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  • Blood in the Garden: The Flagrant History of the 1990s New York Knicks
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Blood in the Garden: The Flagrant History of the 1990s New York Knicks

Blood in the Garden: The Flagrant History of the 1990s New York Knicks

byChris Herring
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From Canada

Bruno Biasetto
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful sports story
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on April 21, 2022
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For all those who like great sports stories, this is a great book. The Knicks were full of drama, antics and shenanigans during the 1990s. I had a great time reading it, funny , insightful and brilliantly written.
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Rick Shaq Goldstein
5.0 out of 5 stars SHAQ GOLDSTEIN SAYS: TIRED OF WUSSY NBA GAMES… READ ABOUT THE LAST BLOODY BARE KNUCKLE 90’S KNICKS!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 20, 2022
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Though I’m an old Grandpa… I spent over half my life playing high level competitive basketball… and longer than that watching and going to NBA games… over a quarter-of-a-century before the 1990’s New York Knicks. When I played at every level… and every game I watched… you needed two things to not only compete… but to be allowed to stay on the court… a spine… and cajones! When I raised my son and taught him how to play hoops… “OUR-FAMILY-MANTRA”… ON AND OFF THE COURT WAS… “YOU EARN YOUR BONES UNDER THE BOARDS!”

Around the time that these Knick teams were making the rest of the league shake in their boots… and when every Knick opponent knew… when they came to play the 90’s Knicks… they didn’t just need to bring their lunch bucket… THEY NEEDED TO BRING A VERY LARGE FIRST AID KIT! Then NBA commissioner David Stern… started his massive de-boning and gentrifying of the mano-a-mano “gladiator” sport… and in its wake… leaving a game behind that if you breathed on someone it was a foul… and players started dancing… and literally howling at the moon like a rabid werewolf… and actually… (I still can’t even begin to fathom this!) constantly giving each other high-fives when they MISS FREE THROWS!

The author… Chris Herring… does an absolutely… classic… professional… detailed… pull no punches… look at the last team that not only left “BLOOD-IN-THE-GARDEN”… but blood AND TEETH… at every arena in the league. From the time Pat Riley took over a terrible Knicks team… with terrible losing records… and thousands of empty seats at the most famous sports arena in the world… Madison Square Garden… to their resurrection as a legitimate and feared championship contender with over FIFTEEN-THOUSAND-FANS… on a waiting list for season tickets. Forget the physical fear and tolls that the Knicks rained down on their competitors… their practices from the very first day of training camp became blood baths… akin to feeding the Christians to the Lions… except the Christians and the lions… were on the same New York Knicks team.

The author does a stupendous job of telling the intimate story of not only the overall team… but digs microscopically deep… into the lives on and off the court of “Knick-combatants” such as Patrick Ewing… the toughest of the tough… Charles Oakley… John Starks… Anthony Mason… Xavier McDaniel… and innumerable others who became teammates and fodder without mercy. I cannot heap enough praise on the author for seamlessly combining published information from the actual time of the games… but also with interviews years later… as time allows not only 20/20 hindsight… but the ability to admit mistakes… accomplishments… observations as to how they wished certain things could have been different.

What puts this unvarnished… yet at the same time highly-polished literary gem above other sports books… is that it not only painstakingly describes the mayhem on the court… but takes just the right amount of time to integrate what made these gladiators and madmen into the resulting individual. One of the most intriguing expose’s is the life of Anthony Mason… an extremely unique… talented… overly flawed human being.

Though I knew in extreme depth… not only what made Pat Riley… Pat Riley… as a man… a player… and a coach… especially as the coach of the Showtime Lakers… and coach and executive of the Miami Heat… this is an extreme unveiling of how… if nothing else his success with the Lakers (where he eventually wore out his welcome… as he would with the Knicks) allowed him to be even more “over –the- edge” in his demands to the owners as well as the players. But it is a lifelong testament how one coach could lead a team of finesse like the Lakers… and then create “MURDERERS ROW” with the Knicks on the court! It of course continues on with Jeff (I am now happy being a clown on NBA telecasts) Van Gundy… following in Riley’s wake down the road.

I would like to acknowledge one very special and heartfelt thing the author included… that probably ninety-five-per-cent of readers didn’t even see… or absorb… let alone acknowledge… that absolutely touched my heart… because I have had the same exact sentiments regarding my dear departed Parents for over forty-years… and that is the following note that author Chris Herring included before you even got to the table of contents:

***”FOR MARSHA AND CEDRIC HERRING, THE BEST PARENTS I EVER COULD’VE ASKED FOR, ALL I’VE EVER WANTED IS TO MAKE YOU PROUD, AND I PRAY I’M DOING THAT NOW. UNTIL WE MEET AGAIN. I LOVE YOU”***

