The Milwaukee Bucks power forward Bobby Portis trolled a New York Knicks fan on Twitter on Saturday after recording 13 points and 12 rebounds against the Chicago Bulls—a double-double.

Telling Portis that he should have put up similar numbers last year with the Knicks, the forward reminded the fan of the handicap that still gives Knicks fans nightmares.

New York, you still have too many power forwards.

Entering the 2019 offseason with enough cap space to sign two max-level free agents, the Knicks were considered leading contenders to sign Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving. While both players' acquisition would have immediately transformed the franchise's fortunes, there was an acknowledgment among observers that the team might be unsuccessful in luring such top-line talent to Madison Square Garden. Nonetheless, the plethora of money the Knicks had available was seen as an asset almost certain to improve the team's standing, leading to an influx of talent even beyond Durant and Irving.

As New Yorkers now know, things didn't quite work out that way.

Losing out in the race for both top-line free agents to the Brooklyn Nets, the Knicks pivoted from the blow by embarking on an attempt to seemingly sign every free agent power forward on the market. Having previously traded away their franchise forward, Kristaps Porzingis, in a salary dump to generate that cap space, the Knicks attempted to repair the damage with a quantity over quality strategy.

All told, New York would sign the aforementioned Portis, along with Julius Randle, Taj Gibson, and Marcus Morris, leading to a roster filled with interior players and almost comically bereft of ball-handlers. Needless to say, the season didn't turn out to be a success, as Portis reminded fans. While the team would eventually put a new front office in place that pivoted away from the strategy and eventually released Portis into free agency, the remainder of the lost season cannot be comforting.

Then again, maybe the problem is that the Knicks didn't sign enough power forwards.