Thursday, September 4, 2025
Home Basketball "He made the team better": Jim Boeheim makes feelings clear on Carmelo...

“He made the team better”: Jim Boeheim makes feelings clear on Carmelo Anthony getting critiqued by George Karl, Phil Jackson (Exclusive)




Carmelo Anthony, before and after playing under Jim Boeheim at Syracuse, was a different player. Boeheim and his coaching crew helped the NBA legend work on his offense at Syracuse.

Ad

Melo developed into one of the greatest offensive players in the NBA. From ball fake, turnaround fade away to his jab step, the NBA became a fan of Melo’s game. As great as Anthony was on offense, some weren’t big fans of his game, including legendary coach Phil Jackson and his former Denver Nuggets coach, George Karl.

When Anthony was with the Knicks, the 11-time NBA champion coach was the acting president of the team. Long before his big fallout with Anthony, Jackson publicly expressed his discomfort with the former All-Star player’s game on multiple occasions.

Ad


RELATED ARTICLES

“Steve Ballmer isn’t that dumb” – Mark Cuban backs $152 B Clippers owner while warning Pablo Torres about fallout of allegation

Dallas Mavericks minority owner Mark Cuban chimed in on the salary-cap circumvention controversy surrounding Steve Ballmer and the LA Clippers. Ad On Wednesday, Ballmer, who has a net worth of $152.8 billion per Forbes, was accused of allegedly trying to evade the salary cap with Clippers star Kawhi Leonard. Following the revelations, Cuban tweeted on

When NBA fined Timberwolves $3.5 million for off the books payment to Joe Smith in Kawhi Leonard-like saga

On Wednesday, the NBA announced that it would be investigating the allegations that Kawhi Leonard signed a $28 million deal for a "no-show job," which was reportedly funded by LA Clippers owner Steve Ballmer. This won't be the first time that the league will be looking into reports of under-the-table deals, as another Western Conference

“Flat-out wrong” – Clippers shut down claims accusing Steve Ballmer of orchestrating $28M deal with Kawhi Leonard

The NBA community is abuzz with the allegations that LA Clippers star Kawhi Leonard signed a $28 million deal for a "no-show job," supposedly circumventing the league's salary cap. Now, Leonard's team has released a statement on these claims. Ad On Wednesday, NBA insider Shams Charania posted a screenshot of the Clippers' official statement, which

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

From mental health breaks to US Open SF: How Amanda Anisimova & Naomi Osaka found strength after the lowest point of their careers

Both Amanda Anisimova of the United States and Naomi Osaka of Japan have reached the semifinals of the US Open. While Anisimova beat second-seed Iga Swiatek 6-4 6-3, Osaka defeated Karolina Muchova 6-4 7-6 (3) in the quarterfinals. Ad However, it has not always been smooth sailing for them. Both of them had to take

Amanda Anisimova net worth: How much has American earned at US Open so far & how much more can she add to her fortunes...

Amanda Anisimova's career-best season produced another highlight worthy moment after she advanced to the semifinals of the US Open 2025. She did so by exorcising the demons from her loss in the Wimbledon final. She received a 6-0, 6-0 beatdown courtesy of Iga Swiatek in a nervy performance from her side. Ad Anisimova got another

“Steve Ballmer isn’t that dumb” – Mark Cuban backs $152 B Clippers owner while warning Pablo Torres about fallout of allegation

Dallas Mavericks minority owner Mark Cuban chimed in on the salary-cap circumvention controversy surrounding Steve Ballmer and the LA Clippers. Ad On Wednesday, Ballmer, who has a net worth of $152.8 billion per Forbes, was accused of allegedly trying to evade the salary cap with Clippers star Kawhi Leonard. Following the revelations, Cuban tweeted on

When NBA fined Timberwolves $3.5 million for off the books payment to Joe Smith in Kawhi Leonard-like saga

On Wednesday, the NBA announced that it would be investigating the allegations that Kawhi Leonard signed a $28 million deal for a "no-show job," which was reportedly funded by LA Clippers owner Steve Ballmer. This won't be the first time that the league will be looking into reports of under-the-table deals, as another Western Conference

Recent Comments