NEW YORK -- Despite the guarantees, there will not be a return to the
NBA Finals for the New York Knicks.
The latest season to end without a title finished Friday night when the
Indiana Pacers pulled away in the fourth quarter for a 93-80 victory in Game 6.
The loss in the best-of-7 Eastern Conference finals means no repeat trip
to the NBA Finals for the Knicks, who won their last championship in 1973.
It also added a non-title year to the Patrick Ewing era. New York's center
since the 1985-86 season was one of the players who guaranteed a win that would
send the series back to Indiana for a Game 7.
"I'm very proud of my teammates," Ewing said. "I think we worked
extremely hard. The outcome doesn't show all the work and effort and the energy
we put to get back to the championship. I thought we worked hard. We deserve to
be there, but I guess it wasn't our turn again."
Ewing and Latrell Sprewell had the sellout crowd at Madison Square Garden
thinking there would be that deciding game when they combined to score all but
two of New York's 21 points in the third quarter when the Knicks turned a 50-41
halftime deficit into a 62-62 tie.
Sprewell, who had nine points in the third quarter, opened the fourth with a
3-pointer that gave the Knicks a 65-62 lead, their last as Reggie Miller led
the Pacers on a 10-0 run. New York was never closer than four points the rest
of the way.
"I don't know if we ran out of gas," Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy said. "I
think we played extremely hard. I just think we got outplayed. I think it is
very simple."
Both Ewing and Sprewell fought through injuries in the series as did
teammates Marcus Camby and Larry Johnson, but that wasn't enough as Miller
scored 17 of his 34 points in the fourth quarter.
"It's going to be difficult to accept for a couple of weeks while others
are still playing games," Sprewell said.
Sprewell finished with 32 points, while Ewing had 18 points and 12 rebounds.
Only Allan Houston, with 10 points, was also in double figures for the Knicks,
who had won Games 6 and 7 against Miami to advance to the conference finals.
"You're going to face elimination games as you go along in the playoffs
unless you're a dominant team," Van Gundy said. "Indiana faced theirs against
Milwaukee and got through it. We faced two against Miami and got through it.
Certainly you would rather play with a cushion and be ahead. Playoff basketball
is about responding to whatever situation you're in. This isn't about anything
except they outplayed us tonight."
Sprewell said the elimination games did make a difference.
"The Miami series took a lot out of us," he said. "It took a game or two
to switch gears and get ready for Indiana.
"Last year, in every game I can think of at least two guys were playing
well. This year, minus Game 3, it seemed only one guy was carrying us."
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| Latrell Sprewell will have to look forward to the 2001 season.(AP) | |
This was the Knicks' team-record 13th consecutive postseason appearance. In
that span there have been four trips to the conference finals and two to the
NBA Finals - a seven-game loss to Houston in 1994 and last season's
five-game loss to San Antonio.
The sellout crowd was the 347th in a row at the Garden and the usual array
of celebrities was on hand. All those people and the Knicks left again without
a title.
Van Gundy was asked what his message was to the team after the game.
"Not after the game. It's not the appropriate time," he said. "We will
get together Sunday, talk briefly and move on."
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