
The Knicks didn't beat the Cavaliers last night, but at least they accomplished something meaningful -- they won the Garden back.
Unlike Monday night, when the home crowd cheered Kobe Bryant as if it were the Staples Center, it was in full throat last night trying to encourage the Knicks to pull out a victory over LeBron James and the Eastern Conference-leading Cavaliers.More from the New York Post
Wednesday's action
- LeBron puts up 52-10-11 line vs. Knicks
- Kobe, Gasol come up big for Lakers
- Nelson's replacement nets 26 for Magic
- Without Paul, Hornets fall to Bulls
- Carmelo sinks winning shot for Nuggets
- Hot Mavs stop Blazers' streak at 5
- Nets cruise past hapless Wizards
- Stuckey, Pistons outduel Wade, Heat
- Mayo shines as Grizz shock Rockets
- Bibby, Hawks shoot down T-wolves
- Warriors win with Jackson's triple-double
FOXSports.com analysis
- Rosen: Answering your NBA questions
- Rosen: Bynum's injury a huge blow
- Hill: Phil, Shaq and Kobe reunited
- Galinsky: NBA Power Rankings
Video
- LeBron talks about his Garden party
- Hill: What Kobe must do now
- NBA stars on Black History Month
Photos
- Eastern Conference All-Stars
- Western Conference All-Stars
It wasn't long ago when stars such as Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird came to town and were treated like the enemy despite their greatness. Jordan's 55-point night in 1995 was acknowledged but not deified. No one in an opposing uniform ever heard the chant "M-V-P . . . M-V-P."
That's the way it was last night, as James didn't get the kind of support Bryant enjoyed. Not even when he got off to a fast start, scoring 20 points in the first quarter and looking every bit like he intended to chase down Bryant's record.
"I wanted to continue to work the hand to see if it was hot," he said of his shooting touch.
The Knicks did their part by not folding. They played more competitively than they did against the Lakers. Though they trailed by 15 early, the Knicks actually took a brief lead late in the third quarter and always were within striking distance down the stretch, with the crowd urging them to keep fighting.
"I'm happy with the way things went," D'Antoni said. "We had a shot to win. We just didn't quite get it done."
Some misguided folks might argue that by cheering James, he or she is doing the franchise a favor, showing King James some love to persuade him to come to Manhattan when he becomes a free agent at the end of the 2010 season.
Truth is, the best way to get James to New York is to have him experience more nights like last night, where the Garden is alive and backing the Knicks. A loyal fan base, a team with a future, and an organization that wants to win as badly as he does, that's what will bring James to New York permanently.