Charles Oakley: Ewing "never put us on his back like he should have"

Rembrandt Brown

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If I were a one-time all-star who was only relevant 20 years later for riding another man's coattails, I would not criticize that man's coat.

You also have this bullshit from Oakley in December:

I'm disappointed by his lack of loyalty and gratitude. This is bitch behavior IMO.

Charles Oakley says '90s Knicks were held back by Patrick Ewing: 'Every adversity he ducked away from'
In Oakley's assessment, Ewing didn't live up to the leadership standard of a superstar
by Brad Botkin
Apr 13, 2020

Despite being in the thick of title contention for the better part of a decade, the 1990s New York Knicks were never able to get over the championship hump. It's hard to fault them. They went against a bevy of all-time great players: Hakeem Olajuwon's Houston Rockets in the 1994 Finals, Tim Duncan's San Antonio Spurs in the 1999 Finals, Reggie Miller's Indiana Pacers in the 1995 and 1998 conference semifinals and the 2000 conference finals and, of course, Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls, who eliminated the Knicks four times during the decade.

The Knicks obviously had their own all-time great player in Patrick Ewing, and in the opinion of Charles Oakley, that was part of the problem. On Monday, Oakley, who played with Ewing and the Knicks from 1988-1998, said on CBS Sports Radio's "The DA Show" that Ewing ultimately held the Knicks back.

"He could never put us on his back like he should have because every adversity he ducked away from," Oakley said of Ewing.

Oakley was not suggesting that Ewing couldn't, or didn't, put the Knicks on his back from a basketball standpoint. Rather, it was sort of a backhanded compliment as to just how great a player Ewing was during his Knicks career. But with that kind of talent, in Oakley's estimation, comes a responsibility to lead, to speak up when necessary, to stand up for teammates when they made a mistake and ultimately be the galvanizing force and voice of an organization.

"Every leader, every superstar in this league, if you go through adversity and you're trying to duck and dodge and you're in the biggest city, it's going to damper your team," Oakley said, citing, among other things, Ewing's unwillingness to be accountable with the press and say tough things to officials and coaches when they needed to be said. "Michael Jordan wasn't like that at first, but he installed it in his game. He seen that if he's going to be getting 30 shots, 30 points, that he's got to put his team on his back. And Patrick could never put us on his back like he should have."

You can listen to Oakley's full comments below:



Bear in mind, this is one man's opinion. Take it for what it's worth. Ewing was an indisputably great player who, again, ran up against some of the greatest players in history in his quest to bring a title to the Knicks.

Would the Knicks have beaten Jordan's Bulls or Hakeem's Rockets if Ewing had been a better behind-the-scenes leader? These are easy things to suggest in retrospect, but I'm not sure Ewing had anything to do with John Starks going 2 for 18, including 0 for 11 from 3, in Game 7 of the 1994 Finals. If Starks makes just a couple more shots and the Knicks win that title, Oakley might be singing a very different tune.

 
Career Summary
Games1282

PPG 9.7

RBG 9.5

APG 2.5

In other words, shut up!

Where’s security when you need’em?

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I'm officially ending my efforts to get Oakley's jersey retired. :smh:


 
"You're a bitch for not carrying me the way you should have"? What sense does that make?
Ok.. now you're not making any sense. You can say it as a third party observer but Oakley cant as a first party involved person?

Oakley feels Pat was disloyal, absent, and ungrateful for all the support and protection he had given him over the decades. So he expressed it openly. Good for him.
 
You can't make somebody what they not. They played in the Magic and Bird, Bad Boy and Bull era those teams were better. When they had they chance Starks goes like 0 for 17 in the game 7 that won't Ewing fault.
Oakley outta line.
One of my fave ewing shots ever



As a lifetime bull fan I enjoy the Knicks demise


I was just about to post that vid, Ewing will always be remembered for missing this shot from point blank range
 
Oakleys best friend at the time was Michael Jordan. I’m a firm believer that your friends make you greater. So what’s Oakleys excuse for not bringing that MJ energy to the Knicks himself. Say what you want about Ewing’s Knicks in my opinion they were warriors. As many times Ewing got posterized he never ducked away from a dunk. These new dudes won’t even challenge a layup.
 
It makes no sense what so ever.
There's no "I" in team, Kobe.
Always someone else's fault.
The only reason Kobe's going to the Hall this early is because he died.
Ooops! Too soon?
EDEMzTFWkAAjRk8.jpg
Kobe and Shaq said a lotta shit about each other when they had beef. Once the beef got settled, they both took ownership for their own part in fucking up their chemistry and championship run. Kobe never blamed Shaq for not carrying him on his back. Oakley sounds like a bitch.
 
My fave defensive play by ewing



Aw man...fuck you!

:hmm:



:lol:

But seriously, Patrick always gave it his all every night. I also liked the fact that he challenged every dunk. Yes, he got yammed on a few times, but at least he tried to go for the block. Most guys would be afraid of getting posterized, and they wouldn't even try to play defense.

Oh yeah, and Fuck Oakley for his comments!:angry:
 
This reminds me of when Oprah went after MJ, in the words of Draymond "they don't love you like that" Oak. Oak never had a shoe; Oak never led a team. Ewing was The New York Knicks & he was a fighter, that Oak hate for Ewing is real, sad.




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wow he carried tht resentment for Ewing a long time...

thts even more bitch made...

probably ran across tht man hundreds of times n never said shit n then pick an off day in 2020 to voice this shit ..

fuck ass shit here bro ... u can feel how u feel but tell tht man to his face back in the day ...fuck ass ni99a...
 

One week after former Knicks guard Chris Childs criticized his old teammates on CBS Sports Radio, Charles Oakley did the same thing Monday morning on The DA Show.

Oakley, who played for the Knicks from 1988 to 1998, expressed a desire to “smack” Bernard King, said that Patrick Ewing was high-maintenance, and called NBA owners "embarrassing" for trying to finish the 2019-20 season and for putting on Sunday’s HORSE Tournament, which he dismissed as a three-point competition.

Oakley, 56, also opened up about his infamous run-in with James Dolan. Oakley, a vocal critic of Dolan, was handcuffed and arrested at Madison Square Garden in February 2017. Two days later, Dolan banned Oakley from Madison Square Garden and suggested that he had a drinking problem.

That, however, didn’t stop Latrell Sprewell, Larry Johnson, Bernard King and other former Knicks from sitting with Dolan at a Knicks game just four days after Oakley’s arrest.

“I just don’t want to be around these guys,” Oakley said on The DA Show. “A lot of guys I played with, I just lost respect for them because I went to war for them. I protected them, from Patrick on down. Patrick just spoke up two weeks ago about this. But I could have gotten sentenced in jail for 20 years. Three years later, it’s over with really. It’s a PR stunt.”

Oakley and King were never teammates, but both played for the Knicks. King’s final year in New York was in 1987. The Knicks acquired Oakley from Chicago in 1988.

“I was disappointed in Bernard King, too,” Oakley said. “I addressed it to him . . . two years ago. He said, ‘Well, my wife wanted to go to a game.’ I said, ‘Bernard, this man [Dolan] makes you turn off your Twitter account, and you’re going to tell me out of 41 home games, this is the game your wife wanted to go to?’ I wanted to smack Bernard. Serious. . . . I lost so much respect for him. I can’t even speak to him.”

Oakley also ripped Ewing, calling his teammate of 10 years high-maintenance.

“Even though I said he’s high-maintenance, people might take that wrong – he was a high-maintenance player,” Oakley said. “Everybody in the world knows he was. You got to be special to play with Patrick. You had to do so much out of your ordinary just to be on the team, and that hurt us sometimes. As a team, we’re supposed to be close and together. It wasn’t that. We had to make sure he was happy. He didn’t care if we was happy or not. That’s a sad situation, and I see why the Knicks won’t give him a job. He treated them bad – inside out. Chris will tell you. He was tough to play with, but he wasn’t no problem to me because I understand. Mase [Anthony Mason] had a problem with it because Mase always hollered and cussed at him.”
 
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