G-d Bless Chris… I’m sure they’re proud as can be… based on this book alone… and these words of love and gratitude!
15 people found this helpful
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CFR
5.0 out of 5 stars Informative book for Knicks fans!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 23, 2023
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I really enjoyed this book! Having been a devoted New York Knicks fan during the 1990s, I learned a lot about what went on behind the scenes. Not all of it was flattering, but it was very informative.
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Georgia M Monson
4.0 out of 5 stars The Inside Story of the 90s New York Knicks!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 1, 2022
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I heard about this book when the author was on a podcast I frequent. Being a big fan of 90s NBA, and the Knicks/Bulls rivalry in particular, I was compelled to read this. I was not disappointed. The aspect of this book I enjoyed most was that it didn't focus on Patrick Ewing and Pat Rielly, but gave equal coverage to the supporting cast, like Charles Oakley, John Starks and Anthony Mason. The 90s/early 2000s Rilley and Van Gundy Knicks were the team they were because of the tough and tenacious attitudes of the supporting cast and I learned a lot about them by reading this book.

Other content I found compelling was the coaching transition to Rilley, then from Rilley to Van Gundy. The context provided and level of detail regarding the motivations and personalities was impressive.
2 people found this helpful
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Jane
3.0 out of 5 stars Just ok
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 19, 2022
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First, this is not from "Jane," its from Jane's husband. So if you don't like my review, don't yell at her.

This book shows a lot of research and knowledge of the Knicks but not as much interest in the NBA more broadly. Nor does it really get to the bottom of why the Knicks lost in 1994, a question that has to be important for any Knick fan and really any NBA fan as it meant that an all-time great, Patrick Ewing, retired without a ring. There are errors.. Hakeem is depicted as an exhausted battered player. Not someone who averaged nearly 27 points a game on 50% from the field against the vaunted Knick defense. And page 142, "Olajuwon had perhaps [!] grazed the shot with his fingernail . . ." Has the author watched the tape of game of the 1994 finals? The shot was well short and off-line, clearly tipped by Olajuwon. Just an inaccurate statement and weird. Why say that when it clearly was not true. Is it part of some Knick mystique?

Riley made mistakes and was outcoached by Rudy T. who went with rookies and 2d year players and was not as stubborn as Riley. Riley overused his starters and ignored a good bench, just look at the box scores. Essentially, the Knicks went 6 deep and used about 135 minutes total for players beyond the top 6. Rudy T used 200 minutes beyond the top 6. Not enough comparative analysis unless you are Reggie Miller. Not a book about why the Knicks lost in 1994, at least not a good one. If you are a Knick fanatic, then this is a great book for you. For others, it is just ok. Not the book about the NBA in the 90s that I was hoping for. Also, understand before you buy this book that is based on many interviews (a good thing) but that Riley,Ewing, Oakley, and Starks do not appear to be among those interviewed. Check the Notes section at the end. I am sure that is not the author's choice but still. Don't talk about how many people were interviewed when those at the core of the story wouldn't talk (apparently) to the author.

And finally, there is no real analysis of why the Knicks lost their best chance at a championship since the 70s. They were up 3-2. Riley was too stubborn and complacent. He not only did kept his rotations too limited, check out the minutes played by the starters in game 4, 5 and 6. All close to or over 40 minutes except Smith. He did not have the insight about how to get the best out of Patrick. The press was going to and did say this was Hakeem vs. Ewing. That worked in 1984 but Riley should have known better. Do you really want to let that narrative frame the series? Against a 1994 Hakeem, perhaps his absolute best year. An offensive genius and at or close to his peak on defense. Riley should have taken some pressure off Patrick and say, like so many said about playoff series with Jordan, "Hakeem will get his." Let Patrick rebound and block shots which he did very well, better numbers than Hakeem. Have Patrick going into game 6 and 7 thinking he was playing well, not looking at his shooting and percentages. A few more jumpers were all the Knicks needed. All of this is from a die-hard Hakeem fan who thinks he is a top 5 player. But even this book shows enough to demonstrate that a well-coached Knicks team should have beaten the Rockets. The author has no interest in this sort of analysis for whatever reason.
6 people found this helpful
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NibbledtodeathbyDucks
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Quite What I Was Hoping For
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 14, 2022
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As a die-hard, bleed blue and orange Knick fan in the 1990s, I learned three things: that it really is the journey and not the destination, that prayer is powerful, and that if you refer to then-NBA Commissioner David Stern as an anal wart in the comments section of the New York Times, it will be removed.

One of the greatest nights of my life was being in the Garden on May 12, 1997, when the Knicks stripped the bark off the Heat. I rarely feel at home in any crowd, but did in that one. In fact, real Knick fans (I use this distinction because New York in general attracts bandwagon wingnuts in all areas, and the Knicks were an absolute magnet, with a concomitant rude and nasty corporate staff) would spot one another during the course of daily business, and then just dissolve into conversation about our team. A tollbooth collector spotted my jacket in the middle of the '99 playoffs, and we got into a conversation that ended up with what I estimated to be a thirty-car line up behind me -- oops! While parking in an outdoor lot before the theater, the guy in front of us had a Rolls, and gave the attendant a key wrapped in bills (in those lots, you would have to wait a long time to get your car if it wasn’t parked in the front.) When we gave him the key, I shrugged and said, Knick tip-off is at 6:10; whatever you can do. When we came out, our car was facing the street and the Rolls was behind us. It’s an important part of everything that happened in that decade, and it’s missing in this book. Herring wasn’t alive for a lot of this, and you don’t have to be alive during any time period to write about it, but you should talk to the fans who were a big part of this. He should have talked to a lot of people to get a fuller picture of this era, more Knicks, more broadcasters, more opponents. At least mention Kurt Thomas, his absence is a mind-blower.

