Here is the reason the Knicks are so bad:
James Lawrence Dolan[1] (born May 11, 1955) is an American businessman, and the
executive chairman and
chief executive officer of
Madison Square Garden Sports and
Madison Square Garden Entertainment, and executive chairman of
MSG Networks
Dolan is one of six children of Cablevision founder
Charles Dolan and his wife, Helen Ann Dolan,
[3] and nephew of
Cleveland Guardians owner
Larry J. Dolan.
[4] He is of
Irish descent.
[4] After originally pursuing a career in music, Dolan eventually switched to a major in communications at
SUNY New Paltz and began working for Cablevision in various capacities including sales before eventually being dispatched to
Cleveland by his father to manage the launching of a sports radio station. In 1995, he was made CEO >of Cablevision.
[5] Throughout his early adult life, Dolan battled drug and alcohol problems and was reportedly known for having a volatile temper. In 1993, he went to
drug rehabilitation at the Hazelden clinic in
Center City, Minnesota.
[6]<
New York Knicks
Like the Rangers, the Knicks performed abysmally in the early 2000s. Unlike the Rangers, they have yet to fully recover, which fans mostly blame on Dolan's management missteps.
[16] Although the Knicks made the
NBA Finals in 1999, they did not post another winning season until the
2012–13 season. Furthermore, the Knicks did not make the playoffs at any point between the
2003–04 and
2010–11 seasons, which both ended in the first round with four-game sweeps of the Knicks. In 2007, NBA Commissioner
David Stern criticized Dolan's management of the Knicks, saying "they're not a model of intelligent management."
[17][18]
>In 2007, Dolan was named as a defendant in a sexual harassment lawsuit submitted by a former Knicks executive,
Anucha Browne-Sanders. Browne-Sanders accused Dolan of firing her out of spite after she complained about sexual harassment from Isiah Thomas. The court ruled in favor of Brown-Sanders and Dolan had to pay $3 million of the $11 million settlement. MSG was responsible for paying the remainder of the settlement.
[19]<