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Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
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Sunday / December 15.
  • The Knicks may just want to go ahead and begin an all-out tanking effort.

    At 21-28 and situated in 11th place in the East, the Knicks appear to be going nowhere. Again.

    So maybe Phil Jackson should just trade Carmelo Anthony for the best package of picks and prospects available. And try not to get fleeced in the process.

    The 2017 NBA Draft is among the most loaded in recent memory and the Knicks actually own their pick this year.

    So maybe they should “Throw their hat in for Patton” or “Let themselves flatten for Justin Patton.” (Props to Josh Newman on the latter. For more #Tank Slogans, read this.)

    The latest mock draft from DraftExpress.com has the Knicks taking 7-foot Creighton freshman Justin Patton with the No. 12 pick.

    Until now, the site had Patton projected as a lottery pick in 2018. Now the big man who’s averaging 14.0 points, 6.4 rebounds and 1.6 blocks for a Creighton team (19-3) that visits Butler Tuesday night has moved into the 2017 lottery.

    Patton would be a tremendous pick for a Knicks franchise that could use an injection of youth at the center position, where Joakim Noah is averaging 5.2 points and 9.0 rebounds.

    “He’s getting better every day,” one NBA scout said of Patton earlier this month. “He’s only a freshman whose body needs to improve.”

    “The sky is the limit, he has tremendous upside,” a second scout said.

    On the night that Patton went off for 25 points and 9 rebounds against St. John’s, Chris Mullin said: “He reminds me of Marcus Camby. [He has] great hands and even banged a three. Especially tonight, he looked All-NBA.”

    Regardless of whether they land Patton or not, the Knicks would have a variety of great options if they were to finish with the worst record possible.

    Two elite Pac-12 point guards — Washington freshman Markelle Fultz and UCLA freshman Lonzo Ball — remain the projected top two picks in the latest mock.

    Following Fultz and Ball, the site has Kansas wing Josh Jackson at No. 3, N.C. State point guard Dennis Smith Jr., at No. 4, Duke small forward Jayson Tatum at No. 5, Florida State small forward Jonathan Isaac at No. 6, Arizona power forward Lauri Markkanen at No. 7, Kentucky point guard De’Aaron Fox at No. 8, Kentucky shooting guard Malik Monk at No. 9 and international point guard Frank Ntilikina at No. 10.

    That’s five point guards in the Top 10, a position where the Knicks would be in major need should they opt not to re-sign Derrick Rose.

    Kentucky (4), Duke (3)  and Arizona (3) have 10 combined players in the mock.

    For those holding out hope of seeing Lonzo and LiAngelo Ball balling it up at UCLA during the 2017-18 season, Steve Alford says Lonzo is “absolutely” going to be one-and-done.

    Not exactly shocking news, considering Ball is now the projected No. 4 pick via DraftExpress.com and will be watched by nearly 50 NBA scouts on Saturday when No. 2 UCLA (11-0) faces Ohio State in the CBS Sports Classic in Las Vegas.

    But it isn’t always that a head coach comes flat out and says that about a star freshman, either.

    “Do we know he’s a done and done, do we know he’s not gonna be here long? Absolutely,” Alford told ESPN’s Cari Champion for a feature that aired Friday. “Do his teammates know that? Absolutely. Everybody understands that but if you’re around ‘Zo, you would think this is a lifetime deal.”

    The 2018 Mock NBA Draft is up on DraftExpress.com and Arizona-bound 7-footer DeAndre Ayton is the projected No. 1 pick, followed by uncommitted 7-footer Mohamed Bamba of the PSA Cardinals and the Westtown (PA) School.

    Ayton, a native of the Bahamas who’s a senior at Hillcrest Prep (AZ), would be the first No. 1 overall pick out of Arizona. And head coach Sean Miller and his staff explicitly made that pitch to Ayton before he committed in September.

    One veteran NBA scout said then that Ayton needed to improve his work ethic going forward.

    “Right now going into 2018 he will be in the discussion for a Top 5 selection but his game and approach have to drastically improve,” the scout said. “He is very immature and his game currently reflects that. He is a talent but he needs to grow up physically, emotionally and mentally with his overall game.”

    NEW YORK – If you’re looking for an example of the current strength of this new Big East, consider the first 18 picks of Thursday evening’s NBA Draft.

    Providence point guard Kris Dunn, the two-time Big East Player of the Year, was chosen fifth overall by the Minnesota Timberwolves. Later in the evening, Marquette freshman forward Henry Ellenson was viewed by many as a steal after he sat in the Green Room longer than expected, eventually getting scooped up by the Detroit Pistons. He is the Big East’s first one-and-done since Pitt’s Steven Adams in 2013.

    Two of the league’s stars getting picked early Thursday can only help the league’s profile, but then consider that Seton Hall’s Isaiah Whitehead was chosen 42nd by his hometown Brooklyn Nets, and Dunn’s teammate, Ben Bentil, went 51st to the Boston Celtics.

    NEW YORK — Jersey Boys Wade Baldwin, Malachi Richardson and DeAndre’ Bembry all went in the first round of the NBA Draft Thursday night, solidifying the state’s reputation for producing some of the world’s top basketball talent.

    The 6-foot-4 Baldwin out of Vanderbilt went first, at No. 17 to the Memphis Grizzlies.

    The 6-5 Bembry out of St. Joe’s was taken at No. 21 by the Atlanta Hawks.

    And the 6-6 Richardson from Syracuse was taken immediately after at No. 22 by the Charlotte Hornets (who conveyed the pick to the Sacramento Kings).

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