Quantcast

Anthony doesn’t want return to Denver canceled

Carmelo Anthony
New York Knicks’ Carmelo Anthony during the second half of the South Florida All Star Classic basketball game in Miami, Saturday, Oct. 8, 2011. Team Wade won 141-140 in overtime. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter)
melo
New York Knicks' Carmelo Anthony during the second half of the South Florida All Star Classic basketball game in Miami, Saturday, Oct. 8, 2011. Team Wade won 141-140 in overtime. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter)

NEW YORK (AP) — The first big night of the NBA season, barring further cancellations, would feature Carmelo Anthony’s return to Denver.

The Knicks’ All-Star doesn’t want to lose that one, but is concerned there may not be basketball at all this season.

“Right now, anybody would be,” he said Wednesday. “They cancel the first two weeks of the season, maybe in a couple of days they cancel another two weeks of the season. So I don’t know how to feel right now.”

But he knows he wants to play in Denver on Nov. 16, just to get the return to his first NBA home out of the way. He knows it could be a “circus,” but said: “I can’t shy away from that. I’ve got to deal with it.”

“Obviously once they said the first two weeks was going to be canceled, of course the Denver game was highlighted on the calendar, not just for me but for everybody. So right now, that has a chance to be up in flames now.”

The current season opener is Nov. 15, featuring just four games. The next night is a full slate, including Boston at Miami in a playoff rematch. Those could be gone if there is no collective bargaining agreement soon.

“Looks like everything is up in jeopardy,” Anthony said.

Anthony released his Melo M8 on Wednesday, his eighth Jordan sneaker and first since being traded to the Knicks in February. Anthony said the sneaker, with a suggested retail of $135, was his lightest model by far.

The move to New York has given him more opportunities for exposure, part of the reason he was looking to leave Denver. He could have become a free agent this summer and left through that route, but pushed for a trade to get it done during the season so he could get under contract under the old rules.

And though he took some criticism from Knicks fans who would have preferred getting him for nothing instead of a costly trade, he made the correct financial decision given the current lockout.

“I think I did the right thing. For the average person out there who really thought I was just trying to get up and just leave for no reason, that really was a big key in my decision,” Anthony said. “I knew free agency was coming, I knew it would be altered, I knew it’d be messed up, so imagine if I’d have stayed. I’d have been a free agent now in limbo. It’d have just been all bad.”

But he played well while awaiting the deal and the Nuggets ended up getting great value, acquiring Wilson Chandler and Danilo Gallinari, Raymond Felton and center Timofey Mozgov and trading Chauncey Billups. So the No. 3 pick in the 2003 draft expects a mostly positive reception whenever he does return.

“I don’t think I did anything wrong to the Denver fans. I think I’ve been loyal to them for 7½ years, so for me to go back — of course you’re going to have some boos and people weeping and whining about it — but for the most part I can say I did a hell of a job out there in Denver,” Anthony said.

“I think it was kind of a win-win situation for both teams.”

If he’s not on the road with the Knicks next month, Anthony hopes to be playing in an exhibition game in New York. He’s played with LeBron James and Chris Paul in the recent star-studded affairs in Philadelphia, Winston-Salem, N.C. and Miami. If so, he hinted at some “surprises” on the court.

“It is New York, the game would have to be that much bigger,” he said.

But Anthony, recovered from offseason elbow and knee surgery, would prefer to be back at the Pepsi Center.

___

Follow Brian Mahoney on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/Briancmahoney

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.