NBA

Knicks have to re-evaluate everything after NBA playoffs disaster

There’s a saying coined by legendary former Giants coach Bill Parcells: “You are what your record says you are.”

Except maybe not in a pandemic season with lots of variables.

The conditions suited Tom Thibodeau’s Knicks perfectly in the regular season, but the talent level got exposed during a playoffs, which felt like normal times with near-capacity buildings louder than ever.

Wednesday’s late-night postgame Zoom press conference was a lovefest to the Knicks’ gritty 41-31 regular season. It sounded as if the Knicks had been taken out in a deciding seventh game instead of falling in five, losing the final three games by a combined 42 points.

Fact is, the Knicks weren’t competitive. The Knicks didn’t look like they belonged on the same court as the Hawks, who weaved the same 41-31 record during the regular season.

That’s a concern going into an offseason that has promised further riches with their $60 million in cap space and two first-round draft picks.

But being routed in three straight playoffs games by the Hawks changes the lens, raising more questions about the validity of 41-31.

Is Julius Randle really a “1a?” Is RJ Barrett even close to being a “1b?” What will Derrick Rose, turning 33, look like if he returns in a similar role playing 30-plus minutes a night? Rose, his knee acting up, looked burnt in the final two playoff games.

For all the nice talk about “building a foundation,” it was a sobering reality these past 10 days in the way they got pummeled.

Knicks Julius Randle, Tom Thibodeau, RJ Barrett
Julius Randle, Tom Thibodeau, RJ Barrett NBAE via Getty Images (2); Corey Sipkin

The Knicks got their doors blown off and Randle didn’t look close to being able to lead a playoff run, though it was his first try. And Thibodeau made no adjustments in the three blowout losses. He kept Elfrid Payton and Frank Ntilikina fastened to the bench in each passing rout following his starting-lineup shake-up with Rose, which backfired.

It brings to mind a comment once made by Warriors president Bob Myers, a former agent like Knicks leader Leon Rose. Myers is comfortable talking to the press, while Rose has had the mute button on since last July’s press conference introducing Thibodeau.

“The playoffs are nothing like the regular season,” Myers said. “They are two completely different sports.”

Myers’ further remarks are more chilling, considering the depth of Randle’s struggles in the playoffs, when he shot 29.8 percent (33.3 percent from 3), compared with 45.6 percent (41.1 percent on 3s) during the regular season.

“Whatever they know [a star] does well, is gone,” Myers said. “Even shooters. … That two feet of space in the regular season is two inches. Watch how many players cannot make a shot in the playoffs and shoot 42 percent in the regular season. It’s not the same thing. Why does that matter? The more dimensions you have to your game, the harder you are to take away. You watch the playoffs, you know who can play basketball. That’s when you evaluate players.”

The Knicks still hope to extend Randle’s contract in August if he’s willing. They can offer him a four-year extension, but not at max money, under collective bargaining agreement rules. The Knicks can offer at most a 20 percent bump from his $19.8 million salary in the final season of his current deal. That means it can start at $23.8 million in 2022-23.

After Randle’s humbling playoffs, he may be eager to lock it up instead of testing unrestricted free agency in 2022 and vie for the max.

Knowing the depths of the players’ despair, Thibodeau never sounded more positive than after Game 5’s season-ending clunker. No more motivational riffs that they need to be better. It was over, and many of the fringe players are moving on in free agency.

“Just building a foundation, building the right habits,” Thibodeau said. “Everyone getting better, learning, growing, being together. Getting knocked down, getting back up. Coming back in the next day, attitude and approach was outstanding from last summer to the end. I couldn’t ask for anymore from the team.”

Indeed, the Knicks played with a warrior spirit in the regular season that thrilled their fans, but wasn’t nearly enough in the playoffs. The roster wasn’t built for this. Thibodeau squeezed blood from a stone all season.

As Jeff Van Gundy has attested, his buddy is a master at logging regular-season victories, playing his top guns max minutes with nobody taking nights off.

His two best players, Randle and Barrett, were 1-2 in total minutes played in the NBA. Other NBA teams don’t function that way, but Thibodeau needed to this season to establish the Knicks as a credible destination for free agents.

Next season, the coach can be more about pacing. Maybe Randle gets a couple of load-management off days next season because he looked mentally and physically exhausted in Game 5 — as did Derrick Rose.

The Knicks benefitted from pandemic rules, not having the usual distractions playing in New York. No personal appearances, no media around except for the club-controlled Zoom calls. They thrived in mostly empty arenas all season when the pressure wasn’t as high. When the buildings got filled, the Knicks were running on empty.

Before the playoffs, it was clear they needed a starting point guard. Portland’s Damian Lillard could demand a trade, or they could sign Lonzo Ball, Kyle Lowry or Dennis Schroder as a free agent.

But in the wreckage of the Hawks’ five-game domination, the Knicks may need a lot more, especially with higher expectations next season. Under closer inspection, that 41-31 record can look more mirage than real.