Oh lawds.... it's the latter. He's trying to prove a point and trying to doubletalk his way around it. He did this same **** a year ago and then went back to hucking 30 shots a game. He sure is full of himself that's for damn sure.
GREENBURGH, N.Y. - Carmelo Anthony's first instinct, especially during crunch time, is to shoot the ball. He said he's not playing instinctively but too passively right now.
For one of the NBA's most aggressive scorers and best closers, this is troublesome. Anthony said it has to change immediately.
In three games, Anthony has scored only 15 fourth-quarter points and hasn't attempted a free throw. He's 7-for-22 in the quarter, including 1-for-5 from three.
"Maybe I'm second-guessing myself," Anthony said after Monday's practice. "Maybe I'm a little bit passive out there, trying to do things that's out of the norm and trying to make people better at the wrong times. That's where I'm second-guessing myself and I'm second-guessing my shot and should I take this or should I pass this. I've got to get out of that mentality quick."
Anthony isn't the reason the Knicks, who host the Bobcats Tuesday, are 1-2. They have been turning the ball over more than last year, and their transition defense, overall effort and shot selection led to them falling behind by 23 in Sunday's loss to Minnesota.
But Anthony, who's shooting 37.7 percent and averaging 21.0 points, was invisible late in each of the Knicks' two defeats.
In the last 4:09 of Thursday's one-point loss in Chicago, Anthony was 0-for-5 and missed the game-winning shot, settling for a long pull-up. Sunday against the Timberwolves, Anthony was scoreless the last 5:54, and was 0-for-3 with a turnover after the Knicks drew within two with 4:49 left.
Anthony wouldn't blame his struggles on playing less basketball this past offseason while rehabbing a torn left labrum and rotator cuff as opposed to last summer when he was on the Olympic team.
"There's no excuses behind that," Anthony said. "I got to get better. I got to do better. I got to put the ball in the hole. That's what I do best and I got to do that. There's no need for me to take that away from myself when I know that I can do that. When I do that, we're a hell of a team."
Mike Woodson defended Anthony and said the offensive woes are a team-wide problem. The Knicks are not sharing or taking care of the ball throughout the game and not just the fourth quarter. But they have committed 14 of their 53 turnovers in the fourth.
"I am not putting it all on Melo," Woodson said. "I think at times he might be trying to make sure everybody is involved and being a part of it and that is OK, too. That is not getting us beat, guys."
"There's no need to panic," Anthony said. "It's three games into the season. We're still trying to figure a lot of things out."