But I’m not sure that was Herring’s aim. I am troubled by the title of this book – then and now, I have held a certain opinion of David Stern, Mary Mother Discipline Thorn and Granik the Panic, the unholy trinity of NBA suits, which to my mind explained the success of some players and some teams, and the lack of success of others. The Knicks were a really, really black team, from a city that intimidates people no end. No John Paxson on our team, no John Stockton, no Steve Kerr. We played hard, as you’re supposed to, it wasn’t a bunch of no-talent thugs. Stern was trying to sanitize the entire league to make it palatable to the lowest common denominator, because spoiled white kids from the suburbs generated a lot more revenue than die-hard fans. I think they were using the Yankees as a blueprint. That’s why our momentum was blindsided by the league in ’97 with all those idiotic suspensions for people who were clearly breaking up the fight. The Knicks were major market, money coming out the proverbial, you know, and we could take the financial hit. A safe target for suits. I’m not saying we would have definitely won in ’97, but we got too close for some people’s comfort. Herring was a sports writer for the Wall Street Journal, which to my mind was like being the Financial Editor of High Times, so this probably wasn't an alley he wanted to stroll down.

This is a good overview, a swim down memory sewer for me, which I don’t generally do, and brought back pleasure and pain. But I am convinced that Herring really wanted to write a biography of Anthony Mason, and some publishing ginks said, nah, that won’t sell, how about…
5 people found this helpful
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Frederick W. Benner
4.0 out of 5 stars Christmas Gift
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 2, 2023
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Item received on time and intact
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Luke OVERLORD Zimmerman
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling, dramatic, great for embittered Knicks fans or sports fans alike
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 10, 2022
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Most NBA fans tend to write off the 1990's Knicks as unfortunate victims of Michael Jordan and Co. running the league for the better part of a decade. Is this true? Ehh partially. But there's so much more behind the scenes than just "Oh the 1990's Bulls, too bad". And in reading this you'll get the full story behind a legitimately fantastic and compelling team that rose, fought, and fell before the turn of the millennium.
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Kerry O. Burns
5.0 out of 5 stars makes you feel as if you're sitting courtside at the Garden next to Spike Lee
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 25, 2022
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I moved to NYC in 1991 and left in 2000 and witnessed perhaps the greatest decade in NYC sports history. The 90s were a rich trove of sports history in NYC with the NY Yankees winning 4 World Series, The Rangers The Stanley Cup in 1994, NY Giants in 1991 won the Super Bowl, even the lowly NY Jets made it to the AFC Championship Game in 1998. There were a lot of ticker tape parades down Broadway in the 90's. My favorite team during that span never won a NBA Title despite reaching the Finals twice but the memories from that team are more vivid to me than any other team. Who can ever forget those Knicks of the 90's - Ewing, Starks, Oakley, Smith. Mason, LJ, Rivers, Sprewell, Camby, Houston, Childs, Ward, Anthony and Xavier McDaniel. Led by first Pat Riley then Jeff Van Gundy. The memories are still so vivid - LJ's 4 point play, Reggie Miller going off for 8 points in 12 seconds, Starks clanging threes all night in Houston, The Miami brawl and suspensions, Van Gundy hanging onto Mourning's leg and Ewing's steady presence and Oakley's physicality. As Chris Herring so vividly brings back to life you almost feel yourself on the court watching the Knicks play their suffering style of defense that Riley brought to NY and Van Gundy revived after the failed Don Nelson experiment. I loved those teams and I remember being glued to the tv during their playoff runs. I was in an off-off Broadway play one night and I remember rushing out the dressing room down the stairs to the local corner pub to watch the Pacers vs Knicks playoff game just in time to watch LJ's 4 point play. How can those memories ever be captured? By exceptional writing and research that's how. Chris Herring conducted over two hundred interviews over the course of two years putting this book together. I was hoping it wouldn't end but alas as the Knicks run came to an end so did this fantastic book. Thank you Chris for bringing it all back to us - I know your parents could not be prouder.
11 people found this helpful
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GS
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Read, Sad Story
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 1, 2022
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Interesting read with some good behind the scene insights. Thank God the NBA has progressed past the Knicks/Heat NHL-style bruiser game. Sad to hear about Mason, Oakley and Ewing. They should be celebrated by the Knicks organization. Maybe not Mason who comes off as a major Richard. I also feel bad for NY Knicks fans…they deserve so much better than the past 20+ years misery.
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