NEW YORK, NY - JANUARY 30: Enes Kanter #00 of the New York Knicks goes to the basket against the Brooklyn Nets on January 30, 2018 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)

The Brooklyn Nets and New York Knicks had fans beefing on Twitter this summer, but the truth is that the Knicks are just as far away as their city rivals.

The New York Knicks were the best team in the city last season. That is true both based on their 29-53 record and their 4-0 sweep of the Brooklyn Nets, who were 28-54 a season ago.

That said, it had to be humorous for NBA fans in other locales to watch as a Twitter beef that began last month between Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie and Knicks center Enes Kanter soon extended into the fan bases of both clubs.

It is a rivalry that has heated up considerably since the Nets returned to New York from New Jersey in 2012, but it hasn’t exactly been a battle of heavyweights for most of that span.

The Knicks are five years removed from their last playoff berth in 2013 and fired coach Jeff Hornacek after two seasons in which the Knicks were sliding backwards from the 32 wins under Derek Fisher and interim coach Kurt Rambis in 2015-16 to 31 in 2016-17 and 29 last season.

Into the breach steps David Fizdale, who was fired 19 games into his second season with the Memphis Grizzlies last November after the club got off to a 7-12 start.

The Grizzlies went just 15-48 after the firing of Fizdale, so there may have been more problems in Memphis than just the head coach.

Fizdale’s biggest immediate challenge is navigating the Knicks through the continued absence of Kristaps Porzingis, the All-Star unicorn who tore his left ACL on Feb. 6 against the Milwaukee Bucks and remains out indefinitely.

When Porzingis returns is very up in the air, with most projections saying February — in line with the usual 12-month recovery period for a knee reconstruction.

Without Porzingis, New York’s top returning offensive threat is shooting guard Tim Hardaway, who averaged 17.5 points per game last season, but missed 25 games with a stress fracture in his left leg and a sprained ankle.

The Knicks lost some bench punch when Michael Beasley bolted to join the LeBron James bandwagon with the Los Angeles Lakers and it’s expected Courtney Lee‘s minutes will shrink, as Fizdale wants to move Hardaway back to the 2 spot to get more size at the 3.

That size could be represented by No. 9 overall pick Kevin Knox, who at 6-foot-9 and 216 pounds is a considerably larger presence at the 3 than the 6-foot-6, 205-pound Hardaway.

As for Porzingis’ minutes at the 4? The Knicks have a collection of large bodies in Luke Kornet, Noah Vonleh, two-way contract holder Isaiah Hicks and bulky Lance Thomas and someone will have to play those minutes, because it’s still a 5-on-5 league.

Kanter figures to get a lot of the minutes at center, though the Knicks still have the guy who used to be Defensive Player of the Year Joakim Noah and promising second-round pick Mitchell Robinson.

The point guard position is unsettled, with second-year Frank Ntilikina potentially ready to move to the top of the depth chart over former lottery pick Emmanuel Mudiay and reclamation project Trey Burke, who played very well in 36 games after being re-signed by the Knicks in January.

So New York still has a lot of fluidity on its roster and is closer to remaining in the lottery than it is returning to the playoffs.

But Fizdale, still only 44, was a highly regarded assistant with the Miami Heat for eight years before getting a chance to be a head coach with the Grizzlies and took an injury-riddled team to 43 wins in 2016-17 before more injuries forced the bottom out of the box last season.

2017-18 Vitals

29-53, 11th in Eastern Conference

104.5 PPG (18th), 108.0 OPPG (20th)

107.1 Offensive Rating (20th), 110.7 Defensive Rating (23rd)

Team Leaders (minimum 42 games/82 3-pointers made)

Scoring: Kristaps Porzingis 22.7 PPG

Rebounding: Enes Kanter 11.0 RPG

Assists: Jarrett Jack 5.6 APG

Steals: Tim Hardaway 1.1 SPG

Blocks: Kristaps Porzingis 2.4 BPG

3-point shooting: Courtney Lee 40.6 pct.

Honors:

Kristaps Porzingis (All-Star Game, replaced due to injury)

2018-19 Roster

Kadeem Allen, G

Ron Baker, G

Trey Burke, G

Damyean Dotson, G

Tim Hardaway, G

Mario Hezonja, F-G

Isaiah Hicks, F (two-way)

Enes Kanter, C

Kevin Knox, F

Luke Kornet, F

Courtney Lee, G

Emmanuel Mudiay, G

Joakim Noah, C

Frank Ntilikina, G

Kristaps Porzingis, F-C

Mitchell Robinson, C

Lance Thomas, F

Allonzo Trier, G (two-way)

Noah Vonleh, F

Offseason Additions

Kevin Knox (draft), Mitchell Robinson (draft), Allonzo Trier (undrafted free agent, two-way, July 3), Mario Hezonja (free agent, Orlando, July 6), Niah Vonleh (free agent, Chicago, July 24), Kadeem Allen (street free agent, July 25).

Offseason Departures

Jarrett Jack (free agent), Kyle O’Quinn (free agent, Indiana, July 9), Troy Williams (waived, July 16), Michael Beasley (free agent, L.A. Lakers, July 23).

Also See

Brooklyn Nets 2018-19 Primer: Scanning the East — Atlanta Hawks

Brooklyn Nets 2018-19 Primer: Scanning the East — Orlando Magic

Brooklyn Nets 2018-19 Primer: Scanning the East — Chicago Bulls

Against the Brooklyn Nets

Last season (home team in CAPS)

Oct. 27: KNICKS 107, Nets 86

Dec. 14: Knicks 111, NETS 104

Jan. 15: Knicks 119, NETS 104

Jan. 30: KNICKS 111, Nets 95

This season

Oct. 19: at Brooklyn

Oct. 29: at New York

Dec. 8: at New York

Jan. 25: at Brooklyn

Projected Depth Chart

C: Enes Kanter, Mitchell Robinson, Luke Kornet, Joakim Noah

PF: Mario Hezonja, Noah Vonleh, Kristaps Porzingis

SF: Kevin Knox, Courtney Lee, Lance Thomas

SG: Tim Hardaway, Frank Ntilikina, Damyean Dotson

PG: Trey Burke, Emmanuel Mudiay, Ron Baker, Kadeem Allen

Outlook

The Knicks are quite a collection of young pieces, old pieces and pieces that just don’t quite seem to fit anywhere.

Hardaway will have to shoulder much of the offensive load until Porzingis is back, while Knox — who showed potential as a scorer in Summer League play even as his shot was off more often than on — learns the league.

The cleanup from the ill-fated Phil Jackson as front-office decision-maker experiment will be extensive and will take some time, but the Knicks appear to have put together an excellent draft and have some hope for down the line.

It all hinges on how well and how completely Porzingis is able to come back from his knee injury, however, and that won’t happen for at least half a season, most likely.

Projected Record: 28-54