Originally Published: November 15, 2007
Marbury returns from travels with same old story
Stephon Marbury came back to the Knicks. Whether all is back to normal is another question, J.A. Adande writes.
LOS ANGELES -- "This is part of being a coach in this league," Isiah Thomas said, as if having a key player skip a game, fly home, then fly all the way back across the country was as normal as calling a play from the sideline.
The crazy thing is he's right, these kinds of things do happen in the NBA -- and only the NBA. For instance, Rod Strickland went AWOL twice; first in Portland, then in Washington. But they only happen to the teams that deserve it, to the ones that don't heed the warning signs, ignorantly and arrogantly believing that things will improve.[+] Enlarge

Jeff Gross/Getty ImagesMarbury and Isiah spoke before the game, agreeing not to speak too much about their issues.
Marbury's presence on the court was strictly business, Thomas made clear afterward.
"My goal is to try to win a basketball game," Thomas said. "I've played with people I don't like, I've won with people I don't like. We're a professional basketball team. My job is to try to win a basketball game. "However I feel about a person, that doesn't matter. We're trying to win. Whatever happened in the past is in the past and we move forward." Before the game, Thomas expressed some hope that Marbury could provide the leadership and defense the team required from the point guard position (the implication being that he had yet to do so). "There's work to be done here," Thomas said. "Unfortunately, sometimes lessons in life have to be learned on a public stage. But this is what we do and this is what sports is all about. This is how you overcome tough situations and this is how you overcome adversity. He's a kid that made it out of Coney Island. I think what I'm asking him to do, he's capable of doing it. If he can't do it we have to find someone who can." But why would Marbury learn a lesson now, when his career has been a series of bad decisions and bad results, and yet he continues to be rewarded. All of his previous NBA stops -- Minnesota, New Jersey and Phoenix -- nobody forced the Knicks to take on Marbury's $76 million contract. And even if they buy it out, as they reportedly have discussed, he'll still get the bulk of the $42 million that remains. This is how and why organizations stay in ruts. Thomas said, "I'm not going to settle for us being the same type of basketball team that we were last year." But after losing to the Clippers the Knicks are 2-5 -- exactly what they were after seven games last season on their way to a 33-49 record. On a bad shooting night by both teams, the Knicks came back and tied the score after trailing by 16 points. This is the pattern they established last year, especially at home. Bad game, furious comeback, close loss. In the final minute, with the Clippers ahead by two, Marbury missed a 3-pointer from the corner. Then Cuttino Mobley came down, backed in Marbury and made a turnaround bank shot over him. So much for leadership and defense. The Knicks lost with Marbury, just like they lost their previous game without Marbury. The Knicks didn't gain anything by playing him. They just lost a little bit of the minimal amount of credibility they have left. Marbury did express remorse when he addressed his teammates, but he sure didn't seem like a humbled man by the whole experience. "I feel good," Marbury said. "I'm cool. I can walk with my head up. I know there was speculation, things that I said, which I know that's not even my character. Going forward, I'm fine. I'm able to do that." He's able to do it because the Knicks enabled him. Just like always.J.A. Adande joined ESPN.com as an NBA columnist in August 2007 after 10 years with the Los Angeles Times. Click here to e-mail J.A.



