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			 Not so fast, say the head coaches of two of the NBA's most 
			underperforming, injury-sapped teams — the Chicago Bulls (8-12)and 
			New York Knicks (6-15), who met on Wednesday at Madison Square 
			Garden. 
 			"It's a long season. Teams that have injuries now, they get healthy 
			as they go along. Anything can happen at the end," said Bulls coach 
			Tom Thibodeau, who played without four starters in a Tuesday loss to 
			Cleveland and was only able to add Joakim Noah to his lineup against 
			the Knicks.
 			Said Knicks coach Mike Woodson, whose center and defensive stalwart 
			Tyson Chandler is sidelined with a broken leg and was also without 
			point guard Raymond Felton (hamstring), "If we're healthy, I think 
			we're a good team. I think we can compete at that level."
 			The Bulls, playing without Luol Deng (sore Achilles) and Jimmy 
			Butler (toe) as well as former MVP Derrick Rose, gone again with 
			another knee injury, fell behind by 23 points in the third quarter 
			before turning up the defensive pressure and tying the game 74-74 
			before New York pulled out an 83-78 victory. 			
			
			 
 			The win was sorely needed by the Knicks, whose last Garden 
			performance was a 41-point drubbing by the rebuilding Boston Celtics 
			and whose record over the first 20 games was the worst in franchise 
			history.
 			"We so desperately needed a win tonight," said Woodson, who lamented 
			playing without "a full deck" and whose job security has come into 
			question during the Knicks' downward spiral.
 			"HOLD YOUR FIRE!" blared the Daily News back page.
 			Rising to the rescue for the Knicks was Amar'e Stoudemire, playing 
			in a second consecutive game for the first time this season after 
			play-time restrictions to protect chronic knee injuries. He scored 
			14 points with nine rebounds and hit the go-ahead shot with 2:30 to 
			go.
 			Knicks high scorer Carmelo Anthony, who led with 30 points and 10 
			rebounds, underlined the importance of the game from a psychological 
			perspective. 
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       "Guys really realized this was a game we couldn't let slip 
				out of our hands from a mental standpoint," said Anthony. "If 
				this game would have gotten away from us there ain't no telling 
				what would have happened." Despite having the worst record in 
			the Atlantic Division, the Knicks are fortunate to be trailing 
			leaders Boston (10-14) by only 2-1/2 games.
 			The struggling Bulls, losers of nine of their last 11, are 10 games 
			behind the division leading Pacers in the Central, but they are 
			clinging on to the last playoff spot for now.
 			Thibodeau has had to deal with adversity in Chicago before and felt 
			confident the Bulls would eventually make a charge.
 			Injuries are part of this league," said Thibodeau, who has taken the 
			team to the playoffs in each of his three seasons with the club, 
			reaching the conference finals in his first season and the 
			semi-finals last year.
 			"Each year has been totally different. The first year, Carlos 
			(Boozer) was out for a significant amount of time and then Jo 
			(Joakim Noah) was out for three months. We were able to overcome 
			that," the coach said.
 			"The second year, Derrick missed half that season. We were able to 
			overcome that. Last year, Derrick missed the entire season. We had a 
			lot of guys step up and do a great job.
 			"So this year we've been hit with a lot of injuries. It's early in 
			the season and we have to take this challenge and we need everyone 
			putting everything they have into it, and I believe we'll be 
			successful."
 			Thibodeau said it was too early to judge.
 			"It's the teams that are playing the best, that are the healthiest 
			going into the playoffs. That's what you're aiming for, to continue 
			to improve and anything can happen." 			
			
			 
 			(Editing by Frank Pingue) 
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