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WFAN’s Gregg Giannotti unloads on ‘loser’ Karl-Anthony Towns

It didn’t take long after the New York Knicks were eliminated from the Eastern Conference Finals for fingers to be pointed in one direction. The players didn’t all provide anonymous quotes bashing a coach in Tom Thibodeau, who has never been to an NBA Finals himself; rather, there has been some airing of grievances aimed squarely at Karl-Anthony Towns.

And none of it has been particularly flattering.

The Athletic dropped a report Sunday revealing some uncomfortable truths.

“Publicly, Knicks players made veiled comments all season about poor communication causing their inconsistencies. Behind the scenes, they and coaches expressed frustration with Towns’ defensive habits — less concerned with his talent level and more with his process on that end. Too often, Towns executed incorrect coverages without communicating why he did it. After it became a theme, players worried Towns didn’t grasp the importance of the matter.”

Essentially, the team got tired of watching Towns blow assignments, and even more tired of trying to figure out if he cared.

And if that wasn’t enough, WFAN’s Gregg Giannotti absolutely torched him on Boomer & Gio Monday morning.

“The biggest issue the Knicks have going forward to get to the next level is the fact that they waited and waited and waited to go all-in on a couple of guys, and the biggest one being Karl-Anthony Towns,” Giannotti said on the Monday show. “And they went and they traded for him, and he’s making $50 million a year. And at the core, he’s a loser. That is their biggest problem. The guy is a loser. He’s a losing player. He complains. He’s soft.

“He shows you flashes where he’s the best player on the court. Not enough. He doesn’t play defense. He b*tches and moans. He is, up until this point in his career, a loser, who is making $50 million, who is going to be a logjam as far as them trying to get to the next level… He is getting the point, now, as one of the most frustrating players I have ever watched in the uniform of a team that I root for because I know how good he can be. And it’s just so damn annoying watching him not realize his full potential.”

.@GioWFAN went off on “loser” Karl-Anthony Towns 👀 pic.twitter.com/5cvIgYeTBD

— WFAN Sports Radio (@WFAN660) June 2, 2025

And Giannotti’s not convinced he ever will.

“That is their biggest issue,” he said. “The fact that they thought this Towns thing was going to work better than it did. And it hasn’t.”

Physically, Towns checks every box. He’s a 7-footer who can shoot, pass, rebound, and handle the ball like a guard. He’ll occasionally give you a 35-and-12 night that makes you believe he can carry a team through a playoff series. But those nights are the exception, not the rule. And that’s the problem. He’s capable of being the best player on the floor. He just isn’t consistently interested in being that guy.

And when things get tough, when possessions slow down, when rotations tighten, when the game gets physical, Towns too often disappears. Or worse, he unravels. Complaining to refs. Checking out on defense. Throwing his hands up at teammates. It’s not that he’s a bad player. It’s that he doesn’t seem built for the moments that separate stars from real winners.

That said, you don’t have to agree with calling him a “loser” to understand why some people are fed up watching a player with that much talent come up small when it counts.

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