Robinson is currently in the process of recuperating after undergoing foot surgery at the beginning of the offseason. According to reports from Yaron Weitzman and other Knicks writers, he is expected to be sidelined until December or January.
NEWS: Knicks center Mitchell Robinson is not fully recovered from his May foot surgery and will not be ready for the start of the 2024-25 season, according to a league source. The team is targeting a December/January return, but that depends on his rehab process. The Knicks'…
— Yaron Weitzman (@YaronWeitzman) September 23, 2024
The Knicks are used to playing without Mitchell, who missed 50 games last season following ankle surgery. Last season, the team could fall back on a quality center in Isaiah Hartenstein to fill those minutes, but this offseason
Hartenstein chased the big payday to another contender and signed with Oklahoma City
(which offered far more than the CBA allowed New York to).That leaves the feisty but undersized Precious Achiuwa and the athletic but raw Jericho Sims as the top centers on the depth chart, plus the just-signed Marcus Morris may be more likely to make the final roster now (he is on a non-guaranteed deal).
Tom Thibodeau has said he will consider using Julius Randle
at center for stretches when small ball lineups make sense, but that is not a long-term option (and Randle is expected to miss part of training camp as he recovers from shoulder surgery).The Knicks had been active in the trade market looking for a center all summer but never found a deal they liked. The remaining free agent centers are not the answer. Mitchell being out this long puts more pressure on New York to consider less-tan-ideal trade offers during training camp if a quality center is available.
The Knicks will still be pushing for a top seed in the East and, if healthy, will be a legitimate threat to Boston and to win the East this season. However, they will need to fill the gap at center to fill those lofty aspirations.