
Come in every day, keep moving forward.Her mother’s name is Shannon Jones, and her father’s name is still unknown in the media.

Julius is passionate about the city, our fans, the game, winning, and that's all that matters. I love that they're passionate about their team. So whether it's praise or criticism, it doesn't matter. I've seen them go crazy over Julius, and this is all part of it. The building is full, there is no other building like it in the NBA, it's the best place to play, we appreciate them. "We know we have a very passionate fan base, and we appreciate it.

The important thing is putting the work in, getting ready to play, sacrifice for the team, put the team first. You can say all the right things, and do none of them. But the most important thing are the actions. It was a similar message from Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau, who echoed comments he made after Monday's win that the best thing for all involved would be for Randle to move forward.

Randle briefly expanded upon what happened last week when he was asked what went into his decision to apologize. Randle also had a one word answer - "None" - when asked if he had a reaction to being fined $25,000 by the NBA for what it said was "egregious use of profane language during media interviews." When asked if he'd talked to Knicks management about what took place, or if he was surprised by the backlash, Randle repeated: "I've already addressed it."

"I've already addressed it," Randle said Tuesday afternoon, when asked where he hopes his relationship with the fans will go from here in the wake of giving the crowd at MSG a thumbs-down gesture during last Thursday's win over the Boston Celtics, later saying the message from that was to "shut the f- up" and then apologizing in a lengthy Instagram post Friday. New York Knicks star Julius Randle had no interest in talking any further about his decision to tell Madison Square Garden fans to "shut the f- up" last week.
