The offseason is here. Finally.A month removed from winning the NBA championship, with free agency wrapping up (waiting for you LeBron James) and summer league nearing completion, the Knicks’ business for the summer is almost done. Sort of.New York still has one roster spot to fill — which it very well could wait to fill in training camp — and some players are soon to be extension-eligible.To talk about what has happened and what might happen in the coming months, Knicks beat writer James L. Edwards III answers subscriber questions.Enjoy.Questions have been lightly edited for length and grammar. Does Karl-Anthony Towns get an extension with the Knicks? If yes, how much will that extension be for? — Troy M.My educated guess is that New York will offer Towns an extension. The question is: will the Knicks offer him the max deal that they can offer him: four years, $272 million? That’s where I pause slightly.Towns came here and, within two years, helped New York reach the Eastern Conference finals for the first time in a quarter century, then turned around and helped the franchise end a 53-year championship drought. He’s done his part.Now, the reason I pause is that Towns is 30 years old and big men don’t tend to age well. An extension would carry him past his prime. The Knicks under Leon Rose have shown a willingness to be flexible. Jalen Brunson will surely get an extension when the time comes. OG Anunoby still has three years left on his deal. Mikal Bridges starts his four-year contract this season. Josh Hart will be extension-eligible later this summer. At some point, it feels like something has to give. Would New York really have this core locked in for another three or four years? That seems unlikely.There’s a world where Towns is the odd man out unless he takes significantly less than the max extension. However, if you’re Towns and have helped bring success to the Knicks and are soon to be on the other side of 30, why do that?It’s hard for me to predict what Towns’ extension will be, but if the two sides did agree to one, I’d be a bit surprised if it were for the max.What I'm watching at Knicks Summer LeagueJames L. Edwards III and Jeshua KiddI understand summer league statistics need to be taken with some levity, but (Mohamed) Diawara’s box scores for the first two games are ghastly against competition that will likely not make any NBA roster. Any concern? — Ernest T.I’m not concerned in the sense that I don’t think this changes how the organization feels about him. The Knicks won the title a month ago. There was a week-long celebration and then I’m sure some downtime for the players. The start of summer league camp might have been the first time Diawara had picked up a ball in a few weeks.Furthermore, New York somewhat punted on this summer league roster. There is no traditional point guard, and you could tell players like Diawara are impacted by not having a table setter.