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Preseason Game Preview: Knicks vs. 76ers, Oct. 4, 2025

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The Knicks opened their preseason with a 99–84 win over the Sixers in Mike Brown’s debut. The coach’s decision to start Mitchell Robinson at center and sliding Karl-Anthony Towns to power forward paid off instantly. Mitch looked like the clear anchor of the lineup, ripping down 16 rebounds in 18 minutes. Brown called him “phenomenal” and, overall, the Knicks crushed Philly on the boards, 58–46.

With OG Anunoby nursing a sprained hand, Pacôme Dadiet got a surprise start. He missed all five of his threes, turned it over twice, and was yanked early. The sophomore still needs development to reach his potential, which shines through on occasion.

Josh Hart’s evening was even worse: a back injury ended his stint after seven minutes, capped by an ejection for throwing the ball into the stands. He’s listed day-to-day and is unlikely to play on Saturday.

The new coach’s mantra is to play faster, with quick inbounds, constant sprints, and rim running. The Knicks didn’t quite hit that gear. “We still have to take it three or four more notches,” Brown said.

The highlight off the bench was Miles McBride, who hounded Philly’s guards and seemed to enjoy the new free-flowing offense. “It’s been fun to create for myself and others,” he said. His energy in the second quarter flipped a stagnant game on Thursday, which became a romp after halftime.

Brown promised his top nine or ten would play in the first half. That group included: Brunson, Bridges, Towns, Robinson, Dadiet, Hart, McBride, Clarkson, Yabusele, and Shamet. (Anunoby will be in the mix, too, when healthy.) The surprise omission? Malcolm Brogdon, who didn’t check in until the third quarter. Although he played well, there’s a good chance the non-guaranteed vet won’t be on the opening night roster. Garrison Mathews only entered in garbage time but impressed, drilling three of four tries from deep and moving well.

There were some tactical wrinkles worth noting. The Knicks only briefly ran a five-out look with KAT surrounded by shooters, and Brown experimented with a Brunson–McBride–Clarkson trio that was intriguing offensively but risky defensively. Bridges struggled from three, but attacked the rim more often and earned free throws—we squeegeed our eyes to see Mikal at the charity stripe. More of that, please.

We expected some sloppiness in the first dress rehearsal, and it’s no measure of how the season will go for our heroes. Yet, it sure was fun to watch the Knicks play a little faster, storm the lane, and look for the extra pass. And knocking around a depleted Eastern conference rival? The cherry on top.

On Saturday, the two clubs square off again in the golden sands of Abu Dhabi. I’ll miss the game to celebrate my sons’ birthdays at the Richardson ranch, but we expect more of the same. Tyrese Maxey, Kelly Oubre, and a ragtag group of Liberty Belles is no match for Mike Brown’s hard-charging Superbockers. Knicks by 15.

Game Details


Who: New York Knicks (1-0) vs Philadelphia 76ers (0-1)

When: Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, 11:00 a.m. ET

Where: Etihad Arena, Yas Island, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Watch: NBA TV / League Pass / MSG

Follow: @ptknicksblog

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...eason-game-preview-knicks-vs-76ers-oct-4-2025
 
2025-26 Matchup Preview: Brooklyn Nets

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On January 28, 2023, the Brooklyn Nets defeated the New York Knicks in the Barclays Center, 123-115. Despite missing Kevin Durant, the Nets rode a 32-point performance by Kyrie Irving to win their ninth consecutive game against the Knicks, dating back to January 2020 when Durant was recovering from a torn Achillies in the first year of the “Clean Sweep” era.

After the game, Brooklyn center Nic Claxton infamously said to the press that he had never lost to the Knicks since he entered the league.

Nic Claxton “Me Personally I’ve Never Lost to The Knicks Since I’ve been in the League #NetsWorld pic.twitter.com/4UUVmbLpkM

— NetsKingdom 👑🗽 (@NetsKingdomAJ) January 29, 2023

This was a lie, as Claxton played in the Knicks’ victory over the Nets in January 2020, but it would go down in infamy because of what’s happened since. Since this statement, the Knicks have won ten consecutive meetings with their crosstown rivals, who have since imploded, traded Durant and Irving, traded the centerpiece to the Durant trade to the Knicks, and are currently in tank mode.

After those few years of Durant and Irving trying to make the Nets cool, it’s been fun to beat them every year.

Knicks’ Record vs Brooklyn in 2024-25: 4-0​

  • November 15, 2024: Knicks won 124-122
  • November 17, 2024: Knicks won 114-104
  • January 21, 2025: Knicks won 99-95
  • April 13, 2025: Knicks won 113-105

The Knicks didn’t blow out the Nets once last year, but they won all four meetings. The first one was an NBA Cup pool game and saw the early-season Knicks nearly blow a 21-point lead in the final 13 minutes. A relentless, 40-point fourth by Brooklyn saw Dennis Schroder hit a go-ahead three with 12 seconds left. Facing a horrific loss right in the face, Jalen Brunson nailed a spot-up three off the inbound, and Mikal Bridges delivered his first signature Knicks moment with a chase-down block of Schroder at the buzzer.

The next game was easier. While the Nets never truly went away, the second meeting ended in a ten-point victory that was never really in doubt. On a day where the usual hero in Brunson was ice cold, the other four starters all poured in 20+ points, with KAT leading the way with a 26-15-6 masterpiece.

The first meeting of 2025 and the first in the Barclays Center was another frustratingly close one. A baffling offensive effort saw Brunson start 4-for-12, and the Knicks only made eight threes all night. Another double-digit lead was blown in the fourth, but Captain Clutch took over to save the day.

The final meeting came on the final day of the season. Neither team played for anything, so the Knicks emptied the bench. Landry Shamet and Cam Payne combined for 50 points, PJ Tucker played 29 minutes, and Kevin McCullar Jr. got 21 minutes.

Knicks vs. Nets — 2025-26 Schedule:

  • Sun, Nov 9, 2025: Nets @ Knicks (6:00, MSG)
  • Mon, Nov 24, 2025: Knicks @ Nets (7:30, MSG)
  • Wed, Jan 21, 2026: Nets @ Knicks (7:30, MSG)
  • Fri, Mar 20, 2026: Knicks @ Nets (7:30, MSG)

Brooklyn’s Offseason Moves:


In:

  • Kobe Bufkin (trade)
  • Haywood Highsmith (trade)
  • Terance Mann (trade)
  • Michael Porter Jr. (trade)
  • Egor Demin (draft)
  • Nolan Traore (draft)
  • Ben Saraf (draft)
  • Danny Wolf (draft)
  • Drake Powell (draft)

Out:

  • Cam Johnson (Nuggets)
  • D’Angelo Russell (Mavericks)
  • Trendon Watford (Sixers)
  • Tosan Evbuomwan (Knicks)
  • Day’Ron Sharpe (unsigned)

Most of Brooklyn’s offseason revolved around the draft, where they made an unprecedented five first-round picks and kept all of them. How will they find minutes and touches for all of them? Nobody knows!

Michael Porter Jr., acquired for Cam Johnson, was exiled from Denver and will look to rebuild his value ahead of free agency. D-Lo moves on to Dallas.

Projected Starters


PG: Egor Demin (BKN) / Jalen Brunson (NYK)

SG: Cam Thomas (BKN) / Deuce McBride (NYK)

SF: Terance Mann (BKN) / Mikal Bridges (NYK)

PF: Michael Porter Jr. (BKN) / OG Anunoby (NYK)

C: Nic Claxton (BKN) / Karl-Anthony Towns (NYK)

Three of the starters are pretty obvious. The other two are extremely hard.

Thomas and Porter Jr. represent an interesting dynamic. Two players who are definitely not known for their playmaking will have to learn to share the ball. Thomas, a dynamite scorer who’s always had the Knicks’ number, has to show some other component of his game to get a big payday after signing the qualifying offer. The same can be said for MPJ, who is a free agent after 2026-27.

After that? They could start Noah Clowney or Haywood Highsmith or could even turn to a second rookie, but I lean Mann at the moment. The only rookie that I think will definitely start is Demin. You just don’t bench a lottery pick when you are not close to contending.

Knicks’ Predicted Record vs Brooklyn this season: 4-0​


The Nets are not trying to win. If their front office got their way, they’d get their hands on AJ Dybantsa at the top of the 2026 NBA Draft. Really, the goal for them is to showcase Thomas and Porter enough to potentially flip them at the deadline or next offseason and eventually pave the way for their five rookies to get more playing time.

If this isn’t a season series sweep, we’re gonna have issues.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...w-brooklyn-nets-nba-cam-thomas-michael-porter
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘If the Knicks don’t come out of the East, something is wrong’

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The international part of the preseason is in the rearview mirror, and the three upcoming games will all take place on American soil.

Starting Thursday, the Knicks will kick off their three-game national preseason with games against the Wolves, the Wizards, and the Hornets. After that? Bring in the Cavs!

Here’s a lot of what has been said and heard during the past few days as we patiently wait for Thursday’s game.

Mike Brown is asked about the reported Knicks-Giannis Antetokounmpo rumors:

"I don't get into that stuff, we're in a great spot right now. Our guys are playing their tails off…that's what I'm concentrated on now. I love our guys." pic.twitter.com/OPqOop2gBH

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 7, 2025

Mike Brown​


On the latest Giannis Antetokounmpo-Knicks rumors:

“I don’t get into that stuff. We’re in a great spot right now. Our guys are playing their tails off, that’s what I’m concentrated on now. I love our guys.”

On Trey Jemison’s preseason performance:

“Our defensive player of the game (Saturday) was Trey Jemison, and it was him, because he played eight or nine minutes, and he had two verticalities. I mean, they were picture-perfect. He went over to help, he went vertical, he took the hit, he didn’t fold, there was no foul. And you can see how tough it is for a guy to take that hit and still try to finish. Trey impacted the game at an extremely high level on the defensive floor.”

On the Abu Dhabi trip:

“It was a great trip. We really enjoyed it. The people here were very welcoming. We couldn’t ask for a better environment to be with our families and each other and I thought we got a lot out of the trip as a whole. We grew. And we’ll just keep trying to get a little bit better every day knowing as we go along we’ll probably take a couple steps back. We can’t get discouraged when that happens and just start stacking days the right way.”

On Jalen Brunson adjusting to the new system:

“Jalen, he’s starting to adjust. You can see it. I think this is gonna be good for him. You can see how much space he has when he brings the ball, and again, if you want to pressure a guy like Jalen with that much space, there’s a pretty good chance that he can make you pay for it.”

On Brunson adapting to the new pace:

“I like that aspect of [Brunson’s performance], and then him just getting used to ‘run-run-run-run-run,’ and still be effective, whether you’re on the ball or off the ball, it was great to see. You could see him getting his feet underneath him a little bit and understand how to play at that frantic pace and still be effective and know where his shots are gonna come from.”

On the need for better offensive execution in transition:

“I thought our pace was better. We didn’t take care of the ball like we should have in transition because our floor wasn’t always spaced and sometimes we got too deep and tried to finish in a crowd. So the pace was better overall — we’ve just gotta do a better job taking care of the ball.”

On playing with speed and spacing fundamentals:

“I thought our pace was pretty good even after makes, and we want to play fast all the time — whether it’s make or miss, we want to space the floor the right way all the time. Philly, they like to pressure you the full court, and they’re athletic and they’re really quick, especially their guards. So we told the guys if you get pressured, go by them if you can and touch the paint, and if you can finish, finish, but if you draw a second guy, spray it.”

On players executing in spacing situations:

“I thought our guys did a pretty good job of knowing when to get out, they busted their behinds really hard especially to the corners, and they did a pretty good job as the game went along of touching the paint and trying to spray it.”

On generating the right shots, not just a ton of shots:

“The first half we weren’t good with it. I think we had one spray, and we want to average 17-18 sprays a game. And so we have to do a better job there. We took some tough shots, and Philly made us take some tough shots, but we have to be more disciplined and get what we want instead of forcing shots like I thought we did.”

Brunson on pace: "I'm comfortable. We're still adjusting…Gonna continue to get better throughout the season" pic.twitter.com/jrkOjB1o8O

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 4, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On the Abu Dhabi trip:

“Playing here was great. The experience here was amazing, seeing the fans, being able to do what we do on the court and also have fun off the court. Great bonding experience for us. I’m just happy we were able to come away with a couple of wins.”

On adapting to Mike Brown’s system:

“I’m comfortable. We’re still adjusting, and that’s the process of this entire season. You’re not just gonna be who you are at the end of training camp. You’re gonna continue to get better throughout the season. So I think the longer that we go through this and understand what’s needed and asked of us, the better we’re gonna be.”

On the meaning of pace within Brown’s system:

“Pace doesn’t necessarily mean fast. Obviously we want to get the ball across halfcourt in a certain time frame, but it’s about playing fast, seeing what the defense does and reading that. We weren’t trying to leak out, but we were just trying to sprint corners, and we were getting behind the defense and able to get layups. So as long as we come away with a stop, that allows us to run.”

if the first two games of the season didn't get you hype… we don't know what will tbh ⚡🔌 pic.twitter.com/j5Z9dZX6fV

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 6, 2025

Mitchell Robinson​


On traveling overseas for the first time:

“So after visiting Abu Dhabi for the first time in my life I can honestly say it’s been a blast. I know I said I’ll never leave the country but hell at this point I’m definitely visiting other places. I’m gonna travel the world.”

Karl-Anthony Towns says he dropped weight this summer to prepare to play power forward, per @StevePopper pic.twitter.com/OJXcGDp8ov

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 6, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On his future after basketball:

“I don’t know if coaching is in my cards. I thought about it younger, early on in the league. I don’t know about it now after seeing all the things I’ve seen in basketball. What I will say is you can guarantee that I’ll be a great t-ball coach and little league coach for my kids, so I’m excited for that coaching adventure I’m going to have. I’m going to be really excited for that. I’m not thinking about the basketball part yet.”

Carmelo Anthony makes bold Knicks prediction: ‘Just dropped the microphone’ https://t.co/AVQwGAcGYo pic.twitter.com/wbbJgxRY9Z

— New York Post Sports (@nypostsports) October 7, 2025

Carmelo Anthony (Knicks Legend)​


On expectations for the Knicks this season:

“The Knicks will be the No. 1 seed in the East. I want to talk about why I believe that. They’ve been primed for this position for the past three, four years. They have everything that you could possibly need [for] a winning formula.”

On the pressure the Knicks will face and the current roster:

“They have the players. Have the point guard. We have the best big man shooter, possibly in the history of basketball. We have Jalen Brunson out there, who’s running the point. I think this year with Mike Brown, putting Jalen Brunson off of the ball, allowing him to play off the ball, alongside with Jordan Clarkson coming in the game, Malcolm Brogdon, who gives us a shot in the arm off the bench. We have Mike Brown, who’s a coach bringing a different energy. I watch them in the preseason. I see the fast pace that they [are] playing with. I see the system that they [are] playing with. I just [think] the Knicks would be the No. 1 seed, and I’ve just dropped the microphone.”

On supporting Reggie Miller’s take of New York winning the East:

“I agree with [Miller] on that.”

On the impact of pressure on the team:

“I think it’s a great thing. They need to feel that energy. They need to feel that pressure, the urgency. If you look back to when Leon [Rose] put this together, he said this is a four– or five-year plan. So I think where we are at right now is the peak of that plan … I think right now we’ve positioned ourselves to do something special this year.”

On backing the Knicks for the title and getting called out for it:

“They (Tracy McGrady and Vince Carter) have this notion that New York thinks they’re better than everyone else. This whole season I will be dealing with that on the set.”

On the Knicks’ roster completeness:

“They have everything that you could possibly need.”

On Brunson’s role under Brown:

“He’s going to be off the ball until he needs to be on the ball.”

More from today's NBA on NBC event https://t.co/igoUaLQdlP

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 7, 2025

Reggie Miller (NBA Analyst)​


On the Knicks’ championship expectations:

“If the Knicks don’t come out of the East this year, something is wrong. I think New York will represent the East [in the Finals], but if it doesn’t happen this year, it’s never going to happen … It is primed for them to come out of the East.”

On matchups in the playoffs favoring New York:

“When the playoffs begin, it’s all about matchups. Styles make fights. Indiana’s style has always bothered New York. Cleveland’s style doesn’t really bother them.”

Jamal Crawford (Former NBA Player)​


On pressure and the sky-high potential of these Knicks:

“I think they put more pressure on themselves than what we can do on the outside. They know this time doesn’t last forever.”

On how Brown’s system benefits the Knicks:

“I think they’ll have more energy because the ball will move more. They won’t have the same responsibilities as far as making everything happen. They’ll have more energy for defense and everything else.”

On this being the Knicks’ time:

“If they stay healthy, and with coach Mike Brown and some fresh energy, I think this is their run.”

Tracy McGrady (Former NBA Player)​


On doubts about Brunson’s fit in Brown’s system:

“The only question mark I have for the Knicks. I think they are going to be very good. But the only question mark I have is Jalen Brunson has been on the ball all the time. Mike Brown comes from a pedigree of ball movement, player movement. So it’s going to be interesting when they implement this new offensive system to see if he’s on the ball or off the ball, and how he reacts to that.”

"I want to see all teams…be competitive…so it's great, obviously, to have a competitive Knicks program"

– Adam Silver to reporters today

Silver is from New York and grew up a fan of the championship-era Knicks but recently said he's "totally neutral now" pic.twitter.com/ePjgfPzCCj

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 7, 2025

Adam Silver (NBA Commish)​


On the Knicks’ status as a legitimate contender:

“It’s great, obviously, to have a competitive Knicks program.”

😒 Yankees L
😒 Rangers L
😒 Giants L
😒 Jets L
😒 Bills L

😏 Knicks preseason W pic.twitter.com/VCVu3XBf8q

— KNICKS ON MSG (@KnicksMSGN) October 6, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-dont-come-out-of-the-east-something-is-wrong
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I love being here. I want to be a Knick for life’

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The Knicks were back in the Tarrytown lab on Tuesday as they gear up for Thursday’s matchup against the Timberwolves.

New York only has three preseason games left before real basketball comes to Manhattan, and we cannot be happier about it as the wait is nearly over.

Here’s everything heard and said by Mike Brown and a bunch of Knickerbockers during the past few hours.

Mike Brown talks about Karl-Anthony Towns' offensive role and how he's taking the time now to figure out how that will change based on which position he plays pic.twitter.com/brpy8jrXZU

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 7, 2025

Mike Brown​


On the team’s current state and style of play:

“I don’t get into that stuff. We’re in a great spot right now. Our guys have been playing their tails off. They’re starting to pick up what we’re doing defensively, and offensively we’re getting a little more comfortable — especially trying to play fast. That’s what I’m concentrating on now. I love our guys, and I think they’re starting to enjoy playing the way we’re trying to play on both ends.”

On Jalen Brunson’s adaptation to his system:

“Jalen, he’s starting to adjust. You can see it. I think this is gonna be good for him. You can see how much space he has when he brings the ball, and again, if you want to pressure a guy like Jalen with that much space, there’s a pretty good chance that he can make you pay for it.”

On planning to increase preseason minutes for starters, starting with Thursday’s game:

“We’ll try to work it up this third game, try to get the starters a little bit of action in the second half.”

On evaluating lineups and dealing with injuries:

“Not really (worried about Hart and OG’s injuries), just because of the injuries, but that’s why you have 15 guys and three two-ways. Someone goes down, it’s the next man up. OG didn’t play in Game 1 — next guy steps up. Josh didn’t play in Game 2 — next guy steps up.”

“Knock on wood, that’s how it’s gotta be all year. That’s why it’s extremely important for everybody to be mentally locked in. Your number can be called any time. Our guys are extremely professional and they’ll be ready — even if they haven’t played in a game or two.”

On Karl-Anthony Towns and Guerschon Yabusele’s learning curve:

“They have the toughest job on the team because one, two, three and four are interchangeable. So when you’re on the floor, you have to know all four of those spots. And then five is completely separate.”

“So Kat and Yabusele have to learn all five spots in everything we’re trying to do now. That’s going to take time.”

“Sometimes they’re at the five, sometimes they’re at the four — and they’re completely different. It’s going to take them a little longer than everyone else, and the learning curve will be a lot steeper.”

“Not only is he trying to get a rhythm, but he’s trying to figure out what the hell he’s supposed to do when he’s at the five as opposed to when he’s at the four.”

“They’re both doing a fantastic job trying to adjust, but it’s going to take them a little longer than everybody else just because they’re playing both of the positions within the framework of our offense — and so their learning curve’s gonna have to be a lot steeper than anybody else’s.”

On Towns’ versatility in the offense:

“It’s hard to tee off and double-team or to measure up how you’re gonna play him because he’s all over the place at all times.”

On McBride’s athleticism and system fit:

“For sure, Deuce is one of the most athletic guys I’ve been around. His combination of power, strength, quickness, it’s off the charts for a guy his size. One time in practice, he went up and dunked the ball. I don’t know how he kept going up, up and up to dunk it. It surprised me. But he fits well with what we want to do, for sure.”

Delon Wright bleeds from head as he's knocked cold 4 minutes into his Pacers career

All best to D-Wright who later posted about it on IG pic.twitter.com/pJoPf7Usvw

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 8, 2025

Jordan Clarkson​


On joining a contender in New York:

“That’s something you chase. That’s a different high, man, if you want to put it like that. The level of detail, every play matters. I really want to get back there and I want for sure to take every step day to day, but Coming here, one of the reasons why is I wanted to compete in the playoffs and be on a winning team that’s playing for something.”

best of luck to @NYRangers this season 💙❤️ pic.twitter.com/5t8r9DWLYd

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 7, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On preseason preparation:

“We’re getting closer to the season, getting closer to the real thing. We’re still preparing as well as we need to be. So we’ll continue with that preparation and focus. Obviously minutes aren’t what they would be in a regular-season game [yet].”

On adapting to Brown’s offensive system:

“Still adjusting, still learning and there’s still a lot for us to get better at, but I think playing out of the basics of our offense for the first week-ish or two, whatever it’s been — the potential is getting there. And what we’re learning and how we’re playing as a team is definitely improving. So still a long way to go, but getting our basics down.”

“What we’re learning and how we’re playing as a team is definitely improving. So still a long way to go, but getting our basics down.”

On team bonding in Abu Dhabi:

“I think the only thing different [from typical team bonding on a road trip] was obviously the length of travel. Being able to do the dinner in the desert that we did, getting to try different things out there that’s within their culture that obviously we don’t really do out here was interesting. But I’m glad we were able to do it.”

POV: you’re @StarburyMarbury on a camel 🐫 pic.twitter.com/IaKUY7dBYq

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 7, 2025

Malcolm Brogdon​


On Towns’ role and confidence:

“It’s super important to get his confidence and keep his confidence at an all-time high throughout the season if this team wants to achieve what we think we can achieve. He’s one of the great players in the league. It’s really that simple.”

On Towns’ shooting:

“He can shoot shots from beyond the arc like guards do.”

“I want to be a Knick for life…

“When the fanbase is behind you through the ups & downs—no matter what—it’s great to play in MSG

“It’s the Mecca.

“I love the City. I love the fans

“It’s a hustle culture
I’m a hustle guy
It’s perfect”

— Deuce McBride

⬇️ https://t.co/LGsBpJNpkN pic.twitter.com/0tfVxx5H4o

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 7, 2025

Deuce McBride​


On playing in a faster system this season:

“It’s always fun to get up and down. That’s what I like to do, make people play faster. Speed up people. I think for a guy that wants to play fast like me and having a coach like that, he definitely wants me to embrace it. Pick up people, make them turn and really guard my yard.”

On ignoring trade rumors:

“I don’t see any of it. I stay off of social media. Even before I got to the league, I feel like social media is a lot of negativity.”

On wanting to stay in New York:

“I mean, I love being here. I want to be a Knick for life. I can’t control anything. So just going to come to work until they tell me otherwise.”

On the fan support and city culture:

“Absolutely. I mean, when the fan base is behind you through the ups and downs, no matter what, it’s great to play in MSG. It’s the Mecca of basketball. So being a Knick for these last couple of years has been amazing and I love the city. I love the city. I love the fans. Just being able to embrace the culture. I feel like it’s a hustle culture and I’m a hustle guy. So it’s perfect.”

On writing a children’s book:

“Really just want to spread positivity. Continue to be a role model to the youth and help them believe that they can achieve anything as long as they work hard and have discipline in themselves.”

Jamal Crawford still hooping at 45 😭

Levels to it @JCrossover

(via kaydeniskold/TT) pic.twitter.com/1F4RzOiRKf

— Overtime (@overtime) October 7, 2025

Jamal Crawford​


On working with Mike Breen:

“It was unbelievable. When you work with somebody like Mike Breen, one of the GOATs of the game, it makes it so easy. You learn so much just watching and paying attention … I wanted to take the year off, but those Knicks reps were unbelievable, and we were undefeated when Breen and I worked together, which is really cool. Always helps.”

On joining NBC’s NBA team:

“I felt like I was built to be with NBC, because I have such great relationships with people that came before me and then the next generation. I feel like it’s my duty to kind of be the bridge of kind of spreading the game. I knew the game would be first. The game is the star at NBC, and that’s why I love the decision I made. I’m glad they had an interest and I thought it was perfect.”

On the Knicks’ appeal as a broadcast team:

“The star power they have, they play an unselfish style of basketball, and they’re fun to watch. They have engaging stars. Brunson is a guy. I’ve seen kids wearing his jersey, and I’m like, you have the right guy. He’s a great guy off the court, [Karl-Anthony Towns] with that same thing. Those two lead the way as superstars. You have Josh Hart, you have OG Anunoby and you have all these unselfish pieces that I think will impact everybody.”

Timothée Chalamet debuts buzzcut via IG live. pic.twitter.com/BpP0RhBT7D

— Pop Base (@PopBase) October 7, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...love-being-here-i-want-to-be-a-knick-for-life
 
How to make sure Posting and Toasting shows up in your Google search

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As many of you are likely aware, Google searches are … different these days.

The good news is Google is offering a solution for folks who like to get their news from specific sources. If you want to help Posting and Toasting — while also streamlining all your Google searches — there is now a way.

Simply click on this link and add Posting and Toasting as one of your “Source preferences.” That’s all there is to it!

Back in August, the tech giant debuted a feature called “Preferred Sources.” It’s a way for Google to prominently feature the results from websites you trust, like Posting and Toasting:

“With the launch of Preferred Sources in the U.S. and India, you can select your favorite sources and stay up to date on the latest content from the sites you follow and subscribe to — whether that’s your favorite sports blog or a local news outlet. …

When you select your preferred sources, you’ll start to see more of their articles prominently displayed within Top Stories, when those sources have published fresh and relevant content for your search.“

As some of you might know, AI searches are hurting outlets around the world and in all spaces. We’ve worked hard at Posting and Toasting to build a brand you can trust and rely on for Knicks coverage. Our goal is to serve you, the fans.

If you’re a fan of our work and want to get the best coverage of the New York Knicks possible, this is an excellent win-win to improve your Google searches while helping Posting and Toasting out.

Go Knicks.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...g-and-toasting-shows-up-in-your-google-search
 
Preseason Game Thread: Knicks vs Timberwolves, Oct. 9, 2025

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The New York Knicks return home after sweeping the 76ers in Abu Dhabi, showing early signs of cohesion under Mike Brown’s faster, freer system. Mitchell Robinson dominated the glass, while Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns provided steady scoring. The Minnesota Timberwolves arrive at Madison Square Garden still tuning their rotation after splitting their first two preseason games—a win over Denver and an overtime loss to Indiana.

Tip-off is 7:30 pm EST on MSG. This is your game thread. This is Canis Hoopus. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Mind your manners. And go Knicks!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...game-thread-knicks-vs-timberwolves-oct-9-2025
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I’m old, I’m tired, and I fell asleep’

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The Knicks might never lose again.

New York hosted a few old pals from Minny and struggled mightily but ultimately pulled off the rare preseason-OT win thanks to the backups’ backups effort.

Here’s what we heard before and after Thursday’s game.

Mike Brown opened up on the emphasis on the little things on plays:

"Those are the great plays that are very small that won't show up in the stat sheet that are going to make you a great offensive team at the end of the day" pic.twitter.com/JBz1rW4lzm

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 10, 2025

Mike Brown​


On read-and-react offensive philosophy:

“I’m glad you brought that up because that’s not a play call, that’s a read. If the defense is playing a certain way, we’re doing our stuff, but it’s a read … BOOM … go right back to him, drive and finish at the rim. We’re getting there. It may take a while. It’s not easy, but the guys have been fantastic and trying to learn and grow.”

On current priorities over game results:

“Right now, I don’t care if we win or lose, as long as we keep trying to play the right way and trust it. Because we have a great shooting team, not a good shooting team, a great shooting team. If we’re getting catch and shoot shots and the feet are set and the defense is collapsing and then have to go back out – so we call those two-way stunts – I’ll take that every day, anytime of the day or night.”

On offensive principles and pace/space focus:

“I want them to learn how to play basketball the right way offensively within our staples. That’s pace, whether it’s in the full court or the half court. And it’s spacing. IF you hit that paint and you don’t have the ball, don’t just stand there. Get out right now and re-space to create more opportunities for driving and kicking… Space the right way all the time…(execute) ball reversals to move the defense. Paint touches, not just on the dribble drive with cuts and rolls and quick decisions. Hey, it hits your hands, shoot it, pass it, snap drive it to try to collapse the defense. Those are things that we believe in.”

On the team’s uneven offensive performance and adjustments:

“I thought at the start of the game we had a lot of great shots, the type of shots that we wanted; we just didn’t make them, which I’m OK with. Especially right now. I want them to keep taking those shots. I thought after they didn’t go in through the first part of the first quarter, our guys stopped trusting it a little bit. And we started holding onto the ball a little bit too much. And the ball wasn’t popping, the space wasn’t there. We weren’t touching the paint. All of the things that we talk about (weren’t happening). We have to be a little bit more consistent with it throughout the course of the game.”

On family attending MSG debut and excitement for the team:

“Yeah, I’m excited. I’m excited about my family coming to the game. I got my sister-in-law, too, in town. I’m excited for the guys to play at MSG.”

On the meaning of Madison Square Garden as home court:

“MSG is such an iconic venue. And whether it’s a preseason game or regular-season game, to be able to know that that’s your home court every night and to do it for the first time, it gives you goosebumps.”

