|
He was never right this season. In part because he wanted to strengthen the back and partly because he wasn't able to get on the court during the lockout, Stoudemire started the season 15 pounds above his usual playing weight of 245. It was clear his explosiveness was gone, and he wasn't picked for the All-Star game in his hometown of Orlando.
But the Knicks needed whatever they could get from him in this series, especially with their previous injuries, plus Chandler battling the flu and Baron Davis a balky back.
By the time the news about Stoudemire broke after the game, many Heat players were already dressed and gone -- apparently unaware of both the injury and its severity.
The Heat had a day off on Tuesday, with no players or coaches available for comment.
"We did what we're supposed to do," Bosh said Monday night. "We protected our home court. Now it's their turn and New York is going to be ready. So we're going to see a totally different team."
At the time he said those words, Bosh had no idea how different the Knicks might really look.
Stoudemire questioned why he ranked below Bosh on most free agent lists in 2010, noting that he had been on winning teams in Phoenix and Bosh rarely had in Toronto.
Yet part of the Knicks' problems against the Heat has been the power forward matchup. Bosh has averaged 18.5 points on 50 percent shooting while helping Miami go 7-1 against New York, counting playoffs, according to STATS, LLC. Stoudemire has scored 18.3 per game -- though hasn't reached that number in his last five games -- while the Knicks have gone 2-6.
Stoudemire called this an "up-and-down" year for him last week before the Knicks' final regular-season home game, acknowledging the difficulties he faced and saying how important it was to him emotionally to be playing again. He was looking forward to the postseason.
"It's going to be a great, great run for us," he said.
Not for Stoudemire, and it's not looking that way for the Knicks, either.
"It was a really stupid thing to do," Charles Barkley said on TNT on Monday, "but they were not going to beat the Miami Heat either way."
[Associated Press;
AP Sports Writer Tim Reynolds in Miami and Associated Press writer Paul Weber in San Antonio contributed to this report.
Follow Brian Mahoney on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Briancmahoney.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor