What happened here
As the New York sunset disappeared
I found an empty Garden among the flagstones there
Oooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh who lived here?
He must have been a Gardener that cared a lot
Who weeded out the tares and grew a good crop
And now it all looks strange
It's funny how one insect can damage so much grain....
They're expecting a sellout tonight for Knicks-Hawks at the Garden. It would be No. 16 on the season.
The basketball may be bad, but the business is always good, baby.
Maybe that's the most troubling thing about the Knicks.
I did a story in the Sunday Newsday about this phenomenon of big crowds, which continue to fill the Garden despite how awful the home team has been and the little regard the team's management and ownership seem to have for the paying customers. They outlasted you, Knicks fans. The protests, the chants and the oversized pink slip rally....all of it fell on deaf ears and has now been muted.
You now cheer for close losses. You now root for win No. 20 in game No. 64. And now they've got us talking about next season and the young players, which is a perfect way to sweep the issues of this season under the carpet.
Don't let it go down like that.
Look at how they have forced you into lowering your standards. This is like putting a jug band in Carnegie Hall. People would still show up because it's Carnegie Hall. And, hey, that dude playing the jug is really trying hard.
It's not as much about the show as it is the venue. And the James Dolan knows it.
When I said earlier in the season that Knick fans should keep filling the building and letting Dolan & Co. hear it, I meant they should continue to hear your displeasure with the current condition of the franchise. Not that you were thrilled with an overtime loss to the Portland Trail Blazers. Or giddy about not getting blown out by Detroit.
LeBron's 50? I can understand that one.
And I can understand why after last season -- there was some optimism...heck, it was even portrayed here on the Knicks Fix -- there was a 91 percent renewal rate for season tickets. But, as fellow Fixer David Nussbaum pointed out, the renewal might drop dramatically if Isiah Thomas does, in fact, return next season.
(David, by the way, is the guy mistakenly not identified in the story who says he often leaves his seats empty just so Dolan sees some seats unoccupied. But David, Dolan also knows those seats are already paid for, so, quite frankly, the fact that they're empty probably doesn't bother him as much.)
Another point about the Isiah Thomas Effect on the season ticket holder renewal rate was made to me by K-Berg last night. The renewals go out in May, if I'm not mistaken. You would think fans would want to know by then about Thomas' status before they make a decision.
All of these things come into play. Then again, if Dolan knows he has so many Knicks fans suckered and knows the Garden will never be as desolate as it was in the mid-1980s, when they barely got 10,000 a night in the building, he will never really feel pressure from the fan base to do anything.
And so in some ways, the more you fill that place, the more it will remain an Empty Garden.
*
@Peaceman and Trane: Fellas, call a truce! Trane, Mark did, in fact, have a rough relationship with the Garden fans after the initial love affair. But Peace, I don't think there is any residual animosity from it. Plus, Mark wasn't calling all Knicks fans "rats," he merely made reference to the fact that all of these people who adored him were so quick to jump ship on him when the first sign of adversity hit. Rick Pitino is partly to blame for it as much as Al Bianchi. Not that I'm putting all of my support in endorsing Mark Jackson to be the next head coach (I want to see the candidates available first), I was just using him as an example of a point guard who might be able to provide some first-person experience to a young point guard who would come into a pressure situation in New York.
But I have to admit, I love the banter. We gotta liven this place up again.