Jay-Z’s 40/40 club in NYC briefly closed for health violations

Jay-Z’s 40/40 Club was shut down for a slew of health-code violations just a day after its celebrity-drenched $10 million relaunch — and now it faces a dreaded “C” grade, The Post has learned.

An inspector found perishable food at dangerously warm temperatures inside the walk-in refrigerator and discovered “hot” food left out on the counter on Thursday, Health Department sources said.

A worker was also seen mixing salsa with his bare hands.

The refrigerator was at a rancid 60 degrees instead of 41 — jeopardizing the safety of 50 pounds of raw chicken wings, five pounds of raw shrimp and 100 turkey burgers, the sources said.

— Reported by Philip Messing and Kevin Fasick of the New York Post

UPDATE FROM TMZ: But Ron Berkowitz, a rep for the club, tells TMZ the motor in one of the refrigerators blew just moments before the health inspector arrived … causing the temperature in the fridge to rise. Berkowtiz says the staff identified the problem immediately and had no intention of serving the food from that fridge. Berkowitz says the fridge was fixed by noon the next day and the club was permitted to re-open.

Steve Nash could join Knicks this summer

Steve Nash

Steve Nash could be the answer to the Knicks point guard troubles.

That is, if they’re willing to wait until next season to get him and Nash wants to play out his final years chasing a title in New York.

Nash refused to discuss his pending free agency but he reiterated his fondness for New York City and Madison Square Garden.

“It’s no secret,” Nash said after scoring 26 points with 11 assists in the Suns 91-88 victory over the Knicks on Wednesday. “This is the basketball capital of the world. I live here in the summer. I have a lot of friends here. My former coach (Mike D’Antoni) and teammate (Amar’e Stoudemire) play here so it’s a homecoming in some ways for me. It’s always fun to play here.”

Nash, who will turn 38 next month, believes he still has plenty of good years left in his body. He keeps himself in top condition and still has the burning desire to play.

— Reported by Frank Isola of the New York Daily News

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Knicks assign Jerome Jordan and Jeremy Lin to D-League

New York Knickerbockers Senior Vice President, Basketball Operations and Interim General Manager Glen Grunwald announced today that the team has assigned center Jerome Jordan and guard Jeremy Lin to the Erie BayHawks of the NBA Development League.

Jordan, 7-0, 240-pounds, has recorded eight points and eight rebounds over 29 minutes in six games this season for the Knicks.

Lin, 6-3, 200-pounds, scored nine points and recorded two assists and two rebounds over 16 minutes in five games. He played 20 games (10 starts) for Reno of the D-League last season, averaging 18.0 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.3 assists over 31.7 minutes.

Baron Davis may be ready by late January

Baron Davis

What’s on Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni’s mind? Not only the return from injury of Carmelo Anthony, but also the looming Knicks debut of Baron Davis.

Davis is getting closer and closer to returning from a herniated disk and a person familiar with the situation said the guard will take a big leap in his rehab this week by starting full running drills and some contact basketball drills.

It’s not out of the question for him to be cleared for practice by next weekend and a late-January debut has become more likely than not.

Last night after the Knicks lost, 104-92, to the Thunder, D’Antoni said optimistically, “Melo will be back pretty soon and hopefully Baron’s around the corner and we’ll see what we got.’’

— Reported by Marc Berman of the New York Post

Amar’e Stoudemire, amateur tattoo artist

amare stoudemire

The bespectacled NBA All-Star took a challenge to ink celebrity tattoo artist BangBang Tuesday night, the Knicks off night, at the hoopster’s Meatpacking District pad.

BangBang, 26, of Brooklyn, shared with the Daily News on Thursday his photos of Stoudemire turning the tables on him.

“He gave me a basketball with some initials, which are kind of representative of his religious beliefs. I told him I wanted whatever he wanted to do,” BangBang said of the fresh tat on the inner calf of his right leg.

While Stoudemire is heavily decorated with body art — including the words “Black Jesus” on his neck and the scripture Matthew 20:16 on his chest — he has never given anyone a tattoo until now.

“He’s got a lot of strong Jewish beliefs, so he gave me kind of the Jewish term for God, or symbol of God. I love it,” said BangBang.

