When attempting to comprehend this dreadful 2016-17 New York Knicks season, many culprits come to mind. Today, we rank each of them.

Hey, listen … it’s not over yet.

Even sitting at 20-26, 11th in the very mediocre Eastern Conference, the New York Knicks still have a shot to provide fans at least some excitement. Perhaps they could leapfrog such teams as the Pistons, Bulls, Bucks and Pacers and actually sneak into the tournament.

As delightful as it sounds, only a bit of excitement could arrive.

Even in the best case scenario, Manhattan would come alive for a few days only to understand its basketball prospects this spring are as screwed as Aaron Rodgers in Atlanta this past weekend. 

Your Knickerbockers would have no shot at championship glory should things turn for the better. Barring injury, we already know it’ll be LeBron James and the Golden State Warriors for a third straight year.

Why even play the regular season? It’s the nature of the Association.

This is why, for intents and purposes, this season in New York has been a complete failure.

The Knicks haven’t turned a leaf en route to something substantial. They haven’t laid that first block towards building a solid foundation for the future.

The project that was this collection of talent has failed, already.

With that in mind, we take a look at the people responsible for such failures, and, better yet, we rank them just so we can point and blame that man with full exposure in mind.

Here are the top culprits to blame when it comes to the 2016-17 New York Knicks:

Jan 11, 2017; Philadelphia, PA, USA; New York Knicks guard Derrick Rose (25) warms up before action against the Philadelphia 76ers at Wells Fargo Center. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-USA TODAY Sports

3. Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah

On the surface, Derrick Rose hasn’t been a terrible acquisition. The 28-year-old former MVP is averaging 18.1 and 4.5 per night, but truth be told, anything he did was going to crush the production of Jose Calderon.

Unlike last year’s point guard situation, D-Rose and Brandon Jennings can actually move. 

It doesn’t mean they can play defense. While, offensively, the Knicks have taken a step up at the one-spot, their defensive woes continue.

More importantly, D-Rose now symbolizes everything that’s wrong with this team thanks to his AWOL night a few weeks ago. No professional athlete can experience a situation like that and have fans feel comfy about it all.

In addition, Joakim Noah‘s free agency signing has been nothing but a bust.

In a perfect world, Noah’s basketball IQ, hustle and intangibles play would have meshed nicely with stud ballers. But that Noah is long gone. The one we have now is an old version that isn’t worth half of his four-year, $72.590 million contract.

Hey, at least each has stayed relatively healthy.

Jan 21, 2017; New York, NY, USA; New York Knicks forward Carmelo Anthony (7) gestures after a three point basket during the first quarter against the Phoenix Suns at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Anthony Gruppuso-USA TODAY Sports

2. Carmelo Anthony

When discussing Carmelo Anthony, extremes show face.

On one hand, we have the Melo lovers, those who’ll defend the Syracuse grad regardless of play. They’ll bow down to the master no matter how poor his defense is.

On the other hand, we have the Melo haters, those who’ll look to run the man out of town no matter how many points he drops. They’ll look to bash the man who, at one point, represented one of the most prolific one-on-one scorers in NBA history. 

The truth lies somewhere in between.

Anthony can still shoot the rock. He’s still an excellent scorer who opens up the floor for teammates.

Shooting at a .435 clip won’t help his resume this season, though.

On top of a less-than-stellar shooting percentage, Melo’s inability to play smart and efficient defense kills the entire structure on that end of the floor. His famous “swat block” is remarkable, but everything else about his defensive awareness creates a serious lack of defensive team success.

Take Monday night for example. In the Knicks 109-103 victory in Indiana — a night Melo hit the eventual game-winner — he committed a silly foul with his team up two points. Away from the ball with his man flashing to the free throw line, he put the opposition on the to tie the game from the charity stripe when they hadn’t earned it.

It’s this type of inefficiency on one end that simply cannot make him a bonafide NBA superstar.

He’s a great scorer, a star offensive player. He’s not that all-around NBA stud on both ends of the floor who garners close to max money.

As captain and leader of the team, Melo deserves the credit when they win and the blame when they lose. It’s that simple.

After so many years of losing, when do we finally admit Melo isn’t that superstar who can elevate players around him like others can?

Nov 22, 2016; New York, NY, USA; New York Knicks general manager Phil Jackson, right, and New York Knicks legend Bill Bradley looks on during the second half against the Portland Trail Blazers at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Adam Hunger-USA TODAY Sports

1. Phil Jackson

He’s the boss, and, therefore, deserves most of the blame.

When Phil Jackson had a chance to start fresh this past summer, he chose not to. When the most talented head coach on the market was available, in Tom Thibodeau, Jackson elected to not even consider the man who once made a name for himself under Jeff Van Gundy.

We all know why he turned away. If Thibs came to New York, he’d want full control of the sidelines, just as any NBA head coach roams in today’s game.

Instead, Jax brought Jeff Hornacek on, a man who’s certainly a solid coach, but, seemingly, has bells and whistles attached. 

Kurt Rambis remained on the staff, Horny is still running triangle principles from time to time, and he’s had zero chance to play a smaller lineup that would keep up with some of the high-flyers of the league.

Think about the roster Hornacek was handed. His starting lineup, while nice on paper, was too big and too slow.

How could Hornacek play Melo at the power forward — a spot he needs to play during his older days — when Noah, Rose, Courtney Lee and Kristaps Porzingis were already ready-made as starters? If Melo were to play the four-spot, the entire rotation would be out of whack. There aren’t enough perimeter players to make it happen.

It’s been clear as day, for three or four years now, that Anthony can’t play the three-spot anymore. He’s too slow and cannot keep up with the quicker threes in the league. However, he’s tough. He’s a good rebounder who can bang down low with the best of them.

It’s Jackson’s fault he didn’t build his personnel around the idea of Melo at the power forward. His older philosophies of deploying a bigger lineup instead of adapting with the times of a smaller league hoisting up threes on every possession has cost this team dearly.

For that, Phil Jackson is the top culprit in Knicks land.

 NEXT: Reasons to like a deeply flawed team