Wednesday, September 3, 2025

9/3 - Mark Jackson

 

Name: Mark Jackson


Team: New York Knicks

Position: Point Guard

Card Year: 1992

Card Maker: Skybox

Card Number: 162







We're back after a one-week hiatus with perhaps the card of the player most immediately relevant to current day sports at least up to this point in the blog - 1992 New York Knick, Mark Jackson. 

Mark Jackson was drafted by the New York Knicks as the 18th pick in the first round of the 1987 draft after four years and a 2nd team All American season in 1987 at St. John's. 

His rookie season couldn't have gone better as he won the Rookie of the Year Award and the Knicks reached the playoffs for the first time since 1984. During that season, Jackson averaged nearly 40 minutes per game playing time while scoring an average of 13.6 points and 10.6 assists per game respectively that season. Despite the Knicks losing to the Celtics in the first round, it was clearly their best season in some time and would be the first in a string of seasons where Jackson would unsuccessfully attempt to lead the Knicks against the Detroit Pistons and the Chicago Bulls for the top spot in the Eastern Conference.

The next season was a statistical improvement for Jackson, as he averaged 16.9 points per game as a point guard. It would be his first and only All Star game, despite what would end up being a lengthy career. He would help lead the Knicks to the Eastern Conference semifinals, only to lose to the Chicago Bulls 4-2. 

The 1988-89 season also saw Jackson sign a multimillion dollar, 5 year deal with the Knicks only for his production to decrease and Knicks fans become impatient with the team's lack of playoff success. The 1991-92 season, the season of this card, would be Jackson's last season with the Knicks until much later in his career. He then was traded to the LA Clippers as part of a three way deal between New York, Los Angeles, and Orlando. After two years in LA he was traded to Indiana where he would play until 2000 with one season in Denver in between.

His time in Indiana was similar to that in New York. He was a reliable point guard but not the star of either team (Patrick Ewing in New York and now Reggie Miller in Indiana) and in both cases, each team just didn't have enough to win an NBA championship. The Chicago Bulls earned their last championship with Michael Jordan in 1998, having just eclipsed the Pacers in the eastern conference finals 4-3 and ironically enough, the Pacers lost to the New York Knicks in the 1999 Eastern conference finals, though that Knicks team was handily beaten by Tim Duncan's spurs 4 games to 1 in the league finals. 

Jackson's playing career ended in the 2003-2004 season after spending a season each with New York once again, Utah, and Houston. He was consistently a starter for all but the last two years of his career, but he never reached the statistical peak of his sophomore season ever again. However, he did impact the game in a different way however, in literally changing the rulebook based on his style of play. It was not uncommon for Jackson to spend considerable time dribbling and boxing players out in the paint with his back to the basket before making another move - something that Charles Barkley also did to great effect. In 1999, the five second back to the basket rule was introduced, only allowing players five seconds of dribbling below the free throw line with their back to the basket until they stop, with violation of the rule resulting in a turnover. While not explicitly the result of Jackson, both Jackson and Barkley were the prominent players known for this style of play at the end of their careers and as such the rule is attributed to them both.

In 2011 he was hired as head coach of the Golden State Warriors, a team in a playoff drought similar to the Knicks when Jackson was first drafted. By the 2013 playoffs he got the team to the Western conference semifinals, and to the first round of the playoffs in 2014 but despite the general turnaround of the Warriors, he was not rehired as head coach. That job would go to Steve Kerr and the Warriors would begin their dynasty in the 2015 championship. There is much speculation as to what led to this decision by the Warriors organization, but it seems that under Jackson, there was a fair amount of dysfunction that occurred alongside the improvement in Golden State's record.

Finally in 2025 - the New York Knicks fired Tom Thibodeau after again not making an NBA finals and were in need of a new head coach. The likes of both Rick Pitino and Shaq publicly suggested Mark Jackson as a potential replacement for Thibodeau, but instead of getting his first coaching job since Golden State, Mike Brown is hired instead. Jackson immediately took to social media to demonstrate his displeasure with this outcome, revealing the insecurity that fans have been critical of his entire career. 

Jackson's frustration is understandable, both in that moment, and throughout his time in basketball. In so many cases he got close to championships both as a player and a coach but for whatever reasons, whether situational, personal, or some combination of both, he was never able to get over those humps. Time will tell if another opportunity will arise, and if so, will he be able to finally capitalize on it. 


9/3 - Mark Jackson

  Name: Mark Jackson Team:  New York Knicks Position:  Point Guard Card Year:  1992 Card Maker:  Skybox Card Number: 162 We're back afte...