— Reported by Bill Hutchinson of the New York Daily News

Knicks beat Bobcats 91-87 in MSG

Tyson Chandler

In a regular season battle more exciting than expected and not decided until the final moments, the New York Knicks beat the Charlotte Bobcats 91-87 Monday night in Madison Square Garden.

It was a starter-heavy game for the Knicks, who barely utilized their limited bench. Each Knicks starter played 35 minutes or more. The entire bench scored just three points.

Knicks center Tyson Chandler shined against the Bobcats, who have extremely limited big-men and no real center to speak of. Shooting 7-of-8, Chandler racked up 20 points, 13 rebounds, three steals and three blocks. He’s still learning to play with his new teammates and will likely have some big nights followed by quiet outputs before a level of consistency can be found.

The Knicks were led by forward Amar’e Stoudemire with 25 points and 12 rebounds, but he had no assists and shot just 7-of-25. And forward Carmelo Anthony also had an imperfect game, scoring 22 points but needing 18 shots to get it, grabbing just four rebounds, and while he dished six assists he also committed six turnovers.

Knicks rookie Iman Shumpert, now a starter at point guard, continues to shine. The team is now 4-1 in games he’s played. The confident athlete finished tonight with 16 points, six rebounds and four assists.

“We didn’t shoot the ball well tonight, but we buckled down defensively,” said Anthony after the game. “Other guys helped out tonight, took the load off, but we did what we had to do to win the game.”

Stoudemire feels the Knicks are headed in the right direction. “We’re still getting better as a unit. Right now we’re just learning on the fly. We only had a few preseason games and a short training camp, so we’re still trying to get better as we play these games. We just have to keep gutting them out.”

For the Bobcats, forward Boris Diaw continued his fine play against the Knicks, shooting 8-of-12 for 19 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists. Forward D.J. White came off the bench to shoot 7-of-11 for 15 points and seven rebounds. Starting guard Gerald Henderson scored 14, but on 16 shot attempts. And point guard D.J. Augustin scored 12 but needed 13 shots, and added eight rebounds but just four assists with three turnovers.

“I give them credit. They did play better than they played against us last week,” said Diaw about the Knicks. “They are athletic, they are fast, they are skilled, they are tall and strong.”

New York shot just 38% from the field and was a mere 1-of-10 from three-point range. But thanks to the Bobcats roster limitations, the Knicks came away with a win.

According to the Associated Press, “Knicks guard Mike Bibby missed his lone 3-point attempt after making his previous seven. The team record for consecutive made 3-pointers is 10, shared by Trent Tucker and Allan Houston… The Bobcats started DeSagana Diop at center for the second straight game but went back to former starter White to start the second half… Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni said Jared Jeffries (sore right calf) could return at the end of this week or early next.”

With the win, the 5-4 Knicks are second in the Atlantic Division, behind the Philadelphia 76ers.

With the loss, the 2-7 Bobcats are fourth in the Southeast division and are close to the bottom of the Eastern conference, ahead of only the New Jersey Nets and Washington Wizards.

The frenzied MSG crowd attendance was 19,763. The Knicks have now sold out 34 consecutive regular season home games.

Carmelo Anthony says back pain is gone

Carmelo Anthony

Carmelo Anthony declared that his back is “pain free” and that he will play tonight against the Charlotte Bobcats.

Anthony suffered a back injury in the fourth quarter of Friday’s win over the Washington Wizards. He played 31 minutes the following night in Detroit but clearly wasn’t himself, scoring just 13 points on 5-for-14 shooting and four rebounds in 31 minutes.

— Reported by Frank Isola of the New York Daily News Blog

Isiah Thomas questions Knicks acquisition of Tyson Chandler

Tyson Chandler

Isiah Thomas, FIU coach and former Knicks president, finally spoke out on the club’s acquisition of center Tyson Chandler and did not sound enthused.

Conveniently appearing on the Sid Rosenberg Show on Miami radio yesterday following the Knicks’ 2-4 start, Thomas questioned Glen Grunwald’s acquisition of Chandler, which forced the team to cut Chauncey Billups to get under the salary cap.

Thomas said the NBA has become a guard’s league, and the Knicks cannot win solely with a star-powered frontcourt of Chandler, Amar’e Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony. The Chandler commitment cost them a shot at point guard Chris Paul with next summer’s salary cap space, and Paul was subsequently dealt to the Clippers.

