O'Neal's TNT colleague and fellow Hall of Famer Charles Barkley made sure to note the eventual return of Mitchell Robinson, who is recovering from left foot surgery, but the four-time NBA champion remains unconvinced of the team's defensive toughness. Although the Knicks are guarding the 3-point line competently enough in the early goings, they are allowing opponents to shoot 48 percent from the field (fifth worst in league).

Karl-Anthony Towns may be forced to adjust if New York continues to underwhelm, or the front office might have to add a strong interior presence at the trade deadline. These type of problems do not have to be sorted out in November, but it is critical that this group quickly starts to move in the right direction.

The Knicks' identity is undeniably different after a busy offseason. There is no dancing around that reality. It is also important to remember, however, that if all goes as team president Leon Rose envisions, their ceiling will be the highest it has been in three decades.