Skip to content

Knicks are planning for 2019 free agency, which could be potential New York homecoming for Kyrie Irving

Author
UPDATED:

Kyrie Irving has heard from Knicks fans — both in person and on social media — but for now he’s trying to ignore the impending bonanza of his 2019 free agency.

“It’s just a ways away, man. But it’s already starting,” Irving said. “As long as I could just divide the attention up and it just doesn’t infiltrate what I’m focused on during the season, then I’m cool with it.”

Irving is in New York promoting his movie about New York, “Uncle Drew,” a comedy that features the Celtics point guard as a white-haired old man assembling his former teammates for one final tournament at Rucker Park.

Suspension of disbelief is required for viewing, and it’s also recommended for any Knicks fans hoping for playoffs next season.

“I just hope my Rotten Tomatoes score is high,” Irving said. “At least above an 85. Yeah, I know it’s tough. Shoot for the stars.”

Kyrie Irving has heard all the chatter about his impending 2019 free agency.
Kyrie Irving has heard all the chatter about his impending 2019 free agency.

Irving clearly isn’t afraid of intimidating tasks, and there’s real potential in him as the future star at the Garden. The West Orange, N.J., product placed the Knicks on his short list of desirable destinations last year after requesting a trade from the Cavaliers. He will be one of New York’s primary targets in free agency in 2019.

Irving, 26, has one more year on his deal with the Celtics and already announced that he won’t sign an extension before next season since he’d make more money re-signing with the Celtics as a free agent or with another team in 2019.

Either way, Irving is already sick of the media reading the tea leaves.

“I had somebody dissect me saying I wanting to win a championship with the Celtics,” Irving said. “On TV and saying, ‘What is he actually saying here?’ So I thought that was pretty funny.”

Teams — like the Knicks — devote multi-year plans around when they’ll have cap space, hoping to maximize their appeal for that summer.

“Our goal is to make this an attractive place,” Mills just after the draft. “From the time we started meeting with guys in Chicago (for the draft combine), when we sit and talk to players, we want them to sort of get a really good feeling about the direction of where we’re going.

“And I think we did a good job of that… And that will carry over into how free agents begin to feel about the organization and about our team.”

Landing Kyrie Irving would help Steve Mills make the Phil Jackson era a distant memory.
Landing Kyrie Irving would help Steve Mills make the Phil Jackson era a distant memory.

Labeling this year’s draft as Mills’ “first opportunity” is misleading since he was either the GM or president for the last four seasons, but the Knicks are selling the idea that Phil Jackson was the problem.

Whether or not that leads to Irving is something nobody can answer yet. But the point guard has star appeal and has close ties to New York.

Most of the latter comes from his father, Drederick Irving, who is from the Bronx, played for the gauchos and was a Rucker Park MVP.

“It will always be home to me. I’m from New Jersey — to just be clear,” Irving said. “This is where I grew up, man.”

Originally Published: