Top 10 Worst Moves by New York Knicks GM Isiah Thomas

The adventures of Thomas’ tenure as the Knicks’ leader.

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Isiah Thomas was one of the best basketball players I have ever seen play the game. But his success on the court has had virtually no carry over into postcareer life as an NBA executive. He’s made enough blunders to fill a book. Here are Isiah Thomas’ top 10 mistakes since becoming Knicks’ President on December 22, 2003.

  1. Signing Vin Baker

    In the mid 1990s, Baker was one of the top players in the game. He made four straight AllStar teams and twice averaged over 20 points per game. But the lockout season was a turning point for Baker. His weight ballooned to 300 pounds and he developed a problem with alcohol. He was a liability rather than a star. With the Knicks over the salary cap, Isiah Thomas used the team’s midlevel exemption on Baker, hoping to get a dominant inside presence. Baker averaged 1.4 points per game in 24 games before being traded for Maurice Taylor, a player with an even bigger contract who couldn’t even crack the team’s rotation on a regular basis.

  2. Signing Jared Jeffries

    The Knicks were a poor defensive team, which must have driven Larry Brown, a defensiveminded coach if there ever was one, crazy. So, Isiah Thomas used his exemption to sign Jared Jeffries. The team then drafted Renaldo Balkman, a player with the identical skill set to Jeffries, and then Jeffries got hurt. Oh, and they got rid of Larry Brown. Jeffries averaged 4.1 points per game last year and has no role on this year’s team. And they have him for three more seasons after this one.

  3. Signing Jerome James

    Bolstered by the success of the Vin Baker signing, Isiah Thomas inked Jerome James to a free agent contract with the club’s exemption. James was notorious for being an underachiever throughout his career. He finally played up to his ability in the final year of his contract – imagine that – and he still managed just 4.9 PPG and 3.0 RPG before signing with the Knicks. Shortly after signing James, Isiah Thomas swung the Eddy Curry deal, making James redundant. But that was okay, as James got hurt and has played in just 85 games the past two seasons. James hasn’t played this season and underwent foot surgery in November. And the Knicks have him for two more seasons after this one.

  4. Trading Kurt Thomas

    Kurt Thomas did whatever he was asked to do. He could play defense, rebound and score. And despite being only 6’7, Thomas frequently played center and held his own against players who had five inches and 50 pounds on him. Isiah Thomas dealt him for Quentin Richardson and the rights to Nate Robinson. Richardson has been a disappointment, even when healthy and while Robinson brings toughness to the team, he’s a defensive liability and is wildly inconsistent night to night.

  5. Hiring Lenny Wilkens

    After letting Don Chaney twist in the wind, Isiah Thomas finally fired him and replaced him with Lenny Wilkens. A Hall of Fame player and at one point a fine coach, Wilkens finished his two previous coaching gigs on dismal notes. He posted a 2854 record with the Hawks and was 2458 with the Raptors. He was well on his way to duplicating those marks with the Knicks when he was fired with a 1722 mark.

  6. Not protecting lottery picks on Eddy Curry deal

    The Chicago Bulls decided to trade Eddy Curry because he would not submit to DNA testing on his heart. According to an ESPN,com report, the Bulls were worried that Curry’s “genetic makeup leaves him susceptible to cardiomyopathy, a heart condition that combined with arrythmia, could prove fatal.” Isiah Thomas traded three players, three draft picks and the right to swap firstround picks in 2007 to get Curry. But the picks were not lottery protected, a standard condition of trades involving draft picks. The Knicks ended up trading the number two pick in the 2006 draft and swapping the number nine pick for the number 23 pick in 2007. Curry had a nice season last year, but the loss of the number two overall pick and the ninth overall pick in backtoback drafts has been huge, especially for a player with a major medical condition.

  7. Trading for Steve Francis

    The Knicks already had an undersized, shootfirst, no defense playing, malcontent point guard in Stephon Marbury. So, Isiah Thomas opted to trade for his exact double when he sent the expiring contract of Hardaway and promising youngster Trevor Ariza for Francis and his massive contract. Francis was predictably unhappy on the Knicks, saw limited playing time and was eventually dumped. The only silver lining was that this move caused the franchise minimal damage. But it cost $15 million in just 200607 alone and never had a chance in hell of working out.

  8. Everything revolving around Larry Brown

    After the dismal selection of Lenny Wilkens, the Knicks and Isiah Thomas apparently hit a home run with the signing of Larry Brown to be the team’s coach. But Brown and Isiah Thomas did not see eyetoeye and Brown was his usual cantankerous self. The Knicks had a dreadful season under Brown and did not allow him to stay around to right the ship, like he had done after bad starts in San Antonio, where he went from 21 wins to 56 wins the following season, and Philadelphia, where he went from a .378 winning percentage to a .560 winning percentage the next year. Oh, and this is when Isiah Thomas became coach, allowing him to kill the Knicks in two different capacities.

  9. Trading for Stephon Marbury

    Isiah Thomas put the Knicks deeper in salary cap hell in order to acquire Marbury. He dealt four players, the rights to another and two firstround draft picks for Marbury, Penny Hardaway and Cezary Trybanski. The Knicks were already massively over the salary cap and adding the bloated contracts of Marbury and Hardaway made this worse. Marbury had been on three teams prior to the Knicks and none of those teams had won anything, a trend continued for Marbury in Gotham. Oh year, the Knicks also gave up the team’s firstround pick in 2004 and a pick that has yet to be determined. The pick was protected (see, Isiah Thomas was aware of the concept!) in the top 24 for the 2007 draft; it is top 23 protected for 2008; top 22 protected for 2009; and unprotected for 2010. This deal killed the Knicks in salary, performance and draft picks – no easy feat!

  10. Sexually harassing a team employee

    The Knicks hold a special place in my heart but in the end, it’s only basketball. But when Isiah Thomas was found guilty of making unwanted advances and verbally insulting team Vice President of Marketing and Business Operations Anucha Browne Sanders, his shortcomings take on a totally different dimension. It’s one thing to be a bad executive but it’s another thing entirely to be a rotten human being. We now know that Isiah Thomas is both.

It will be a great day for Knicks fans everywhere when Isiah Thomas is fired. May it come sooner rather than later.

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8 Comments

  1. Kuper Jones
    Posted December 1, 2007 at 11:25 pm

    I agree with the point you made about his luck just not carrying over into the upper offices from his days on the court. He just cant seem to catch a break. He is one of the few people who actually do a worse job than Mitch Kupchek. Good article.

  2. Remi
    Posted January 8, 2008 at 8:29 pm

    I agree with everything on this list except the Kurt Thomas trade. Nate’s one of the few players that I actually don’t mind on the court this season.

  3. Hector
    Posted January 20, 2008 at 4:32 am

    GREAT FANTASTIC points. But I still think Stephon should have been number one. He is a cancer, he needs to go ASAP… and Curry… and Q & Jared & Jerome & Fred & Rose… and ISIAH!

  4. YouThinkThat'sAirYou'reBreathing?
    Posted March 31, 2008 at 5:25 pm

    The Knicks’ problems are deeper than Isaiah. As bad as Isaiah has been (and he’s been bad), it will probably just be “more of the same” regardless of who the new GM and new coach are.

    They need a “capologist” and they need to stop going for the “quick fix” and accept the fact that they need to rebuild the right way. If they did this after the Ewing Era ended, then imagine where they would be.

    Remember that when your next GM blows out the cap and trades away your draft picks to sign a second tier player for record $$.

  5. Monk
    Posted May 21, 2008 at 10:08 am

    Unfortunately I don’t think the Knicks will see success under D’antoni either – at least not anytime soon. His system needs well conditioned athletes – something the Knicks clearly don’t have. Besides Nate and Jamal Crawford the team is a bunch of overweight stiffs – David Lee is tough, but by no means is he an exceptional athlete. I don’t even need to talk about Curry, Q, Mardy Collins, etc etc – these guys are just out of shape.

  6. wkrush
    Posted July 29, 2008 at 12:54 am

    Isiah was TERRIBLE!!! Jamal Crawford, NATE, David Lee and drafting Channing Frye were is bright spots. he trade Channing frye idiot.

    Renaldo Balkman was traded for 2 2nd round players on final year of contract and 2010 2nd round pick.

    We wasted a 1st round 20th pick on a player Knicks could have gotten in 2nd round or FA TERRIBLE!! Isiah Thomas obsession of FRED JONES needs to discussed has claimed this player 3 times in his tenure as gm and coach especially when The Pacers office told him to draft Tayshaun Prince and he decided to draft Fred Jones instead!! IDIOT he is truly dumb and he still has a job with KNICKS THOMAS has DIRT on DOLAN, Marbury , he will definitely make all of his 21 million this year 2nd highest paid player this year HAHHA (A.I. makes same amount this year)

  7. Sam
    Posted January 19, 2009 at 10:35 am

    *update*
    Attention Knicks Fans!
    Isiah’s reign of terror is over
    The knicks are under the cap after trading Mardy collins, zach randolph,and jamal Crawford. Say Goodbye to their bloated contracts and their 23 win 07-08 season, although they were still decent players. (except collins)
    In return we got 3 players under 2010 (which they all expire) and should be $40M under the cap, by 2010 where lebron Dwade, amar’e, and chris bosh hould be free agents. By 2010 knicks sould be in room to sign 2 maximum free agtents. So just survive wathing the knicks for 2 more years.
    Even after th knicks dealing their best players, we are 15-24 so far. Still better record than isiah’s last season.

  8. xabial
    Posted January 24, 2009 at 11:41 am

    Knicks are 18-24 3 stright wins, and another game today.
    Thats close to last seasons wins! Knicks beat Chicago, Pheonix,and Memphis.
    Now that @#$%in isiah is now gone Knicks are doing much better

    Jerome James is injured agion, this time out for the rest of the season. He injured his leg in practise >.> Not in a game but PRACTISE?

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