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With the building appearing completely full before tipoff, fans roared as quotes from Anthony appeared on the overhead videoboard before introductions, noting he was born in Brooklyn and wanted to be former Knicks star Bernard King.
Anthony was then introduced first to a raucous ovation, and quickly earned his first points as a Knick on an offensive rebound with 9:37 left in the first quarter.
"I never experienced anything like that before," Anthony said. "That was a hell of a moment for the fans to react the way they did."
But he appeared rusty after playing little over the last week and perhaps a little worn out after a whirlwind All-Star weekend, and his jumper was off for most of the night.
He arrived in New York on Tuesday night and was introduced along with Billups in a packed pregame press conference, telling the huge crowd that he was "ready to get down to business right now."
With only a short workout since the players need to pass physicals Wednesday, D'Antoni said he put in four or five plays and it would be almost like an All-Star game. The Knicks were sharp early, shooting 59 percent in the first quarter and opening an 11-point lead early in the second on Anthony's dunk.
"It's one game and those are all Olympic-caliber players and they looked good out there," Milwaukee coach Scott Skiles said. "Neither of them shot the percentage they'd like to out there, but it's one game and they haven't even practiced with each other yet."
Milwaukee cut it to 59-57 at halftime and grabbed the lead early in the third quarter. The Knicks quickly went back ahead and were up 86-79 after Douglas scored the last five points of the period, including a 3-pointer with 2.6 seconds left.
NOTES: The Knicks recognized some of their top players, one from each decade, during their third annual "Legends Night." Harry Gallatin (1950s), Dick Barnett (1960s), Earl Monroe (1970s), John Starks (1990s) and Allan Houston (2000s) were honored during a halftime ceremony. Mark Jackson (1980s) was not here following the death of his younger brother, Troy, on Sunday. ... Skiles screamed at the officials after Anthony was allowed to grab a defensive rebounding spot after a Bucks free-throw shooter already had the ball. Referee Scott Wall screamed back at Skiles that he had messed it up.
[Associated Press;
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