China / Sports

Knicks rake in some rich consolation

By Agence France-Presse in New York (China Daily) Updated: 2017-02-17 13:50

They may have been buffeted by crises on and off the court, but the New York Knicks remain the most valuable franchise in the NBA, Forbes reported on Wednesday.

The Knicks are languishing in the bottom half of the Eastern Conference after a 23-34 start to the season which last week saw former star Charles Oakley banned from attending home games by team owners.

But the poor form and off-court soap operas have done nothing to diminish the Knicks' money-spinning value, according to Forbes.

The magazine said in its annual survey of NBA team valuations that the Knicks were now worth an estimated $3.3 billion, a 10 percent bump on 2016.

The Knicks posted an NBA-record operating profit of $141 million last year, despite a losing 32-50 season record.

Another iconic franchise with a dismal record - the Los Angeles Lakers - are ranked second, with a value of $3 billion.

The Lakers, who suffered the worst season in their history last term with a 17-65 record, are also struggling again this year at 19-38.

The Golden State Warriors, Chicago Bulls and Boston Celtics round out the top five most valuable franchises.

Golden State's value was put at $2.6 billion, a 37 percent increase from 2016, a spike attributed to surging ticket and sponsorship revenues. The franchise has also broken ground on a state-of-the-art arena due to open in 2019.

But while the Warriors' success on court has shot up them up the rankings, the NBA champion Cleveland Cavaliers were only 11th overall out of 30 teams.

The Cavs were one of three franchises, along with the Los Angeles Clippers and Oklahoma City Thunder, to post a loss last season.

Cleveland's $40 million loss - attributed to payroll excesses - was the fifth largest in NBA history.

Thunder struck

The Knicks' latest suffering came on Wednesday night as Russell Westbrook scored 38 points and posted his 27th triple-double of the season to help the Oklahoma City Thunder beat New York 116-105.

Carmelo Anthony had 30 points for the Knicks after being selected to the All-Star Game.

Anthony answers All-Star call

New York Knicks forward Carmelo Anthony will make an eighth consecutive appearance in the NBA All-Star Game after being named on Wednesday as a replacement for injured Cleveland star Kevin Love.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver selected Anthony to the Eastern Conference squad that will face its Western Conference counterparts on Sunday.

Anthony, who will play in his 10th career All-Star contest, is averaging 23.2 points, 6.1 rebounds and 2.9 assists over 55 games this season for the Knicks, who are 23-33 and three games behind Detroit for the last playoff spot in the East.

Anthony, 32, has 23,775 career points to rank 25th on the NBA all-time scoring list.

Love had been selected for his fourth career All-Star Game but he underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left knee on Tuesday.

The defending NBA champion Cavaliers expect his return in about six weeks.

Other injury replacements for All-Star Game events this weekend were also announced.

Denver Nuggets' 21-year-old Serbian Nikola Jokic will replace injured Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid in Saturday's Skills Challenge while Oklahoma City Thunder guard Alex Abrines, a 23-year-old Spanish rookie, replaces Embiid on the World Team in Friday's Rising Stars Challenge. Embiid is out with a left knee injury.

New York Knicks center Willy Hernangomez, a 22-year-old Spaniard, will replace injured Nuggets guard Emmanuel Mudiay on the World Team. Mudiay will not play due to a back injury.

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