Picking up the pieces in New York

Now that LeBum is going to South Beach, hereās what Knicks fans can look forward to:
Raymond Felton trying to be Steve Nash as he dribbles up the floor and looks for Amarāe Stoudemire.
Thatās the best-case scenario, too.
Uh-oh.
Obviously, it was a humungous setback for Knicks fans when LeBron James decided to shun the bright lights of New York and join forces in South Beach with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.
But it was even worse for the franchise that hasnāt raised a championship banner since 1973.
Itās not every day when a franchise talent goes on the market and is willing to move and your favorite team has the kind of money it takes to get him to come. And then, here comes the low blow of all low blows: He goes to work for Pat Riley, who made an historic clean sweep by landing the summerās top three free-agents.
So where do the Knicks go from here?
Well, they do have Stoudemire, the best big man to play in town since Patrick Ewing. Heās not a No. 1 star. He canāt carry a team by himself. Heās got some holes in his game, as a defender and rebounder. But heās at least the first big-time scoring threat up front since Ewing.
āIād be concerned about years four and five of a contract because heās had four knee surgeries and microfracture surgery," said Steve Kerr, the Suns former GM. āBut I wouldnāt be concerned about the first two, three years."
What about Amareās defense? Well, the Knicks donāt play any, as you might have heard. They allowed opponents to shoot 48.6 percent from the floor last season, worst in the league.
āAmareās not going to be Kevin Garnett, everybody knows that," Kerr said. āBut heās improved. Heās still not a great defender and he knows that. But heās tried to get better. I think heās learned and grown. Heās matured a lot."
Stoudemireās addition led to the Knicks' decision to ship David Lee to Golden State. They no longer needed Lee, who got an $80-million deal. For the Knicks, the key player in return is forward Anthony Randolph, a prospect theyāve had their eyes on for a while.
But beyond that deal, they canāt just throw around their money, as theyāve done in the past. They have to be judicious spenders. If theyāre smart, theyāll save the cap space left over from this free-agent period and roll all those millions into next summer.
Itās not as if they had to rebuild their team in one fell swoop.
Once LeBron took the easy way out and quit on Cleveland, the Knicks were basically sent on a course for more painful rebuilding.
Although Tony Parker has been spending the last year or so conspiring with Stoudemire to come to the Garden, the Spurs arenāt going to deliver him on a silver platter. Parker has a year to go on his deal and the Knicks donāt have the goods to call up the Spurs to talk trade.
So letās assume Parker is at least one season removed from coming to New York, via free agency. What do the Knicks do to get the most out of Stoudemire, one of the gameās premier finishers, this coming season?
As of Friday night they were close to bringing in Felton, a mediocre point guard for the Bobcats. They were also considering Luke Ridnour and Jordan Farmar. One thing is certain: The Knicks canāt entrust the playmaking duties to Toney Douglas, who was a rookie last season.
āAll those guys are really glorified backups," said one Eastern Conference scout. āHow much can you win with them?"
Not much. But thatās part of the fallout from seeing James run to the Heat.
They havenāt won a title since the days of Clyde Frazier and Willis Reed, and the drought is bound to get longer.
If James had come to New York, thereād be no need for a point guard, because heād have the ball in his hands 85-90 percent of the time. He'd be working the pick-and-roll with Stoudemire. But heās not coming, which sure makes the Knicksā decision to pass on Brandon Jennings in the 2009 draft look very dubious.
But for the last two years, everything was predicated on getting LeBron.
Or as heās known around here now, LeBum.
Read more of Mitch Lawrence's columns at the New York Daily News.