— Reported by Marc Berman of the New York Post

Knicks defense fails as Bobcats win in NY

Boris Diaw

Behind 27 points from forward Boris Diaw, 24 from guard Gerald Henderson and a balanced, 10-assist output from guard D.J. Augustin, the Charlotte Bobcats beat the defenseless Knicks Wednesday night in New York 118-110.

A huge 4th quarter effort from forward Carmelo Anthony made a game of it, but the Knicks were simply unable to play the level of defense required to win. Melo scored 22 in the final period, finishing with 32 points (12-of-24), six rebounds, five assists and three steals.

“That hurt,” said Anthony. “It’s just the way we’ve been playing these past couple of games. I mean it hurts to lose games like that. To dig ourselves in a hole like that and try to fight back every time, it takes a toll.”

New York got 25 points and 12 rebounds from Amar’e Stoudemire. As a team, they shot a very good 49.4%, but had 19 assists and 17 turnovers.

The Bobcats shot 55.3% from the field and hit 7-of-11 three-pointers. They consistently made the extra pass, and usually made one move too many for New York to defend.

“It’s just a matter of us being comfortable with one another, and trusting each other on the defensive end,” said Anthony. “I think it’s going to turn around. I’m not concerned about that.”

For Charlotte, Diaw and Henderson could not be stopped. Playing center, Diaw shot 12-of-15 with 3-of-3 three-pointers for his 27 points. Henderson hit 10-of-13 shots for an easy 24. And Augustin hit just 4-of-14 for 14 points, but also added six rebounds and 10 assists with no turnovers.

Diaw was animated and involved from the start. “He was real motivated to come to New York City, ” said Bobcats coach Paul Silas.

A bright spot for the Knicks was the play of guard Iman Shumpert, who today returned weeks earlier than expected from injury. The athletic rookie shot 6-of-10 and 4-of-6 from three-point range, and finished with 18 points, five rebounds and two steals. He played enthusiastic defense as well. Shumpert cramped up in the end, but it appears he’ll be fine.

Bobcats guard Kemba Walker played fairly OK by rookie standards, shooting 3-of-8 for seven points and five assists. The native New Yorker was thrilled to go up against his hometown team. “Beating them here just made it even better.”

Knicks coach Mike D’Antoni summed the game up perfectly afterwards: “Offense was good… just bad defense. Rotations weren’t there.”

Warriors sign guard Nate Robinson

Nate Robinson

The Golden State Warriors have signed free agent guard Nate Robinson, the team announced today.  Per team policy, terms of the agreement were not released. According to the Contra Costa Times, it’s a one-year deal for around $1 million.

Robinson, 27, appeared in 59 regular-season games combined between the Boston Celtics and the Oklahoma City Thunder last season, averaging 6.8 points, 1.5 rebounds and 1.9 assists in 17.2 minutes.  The 5’9” guard played a majority of the season with Boston, appearing in 55 games and averaging 7.1 points, 1.6 rebounds and 1.9 assists in 17.9 minutes.  In 11 starting assignments with the Celtics, Robinson averaged 12.8 points, 3.1 rebounds and 4.1 assists in 33.2 minutes.  After being traded to Oklahoma City on February 24, 2011, he appeared in four regular-season games and three postseason games for the Thunder.  He was waived by the Thunder on December 24, 2012.

Originally selected by the Phoenix Suns in the first round (#21 overall) of the 2005 NBA Draft out of the University of Washington and traded on draft night to the New York Knicks, Robinson owns career averages of 11.3 points, 2.6 rebounds and 2.6 assists in 23.0 minutes over six seasons with the Knicks, Celtics and Thunder.  The Seattle native had his finest season in 2008-09 with New York when he averaged 17.2 points, 3.9 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 1.28 steals in 29.9 minutes over 74 games.  That season he finished third in voting for the NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award and won the second of his three NBA Slam Dunk titles at NBA All-Star 2009 in Phoenix (also won 2006 in Houston and 2010 in Dallas).

Robinson will wear uniform #2 and join the team in Los Angeles tomorrow in advance of Friday’s game against the Lakers.