
La historia que une al Atleti y Athletic desde su nacimiento
Descubre la historia que une al Atlético de Madrid y Athletic Club desde su nacimiento.

Stephon Marbury discusses the Knicks' playoff strategy after their loss to the Hawks, emphasizing the need for adjustments. The Knicks face critical questions as they head to Atlanta with the series tied.
Stephon Marbury is asking for a pen and paper. The waitress brings him an envelope.
To Marbury, the envelope, like many things in his life, has become a basketball court. On this court, constructed with a few strokes of a pen, Jalen Brunson sits at the center. And heâs on an island defending C.J. McCollum, the Atlanta Hawks guard who scored 32 points to hand the Knicks their first loss of the playoffs to even the series at one game apiece on Monday.
Four of his six of his fourth-quarter points, McCollum admitted after the victory, came via brush screens intentionally designed to switch Brunson onto the Hawksâ crafty-scoring guard. On one possession, McCollum used a between-the-legs dribble into a crossover, the âUTEP two-step,â to knock the Knicksâ captain off-balance.
âItâs gonna come down to strategy with Mike Brown,â says Marbury, seated on the 100th floor of a sleek high-rise overlooking Central Park. âItâs gonna come down to structure and strategy with Mike Brown â and I believe heâs going to make the adjustments.â
The Knicks head to Atlanta with more questions than answers as a team with an NBA Finals mandate that has now ceded home-court advantage. Chief among those questions is what adjustments the Knicks will make on both ends of the floor around Brunson, who holds the keys to the Knicksâ title run.
And their future as currently constructed.
âYou know that theyâre running a high pick and roll. Itâs really like a brush screen, just so you can switch. And itâs slow. Like, itâs like stand there, touch his body, drag him down,â Marbury explains. âAnd now youâve gotta switch. And itâs embarrassing if you donât switch, âcause you on the court, on the island, by yourself in the NBA. So you standing there like, âDamn.â
âI could literally walk real slow and just grab you like, âitâs time,â and thatâs the switch. Now, youâve gotta stomp your feet, slap the ground, and just get ready every time.â
That future could very well hinge on how effectively the Knicks can cover for their All-Star scoring guard on the defensive end. McCollum called Brunsonâs number over and over again to help his Hawks win Game 2. Marbury offered a solution, a newer defensive coverage teams have deployed in recent months to keep weaker defenders off of premier scoring threats.
But it will require all five Knicks on the floor to be on a string.
âJalen will have to get over the screen on C.J.âs hip and push him downhill, then whoeverâs man is creating the switch, theyâll stay in the help position to make C.J. pass the ball. Then, the wing man will cheat over to the middle, and the [Knicksâ] corner man will have two men: [Atlantaâs] wing man and the corner man,â Marbury explains. âIf Jalen blitzes the screen, now if C.J. goes to drive and the help defender is in the blue position, Jalen can switch back to his man. He can switch to the other guy.
The Knicks need to focus on strategic adjustments, particularly around Jalen Brunson's role in defense and offense.
C.J. McCollum scored 32 points and exploited matchups against Jalen Brunson, contributing significantly to the Hawks' victory.
The Knicks have an NBA Finals mandate, making their performance critical as they aim to regain home-court advantage.
Mike Brown is a key figure in the Knicks' strategy, responsible for making crucial adjustments to enhance the team's playoff performance.

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âAnd thatâs how you kill it. Now weâre gonna watch, and weâre gonna see if theyâre gonna make that adjustment. Because [Atlanta is] gonna run the same play. Theyâre gonna do it old-school and make us adjust.â
These days, Marbury spends his time building WellBall, what he calls the âpickleball of basketball.â That time was interrupted on Monday.
Because, of course, he saw the tweet.
Words Marbury never associated with his Knicks career reached nearly 1 million viewers when a NY Post reporter denigrated the ex-point guardâs time with the franchise. The post included a video from the Knicksâ own social media account of Marbury supporting the team courtside during Game 1.
âThe celebration of Stephon Marbury is such a strange thing,â the NY Post reporter wrote. âHe was a terrible Knick. Dragged down the franchise for five years. Won zero playoff games.â
Those words are buried inside the archives of Marburyâs iMessage app, incoming and outgoing messages alike, disturbing the freedom heâs worked hard to create.
âI get it. I understand. Things happen. Things didnât go well,â he says. âBut the purity of New York basketball is in my DNA.
âIâm the wrong one. Iâm the kid from Coney Island, for real.â
Marbury amassed a 113-174 record during his four-plus seasons in New York. His Knicks went to the playoffs once and were swept by the New Jersey Nets, who lost in the second round to the eventual NBA champion Detroit Pistons.
Marbury was in his late 20s then. Twenty years have passed since his final season in New York. Today, he wants to see the Knicks â yes, the âNova Knicksâ â reach heights he couldnât during his time in orange and blue.
âI was a Knicks fan before I was ever a Knick. My mom was a Knicks fan. I was a Knicks fan in the womb. Iâm almost close to half of a century living on this Earth being a Knicks fan,â he says. âThis is why people in your industry are being replaced by former players. What [the NY Post reporter] said doesnât matter. It gets voided when real people whoâve been on the hardwood speak.â
Marbury admits his years in New York werenât the best. But when he first joined the Knicks, he got on a plane with then president of basketball operations Isiah Thomas. Thomas, who took the Bad Boy Detroit Pistons to back-to-back NBA titles, gave him a blueprint on leading a team through tumultuous times as a floor general.
âHe said, âTeams bring you in when thereâs a sh-t storm. You are able to weather the storm when things are going bad, and youâll come in and just play and do what you do,ââ Marbury recalled. âIâll put on my sneakers. Iâm gonna lace them up. Iâm gonna play. A lot of people have their opinion about how I played, and I can submit in the moment that I wasnât perfect in all of what Iâve done.
âBut I tried. I was trying, and I came ready, and I came prepared. People that are unprepared, I think those are the people who [critics] will be able to look at and contest. Some of the people that are in my draft class, I lap them. And Iâm talking about years played. Not even talent or stats.â
Marbury and Brunson donât have a relationship, but the former Knick sees a little bit of himself in New Yorkâs current captain.
âHis ground attack is crazy, but right now he makes a lot of moves, and when you make a lot of moves, it takes a lot of energy,â Marbury says. âItâs a lot of movement to breathe through all that. Heâs conditioned to do it, so he makes it look easy. But itâs super hard to do.â
Marbury believes Brunson has what it takes to make good on James Dolanâs January mandate: that he can lift the Knicks to their first NBA title since 1973.
âWeâre behind [Jalen]. We support him, but we also want him to make adjustments,â he says. âJalen is the guy that we want and we love because heâs a great human being. Now, heâs in the process of making his adjustments towards being a leader worthy of building two statues outside The Garden.
âYouâd have to literally build him, then build one with him, Clyde and all the other dudes, if he wins a title.â
To get there, Brunson has to adjust, not just on the defensive end, but offensively, too. He can get his own shot at any moment, but far too often, the offense stagnates: It happened in crunch time against the Hawks when Brunson took eight shots in the final eight minutes while Karl-Anthony Towns took just two.
âI feel like Jalen Brunson has to play like Allen Iverson and John Stockton. He has to find the balance. I donât think itâs a hard transition for him because heâs smart, and heâs astute, and because heâs smart and astute, heâs aware of what happened,â Marbury says. âRight now, this is the first four years of him being the man where heâs making decisions and heâs going on the court. Heâs playing at the highest level and everything is in his hand.
âAnd heâs got all of the support. We are going to support him because we believe him and we trust him. We believe that. I believe that.â
In the locker room after the Game 2 loss, several Knicks players pointed to the same issue: a lack of ball movement and fluidity down the stretch, when the Hawks closed on a 20-9 run to erase a 14-point deficit.
âWeâll wait and watch and see if thatâs something that [Jalenâs] going to do. Because if he makes that adjustment â if he plays like Stockton and Iverson â yeah. Weâre going to witness what we all started to believe in and trust in,â Marbury says. âAnd why we call him Mr. Clutch.â
Marbury also believes Brunson needs more help â from both his coach and his co-star. He wants the Knicks to run more traditional high pick-and-roll with their two All-Stars â ânot that Spain action,â he says â and believes Towns has to be more forceful in demanding the ball.
âKATâs not going to get plays drawn up in this system with Coach Brown. He has to assert himself. He has to demand â he has to demand the ball come his way, man,â Marbury says. âItâs different when you demand something. When you command it, now itâs like, âOK, thatâs what weâre doing. Weâre going there.â When he puts his hand up and demands the ball, everybody knows to throw it.â
Thatâs one side of the ball.
The other is Brunsonâs own matchup. Because McCollum isnât going anywhere. And a player used to diagnosing opposing defenses now must do the same to his own.
âWhat he takes from [Game 2] and how he grows from that night â thatâs him. Thatâs going to be the truth and true honesty in the next game,â Marbury said. âItâs not about playing harder or scoring more or not missing any shots. Thatâs not it. Itâs evaluating how they play him. How am I going to play defensively?
âAm I going to submit and say, look, this is where I need help at? Am I thinking about knowing that I have a weakness right now and now everyone sees it? Everybody in the gym knew it. The whole world sees I canât defend C.J. McCollum, and Iâm gonna have to guard him in the next game.
âHow are we gonna prep? And how are you gonna prepare to play against him?â