On what preseason games mean for the team’s development:

“These guys have been working hard, and so to be able to go out there and showcase their talents and showcase their work, and, now everything’s not gonna be pretty. Minnesota’s a good team, and when you face another team or a different colored jersey, sometimes you take a step back a little bit, and I expect that. But that’s what the preseason’s about. It’s learning, growing one step at a time, but for our guys to be able to have a chance to go out there and showcase what they’ve been working on behind closed doors is an exciting thing for me looking at them — and it should be for them knowing that the fans and their families are gonna be in the stands and be able to see them for the first time at MSG.”

On lineup competition and the significance of starting vs. finishing:

“I think it has a chance to be pretty good. They’re long, they’re big, they’re versatile, and that’s what makes them exciting. So I think it has a chance to be pretty good — but at the end of the day, a lot of people want to start. A lot of people look at the starting unit as the be-all, end-all, but you know: to start is an honor, but also to be able to finish games is an honor. Both hold a lot of weight.”

On Mitchell Robinson’s performance and personality:

“He’s been impressive. You don’t really know guys until you get around them. The most impressive thing is he’s got a collection of monster trucks, they’re out of this world. He drove a blue one yesterday, before I saw him in my rearview mirror. I heard him playing country music. He’s got a great personality. Obviously basketball-wise, you think he’s athletic, but some of the lobs that he catches are just amazing. And then you know he’s got good feet and he can switch onto certain guys, but to actually see him sit down and step-slide and guard guys, all that other stuff, it’s pretty impressive.”

On Robinson adapting to his uptempo system:

“He’s getting better, for sure. He does it in spurts, like most of us, doing it in spurts. Got to get to a point where it’s just natural every possession. With the way that Mitch runs, he’s a monster in a lot of different ways. Man, he could take somebody’s heart at that position just with his relentless pressure he can put on the opposing center when it comes to sprinting up and down the floor.”

On giving all players preseason minutes at The Garden:

“Yeah, we’re going to start cutting it down, but one thing that I’d like to try to do is give everybody some minutes in The Garden. These guys work too hard. They’ve been too good of teammates to not try to find a way to get everybody on the floor at some point. It might not be tonight, maybe the next game. I don’t know. But that definitely is one of my goals.”

On making his coaching debut at MSG:

“It’s exciting. On the ride down, it was exciting. Love being in MSG, knowing that’s where we’re going to play every night for our home games. And it’s exciting. Because it’s iconic. And there’s always a buzz about being here. Not just from the staff, the players — everybody. It’s hard to duplicate any place else. So it’s a good feeling.”

"Everything is new, so attention to detail is going to be key for us to get better faster"

Jalen Brunson talks about the adjustments to the new offense pic.twitter.com/UvQe6wdQbz

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 10, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On adjunsting to Brown’s offense:

“Everything is new, so attention to detail is going to be key for us to get better faster.”

On the need for a better feel for the Knicks’ new offense:

“What we’re working on right now is the basis of our offense and everything. It’s going to take time. It’s not always going to be perfect but it’s all about how we continue to trust it and learn it.”

Mikal Bridges on Mike Brown:

"Accountability. You could make some good plays & a couple plays you feel like you're not doing the right thing he's going to let you know. Why wouldn't you want that? If we want to get to where we want to get to there ain't gonna be no Mr. Nice Guy" pic.twitter.com/H3ZwcXbmAP

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 10, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On his early impressions of Mike Brown’s coaching style:

“Just being on guys, holding guys accountable, preaching everything every single day. He and his coaches, they all run a tight ship. You can tell that whatever we’re doing out there, they’re all on the same page, no matter what the situation is.”

On the value of consistency across the coaching staff:

“And that’s a lot of credit to him… for everybody to be on the same page makes it easier for us players when they talk to us because any coach you talk to, you’re going to hear the same thing.”

On how Brown pushes players with accountability:

“It’s been great, man. And I love just how he pushes us. Accountability. You can make some good plays and a couple plays, you feel like you’re not doing the right thing. He’s going let you know. Why wouldn’t you want that? Maybe in the moment, some guys might be a little upset about it. But if you’re going to get where we want to get to, man, it ain’t gonna be no Mr. Nice guy. You’ve gotta hold people accountable. And he doesn’t do it in a disrespectful way. He just wants greatness out of everybody and just being accountable is great.”

Former Knick and current Timberwolves guard Donte DiVincenzo was asked tonight if he was surprised to see Tom Thibodeau get let go: “For sure. You guys have heard me. I love Thibs. I could talk all day about Thibs. It surprised me, but business is business. I think the trade last…

— Ian Begley (@IanBegley) October 9, 2025

Donte DiVincenzo​


On being surprised by Thibodeau’s firing:

“For sure. You guys have heard me. I love Thibs. I could talk all day about Thibs. It surprised me, but business is business. I think the trade last year was a surprise. So anything in this league is not off the table. You can go across the league and see people get traded, coaches get fired. It just is what it is. I was more impressed with seeing him in San Diego. He looked healthy. He looked happy. That’s the good-stuff side of it.”

On managing emotions after Thibodeau’s firing:

“It’s surprising, but you have to understand that business is business. You have to separate the personal and the relationships and the emotional side of things when stuff like that happens. You get close to people in a short span of time. When stuff like that happens, you can disagree with it or whatever, but they have a vision of what they want to do and you respect that. And I’m not on that side so, with all due respect, I don’t necessarily care that much. But like I said, just to see him healthy, happy and feeling good and sounding good was great.”

