The Mets constantly getting on my nerves has distracted me from the Knicks and Rangers making some big moves recently. The Knicks have a chance to reach the NBA Finals in 2026 with two of their key rivals having star players suffer serious Achilles injuries during the 2025 Playoffs. The Pacers will probably be without Tyrese Haliburton for the entire season and the same goes for the Celtics and Jayson Tatum. That left the Knicks with the second best odds to win the East, but they were also missing an important piece since Tom Thibodeau was surprising fired following the disappointing loss in the Eastern Conference Finals.
BREAKING: The New York Knicks are expected to land on two-time NBA Coach of the Year Mike Brown as the franchise's next head coach, sources tell ESPN. pic.twitter.com/LOXb74LFe4
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) July 2, 2025
The Knicks are a little more whole now that they’ve found a veteran head coach to lead the team in the new season. That man is Mike Brown, and while he may not have an NBA title as a head coach like my preferred candidate Mike Malone, he does have plenty of experience and a history of success. Brown burst onto the scene as a head coach in 2005, and he led LeBron James and the Cavaliers to 50 wins in his debut season. Cleveland reached the NBA Finals in Brown’s second year at the helm, but the next three years featured disappointing playoff exits against the eventual conference champs.
Brown left Cleveland when James did and joined the Lakers a year later after Phil Jackson retired. The Lakers were eliminated in the second round of the Playoffs in 2012 and Brown was fired just five games into the next season. Brown sat out for a couple seasons before joining the Warriors as an assistant under Steve Kerr for six years. He reemerged as a head coach in 2022 and led the Kings to two playoff appearances in two seasons before shockingly being let go after a slow start this past winter.
In a nutshell, the Knicks hired another coach who knows how to win a lot of regular season games and has a history of disappointing exists from the Playoffs. What is even the point?
Thank you, Key.
Best of luck in Carolina! pic.twitter.com/83gYbn1zCN
— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) July 1, 2025
At least with the Rangers we have some idea of the purpose of their actions. They are trying to rebuild without bottoming out, which is an admirable strategy even if it might not technically be the smartest thing. Tanking isn’t fun, and it shouldn’t be a thing in a league that properly rewards winning and punishes losing, but it can be more effective in the long term than trying to win every year.
Hopefully not tanking works out well for the Rangers. They already traded away one key member of their 2024 Presidents Trophy team in Chris Kreider, and now K’Andre Miller is out the door as well. It would be cool if general manager Chris Drury didn’t send Miller to division rival Carolina, but it was cool to get back a 2026 first round draft pick, a 2026 second round pick, and young defenseman Scott Morrow. I’m a hocky casual, but that seems like a decent return for a guy who has seen his points decline for the past two campaigns, even if Miller is still only 25 years old.
What I’m still trying to figure out is why the Rangers dealt away Miller’s eight-year, $60 million and then immediately signed veteran Russian defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov to a seven-year, $49 million deal. That is only a difference of half a million dollars on a per-year basis, and Gavrikov is four years older than Miller. Gavrikov is not a more productive offensive player, so I’m going to convince myself that he’ll improve the Rangers’ defense to help me sleep at night.