders for a time.

Became the only basketball team in the city who was an actual title contender in this century. This isn’t about the two NBA Finals the Nets played when they were still playing in Jersey. This is about the Brooklyn Nets. This is actually about this season’s Brooklyn Nets, where they were one month ago on the night in Miami, Jan. 8, when Durant limped off the court with 36.6 seconds left in the third quarter of a game his team would end up winning by a point, 102-101, without him.

You know want to know where the Nets were that night? Second place in the East, one game behind the Celtics in the standings. The Celtics were 28-12. The Nets, who had just won 18 of their last 20 games, who had survived more Kyrie drama because of that link to an antisemitic movie and his ensuing suspension, were 27-13.

And at that basketball moment in time, certainly the moments before Durant got hurt, they were looking like as much of a contender as anybody in their conference or in their league.

You know what the Knicks haven’t been in more than 20 years? That.

The Knicks weren’t a contender that night, even though they were just a few games behind the Nets in the standings. They aren’t a contender now. As easy as it is to make fun of the Nets of Joe Tsai and Sean Marks — and Lord, they do make that a layup sometimes — they at least took their big swing with Durant and Irving and James Harden, before he decided he didn’t like it in Brooklyn before Durant and Irving did. You bet they swung and missed at the end. The Knicks? They never even get to the plate. They never had a chance at Durant the way they never had a chance at LeBron James before he took his talents to South Beach.

Even when the Nets got hot the way they did in December and into January and we were all celebrating the way they had recovered from the dumpster fire Irving had created earlier in the season, I wrote about them with this caveat: It could all go wrong, for no other reason than they are the Nets.

And, well, you know.

But they looked like they could make a run this time the way they did two years ago, when they would have beaten the eventual champion Bucks in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference semifinals if Durant’s toe hadn’t been on the line with what we thought was the 3-point shot that had won the game and the series. It was a few inches that night. Not even half the length of one of Durant’s sneakers. With Harden playing on one leg and Kyrie not playing at all. It reminded us all, when the Bucks came back from that scare to win the game in overtime, how fragile sports can be, in a game like this and a series like this.

The team that won that night went on to beat the Hawks in the conference finals, which I believe those Nets would have done if Harden (hamstring) had gotten healthier even if Irving (ankle) did not; the Bucks went on to win the Finals from the Suns after that. Durant’s miss helped change everything for Giannis and the Bucks and their brand. And you would say that the Nets never recovered except for the way they got hot this time, and won those 18 of 20 when no one thought they had that in them. And started to make another run.

The Knicks absolutely made it to the conference semis in 2013, but even if they had gotten past the Pacers in the second round, they weren’t going to beat LeBron and the Heat in the next round, as well as they’d played them in the regular season that year. No one looked at them for one minute and saw a championship team. It was different with the Nets two years ago, and looked different this year until Jan. 8.

Now Durant and Irving are gone. Everybody knows about all of it with the Nets: Irving and the vaccine and the way the Nets rolled over for him and Durant wanting to be traded in the summer of ‘22 the way Irving decided he wanted to be traded in February of ‘23; the way they essentially ran Steve Nash, who turned out not to be up to the circumstances of the occasion, right out of the borough of Brooklyn.

They did turn into a clown car early this season. Only then they started to play, and showed you how much game they had when they did. Once again the Brooklyn Nets had what the Knicks haven’t had, truly, since they made it to the Finals of ‘99 against the Spurs:

A shot.

Tsai and Marks are easy targets all over again. But they did take their shot. They did give their fans a chance. They’re now supposed to be the two dumbest guys going, but guess what? Mark Cuban, one of the smartest guys around, and an owner whose team once won a title against LeBron, basically takes the same swing now with Irving that the Nets took. The new owner in Phoenix does the exact same thing with Durant. You know why? Because now there’s a chance for the Suns to win their first NBA title where there wasn’t one last week. And maybe there is the same chance in Dallas. There wasn’t one in Dallas last week, either.

That is the reality of the Brooklyn Nets, as much of a punchline as they are all over again. They kept finding ways to give their fans drama and slapstick, you bet. They also gave them more of a chance in two years than the Knicks have had in twenty.

There’s just one national sports holiday in this country, even if it always falls on a Sunday, and that is Super Sunday.

Once again the country goes to a football game at 6:30, Eastern time, Eagles against the Chiefs.

It looks like a terrific matchup but you never know in the Super Bowl, it could turn out to be a stiff.

Still:

The Eagles now try to win their second Super Bowl in six years.

The first time they not only beat Tom Brady, they beat him on a day when he threw for 500 yards.

Beat him with Nick Foles as their quarterback that night.

And Patrick Mahomes, who might play in a lot of Super Bowls before he’s through, if not the 10 Brady played than at least the five that John Elway played, now gets the chance to win his second Lombardi Trophy, and join all the other quarterbacks who have done that at least twice.

This game really does look even.

But when the big game does look this even, I sometimes fall back on this question:

Who’s the best player in the gym?

And Mahomes is the best player in the gym.

I do love the Jalen Hurts story, though.

Love it lots.

My pal Stanton points out that the last time he played in a title game, he got benched in favor of Tua.

Sunday night he gets a do-over, in a much bigger game than that one.

Another old pal of mine from the Daily News, Frank Isola, asks a pretty good question for that phony, Kyrie:

If it was all such cruel and unusual punishment for Kyrie being a Brooklyn Net, how come he opted back in last June?

It always goes back to George Young, doesn’t it?

When they say it’s not about the money, it’s always about the money.

I love that Steve Cohen bought commercial time for his Mets on Sunday night’s telecast, for this reason alone:

It’s just one more thing that will make the other owners bananas.

Cohen, of course, can afford to rent space inside their heads.

But he just keeps living there for free.

What a terrific thing for Brian Daboll to be named Coach of the Year, one of the best guys to ever hold a job like his around here.

The Pinstripe Express

Weekly

The Daily News sports editors handpick the week’s best Yankees stories from our award-winning columnists and beat writers. Delivered to your inbox every Wednesday.

Wonder how LeBron thinks the whole Anthony Davis thing is working out with the Lakers.

I asked a football guy who knows what’s going on with both these Super Bowl teams how close Mahomes is to being the full Mahomes for this game.

“Close enough,” was the answer.

When LeBron was going for the all-time scoring record the other night, I occasionally thought that CYO team he has playing around him was going for the all-time turnover record.

You know, it’s funny:

I’m not nearly as worried about when Tom Brady might start his television career as I thought I was going to be.

I like Super Bowls in Glendale, Ariz., better when the Giants are playing in them.

[ad_2]

Share this news on your Fb,Twitter and Whatsapp

File source

Times News Network:Latest News Headlines
Times News Network||Health||New York||USA News||Technology||World News

Tags
Show More

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
Close