- Associated Press - Monday, March 28, 2011

GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP) - With the New York Knicks in a terrible late-season slump, Carmelo Anthony said Monday their game against the Orlando Magic was “almost a must win for us.”

The Knicks have lost six straight, tying their worst skid of the season, and nine of 10 to fall to 35-38. New York has gone 7-12 since acquiring Anthony in February, including a loss to the Magic last Wednesday.

“We understand how important this game is for us,” Anthony said at the Knicks’ training center. “It’s almost a must win for us. That mentality, that’s something that I want to approach it, as a must-win game. We’ve been talking about that throughout the team.”

Told of Anthony’s must-win belief, coach Mike D’Antoni said: “We’ve had a few of those lately, and we haven’t seemed to get one, so every game we go out is a must win. It’s a must play well.”

“We’ve been using those cliches and trying to do this and that, and it’s almost time to draw a line in the sand and let’s play as hard as we can play,” D’Antoni added.

Despite their slump, the Knicks are still seventh in the Eastern Conference with room to spare. Anthony said he wasn’t worried about a complete collapse, but D’Antoni and team president Donnie Walsh said the playoffs weren’t a guarantee.

The Knicks open a four-game homestand Monday. After the Magic, who have won all three meetings this season, New York hosts New Jersey, Cleveland and Toronto, all well below .500.

But the Knicks have been maddeningly poor against fellow losing teams, going 0-3 this season against the Cavaliers and losing twice to both Indiana and Milwaukee during the last 10 games. D’Antoni said it had been hard for the team to keep its confidence up “because we’re losing all the time.”

“So the first thing you do is just play harder,” he said.

The Knicks also changed a routine.

New York held its first home morning shootaround of the season Monday. The Knicks usually have a walkthrough in the afternoon at Madison Square Garden, believing a morning trip to Westchester, then a drive into Manhattan, wasn’t the best use of their time. They practiced at their training center the morning of a game only one other time in the last two seasons, on the morning of Tracy McGrady’s debut last year.

But after a day off Sunday, they decided to get to the gym early.

“I think when you’re losing a lot, you change something,” Walsh said. “So we’ll see if the change helps us.”

Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy understood why Anthony said it.

“They’ve been struggling lately and I think that’s probably just indicative of the way they feel,” he said before the game.

Van Gundy then criticized the attention given to New York’s struggles since their deal. The Knicks’ shootaround attracted at least 15 media members, a total many NBA teams could never get even for a game.

“I don’t say this comically, OK?” he said. “With Miami at the beginning of the year and New York since the trade, it’s like because so many people are interested in what happens with LeBron, (Dwyane) Wade and (Chris) Bosh, and Carmelo, Amare (Stoudemire) and Chauncey (Billups), you guys think everybody else, that’s our overwhelming function, is what’s happening with Miami and New York?

“Quite honestly, we don’t give a damn. We don’t, I don’t care. We’re just getting ready to play them. I care about our team. It’s not all Miami and New York. My God. I know to ESPN it is, but to the rest of us, we actually think some of the other teams matter.”

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