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Big money would lure Jackson to the Big Apple.

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Author: Deveney, Sean sdeveney@sportingnews.com

Section: NBA

INSIDER

Big money would lure Jackson to the Big Apple


What's the difference between Phil Jackson and a real Zen Master? Try an annual salary close to $15 mil.

In case you missed it last week, sources say unemployed coaching demigod Phil Jackson visited a Southern California late-night taco stand for a burrito. The contents â€" chicken? shrimp? carne asada? â€" of the burrito are not known, but sources say there was sour cream and jack cheese involved, and Jackson's agents put the likelihood of the presence of guacamole at 50 percent, though that may have shifted to 51 percent by early this week.

Ugh. Is anyone out there better at toying with us ink-stained nabobs than Phil? Somehow, he has managed to turn every hardboiled sportswriter on both coasts into a breathless People magazine gossipmonger, with the media analyzing minute clues that might point to whether Jackson will be the next coach of the Lakers, Knicks, some team in between or no one at all.

Jackson has motivation for this. The more what-will-Phil-do drama, the higher the price tag for his services. He played this game perfectly with the Knicks and the Nets before he took the Lakers job in 1999. No one knows exactly what Phil will do this time around, but it seems that, whatever his next move, he will be paid $10 million per year to make it. Supposedly, that's the salary Jackson will command â€" at least.

What we know is that Jackson met with Knicks president Isiah Thomas early last week for very preliminary discussions. We know that Jackson met with Lakers owner Jerry Buss, too, but the meeting was equally preliminary. We know both teams consider Jackson a candidate and that Cleveland and Portland would like a shot, too. We know all four teams have owners with the requisite checkbooks to meet almost any Jackson demand. We also know that Jackson's agents put the chance of Phil coaching next year at 50-50, though that was later upped to 5149.

What's happening here is a game of chicken that will be decided by how long teams are willing to wait for Jackson and how much they're willing to pay. But the longer teams wait, the greater the chance they will miss out on other candidates, such as Flip Saunders and Eric Musselman. Teams such as Portland and Cleveland â€" young teams planning major personnel changes this summer â€" can't afford to wait for Jackson. They need to get a coach and a philosophy as soon as possible, to begin the work of building. That's why the Lakers and Knicks figure to be the serious contenders.

But the Knicks need Jackson more urgently than the Lakers because New York is a leaderless team desperate for credibility. It's also a group that Thomas put together, and if he is to reduce his own blame for this underachieving bunch, it would behoove him to get Jackson to New York, no matter the cost. If Jackson comes back, the smart money probably is in New York and the smart money is likely to be more than the $10 million per year being bounced around now. Thomas still should wield enough clout with Knicks ownership to get the payout into the $12 million-to-$15 million range.

Jackson might have hippie roots, but he certainly has embraced capitalism as he has gotten older.

Don't forget â€" Jackson will turn 60 in September, and his next job likely will be his final job. Wouldn't it be nice for him to close out his career where it began, in the footsteps of Red Holzman? Sure, but that's a quaint notion, and the lure of it for Jackson is overstated. The lure of $15 million would be a lot more effective.

Get the latest playoff news at sportingnews.com.

PHOTO (COLOR): Not even front office executives are immune to Jackson's manipulation skills.

PHOTO (COLOR)

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By Sean Deveney



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