When the Knicks make a change in the front office, the reasons are usually obvious.
It’s often due to poor results or a lack of progress. Sometimes it’s the result of a regime change.
But when GM Scott Perry and the Knicks mutually parted ways earlier this week, the reasoning wasn’t so clear.
The Knicks just finished one of the most successful seasons of the past two decades. They won 47 games in the regular season and beat the Cavs in the first round. In doing so, they surpassed any reasonable preseason expectations.
So the Knicks and Perry didn’t part ways due to poor on-court results. Perry has worked as general manager under Leon Rose for the past three seasons.
So they didn’t make a change because of a new regime.
Neither Perry nor anyone from the Knicks has addressed the situation. So it’s unclear what, specifically, led to the parting of ways. One thing we know is that it was indeed a mutual agreement between the team and Perry.
So where do the Knicks go from here?
I would assume that Gerrson Rosas, a senior basketball advisor and former Timberwolves president, will have an expanded role. Rosas, whose tenure in Minnesota ended due to a toxic environment and in office relationship, has a close relationship with team president Leon Rose and head coach Tom Thibodeau.
It’s possible that other executives such as Brock Aller (Vice President of Basketball, Planning), Frank Zanin (assistant general manager, pro scouting) and Walt Perrin (assistant general manager, college scouting) take on more responsibility.
Maybe the Knicks look externally for a general manager.
One name you can cross off of your list? Former Warriors GM Bob Meyers.
Meyers left Golden State last week after helping the organization win four championships.
He would be a target for any team looking to fill a front-office vacancy.
But I can’t see Meyers taking a job where he isn’t the top basketball executive. In New York, he’d be working under Rose and executive vice president/senior basketball advisor William Wesley. Also, Meyers would command a significant salary. I can’t see Knicks governor James Dolan adding another high-salaried executive. By my estimate, Dolan would be spending well north of $22 million on his top execs if the Knicks added Myers.
It’s not happening.