September 30, 2024

Knicks again have no luck in NBA’s Draft Lottery

Knicks #Knicks

The Knicks have been regulars at the NBA Draft Lottery, equipping the team representative with a good-luck charm each time. But no matter what the team has tried to utilize to change its fortunes, karma has caught up with them and left them faltering in the lottery ever since the team won the very first one.

In 1985, armed with a horseshoe, general manager Dave DeBusschere presided over the Knicks’ celebration as they got the rights to draft Patrick Ewing amid a lingering belief of a conspiracy to land the consensus No. 1 pick. Since then, they’ve tried an assortment of trinkets, including DeBusschere’s championship rings from his playing days, and have come up empty every time.

Thursday night the Knicks sent new team president Leon Rose out to the virtual stage, armed with a lucky bracelet and an emotional history to it. But the results were the same as it ever was, the Knicks dropping two spots from the sixth spot they held going into the night, leaving them with the No. 8 pick in the 2020 NBA Draft. The Draft will be held Oct. 12.

The top pick went to the Minnesota Timberwolves with the Golden State Warriors at No. 2 and the Charlotte Hornets and Chicago Bulls jumping the Knicks for the No. 3 and 4 spots.

The Knicks have been in the lottery 17 times since that Ewing lottery in 1985.  Not once have they moved up. Ten times they remained in place and now for the seventh time they dropped back.

Unlike last summer when the Knicks had the worst record in the league and dropped to No. 3, this time the odds were against them moving up. They had a 9% chance of grabbing the top spot. The highest probability was for them to go No. 7 and then the next highest probability was No. 8 at 20.9%.

For luck, Rose wore a bracelet made for him by New Jersey teen Antonio Sellers, who already had provided a measure of luck to the Knicks this year. Sellers, who was a high school basketball player before being diagnosed with a brain tumor, was at Knicks practice as part of the Garden of Dreams Foundation and Make-A-Wish on March 1. He met with RJ Barrett, who had played for Duke, which is Sellers’ favorite team, and gave him a bracelet.

Subscribe to Newsday’s sports newsletter

Receive stories, photos and videos about your favorite New York teams plus national sports news and events.

By clicking Sign up, you agree to our privacy policy.

The next day, Sellers was at the Knicks game and made sure Barrett was still wearing the bracelet. Barrett wore it and the Knicks upset the Houston Rockets in Rose’s first game as team president.

Among the prospects, LaMelo Ball could have the highest upside. Georgia’s Anthony Edwards, Memphis freshman James Wiseman and Dayton’s Obi Toppin also have been mentioned as possible No. 1 overall picks.

The Knicks also have a wide-open roster with Barrett the only sure building block. Mitchell Robinson, who was a second-round choice two years ago, is raw, but maybe the only other foundation piece on the roster. Ball, Cole Anthony, Tyrese Haliburton and Killian Hayes all could fill the team’s hole at point guard.

Rose hasn’t given a hint of which direction he’ll go with the pick, but the Knicks also have the No. 27 overall pick (from the Clippers) and Charlotte’s second-round pick at No. 38.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver, speaking on ESPN, said that his initial plan to have next season begin Dec.1 is, “feeling a little bit too early for me,” pointing out that the goal is still to have fans in arenas./p>

Newsday's new Knicks beat writer Steve Popper.

Steve Popper covers the Knicks for Newsday. He has spent nearly three decades covering the Knicks and the NBA, along with just about every sports team in the New York metropolitan area.