On Thibodeau’s coaching philosophy and minutes distribution:

“Everybody has their philosophy, and every player wants to play. The thing about Thibs is, he was trying to win every game. If you look down the list, guys have had career years under Thibs. You could say whatever the reason is, but the facts are guys had career years and guys liked playing for him.”

On his reaction to getting traded to Minnesota:

“Just the surprise of getting traded. The timing of it, I wasn’t expecting it at all. So as time passes, you start to put your mental where your feet are at, versus trying to figure out why … Minnesota embraced me and my mindset, and everything shifted. As the season went on, I just got more comfortable, and I got settled.”

On the potential Knicks–Timberwolves Finals matchup last season:

“It was crazy. As it was going along, obviously you support those guys as friends and you’re watching the playoffs, they keep going. So you’re like: How crazy would that s— be? The headlines, the storylines behind that?”

On selling his Westchester home:

“I held on to it. I didn’t know if I wanted to come back here in the summer time, and then if I do come back, I would spend the time in the city versus Westchester County. That was the reason behind it. And property taxes is no joke.”

On Mike Brown replacing Thibodeau:

“I don’t want to make it seem like Thibs getting fired is a thing that I vouch for, but they got a really good coach in Mike Brown. I think he’s going to do an incredible job of managing the players, managing expectations and getting the best out of everybody. You saw what he did at Sacramento his first year. And I like the way he approaches the media and the team. It’s different. I think it’ll be refreshing for guys. I think it’ll be good.”

"The pump fake on repeat from Randle, we've seen that before"

–– Damn @LT__Murray 🤣 pic.twitter.com/kGBULTGoUk

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 10, 2025

Julius Randle​


On Thibodeau’s firing and his reaction:

“I wasn’t here, so it really wasn’t none of my business. But I’m appreciative of Thibs and the time I had with him the time I was here, but I didn’t really have a reaction.”

On if he was surprised by the firing:

“Not at all.”

On seeing Thibodeau during the offseason:

“It was great catching up with him, see how he’s been doing. He’s been traveling to a bunch of different camps and stuff like that, so just talking about that and the summer.”

On his heated exchange with Thibodeau last season:

“Anything can happen in the heat of the game. It doesn’t mean there’s friction.”

New Zach Lowe Show! Giannis future/Knicks talks w/ @IanBegley, then Spurs deep drive and reasons to watch Wiz, Nets, and Jazz w/ @MoDakhil_NBA:

Spotify: https://t.co/L1Y72Jbvzu

YouTube: https://t.co/ipDmnhc5in

— Zach Lowe (@ZachLowe_NBA) October 9, 2025

Zach Lowe​


On the framework of a potential Giannis–Knicks trade:

“If there is a trade for Giannis at any point, KAT almost has to go out in the trade to make it workable in any way… That makes Mitchell Robinson the one and only proven center on the team… So he’s a massively important piece.”

Asked Doc Rivers about yesterday's report regarding the Bucks and a potential Giannis Antetokounmpo trade after today's practice: pic.twitter.com/8vgbCAGf6f

— Eric Nehm (@eric_nehm) October 8, 2025

Doc Rivers​


On the Giannis trade rumors being media fabrication:

“Another [report]? It’s unbelievable. What are you supposed to do? I’ve been coaching 26–27 years and one thing that I know is 30 teams call 30 teams. ‘Hey, would you like to trade Chris Paul?’ And you say no. That does not constitute a conversation. I read [in the ESPN report] where it said several conversations. Well, that never happened. It was a conversation where a team called, and Jon has been saying no now for 11 years. So I don’t know why this is a new story, but I guess it is.”

On media narrative creation and Giannis trade rumors:

“If you read his comments this summer, every comment he’s made is about being in Milwaukee and loving this city, but for some reason — and it’s funny: you create the story, and then you report on the story you created, and that’s what it feels like, and it gets old for us. But at the end of the day, there’s nothing we can do about it, and I can tell you: Jon has never called a team about Giannis, and until that happens, you really don’t have a story.”

Paul Pierce on Threads https://t.co/LpAIVD84Je pic.twitter.com/6POCD40kvP

— Ballislife.com (@Ballislife) October 10, 2025

Paul Pierce​


On the events surrounding his DUI arrest:

“Imagine being stuck in stand still traffic for 45 mins and falling asleep 🤦🏾‍♂️. I took this picture that night because I never been in stand still traffic for this long.”

On the reason behind the incident:

“I’m old, I’m tired, and I fell asleep 🤷🏾‍♂️. I’m good y’all thanks for the love.”

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ks-bulletin-im-old-im-tired-and-i-fell-asleep
 
What a Giannis Antetokounmpo trade could look like (in 2026)

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The 2025-26 season is just getting off the launchpad, with the Knicks playing their first preseason game at the World’s Most Famous Arena later tonight. Despite all the roster work (mostly) done, there’s still some offseason-like chattering around the Knicks.

On Tuesday, ESPN’s Shams Charania dropped a bombshell article that Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo, a topic of much offseason trade speculation, had a preferred destination: New York City.

New York emerged as the only team Giannis Antetokounmpo desired outside of Milwaukee in the offseason, sources told ESPN, and the Knicks and Bucks engaged in talks for a window of time.

Inside the clouds leaving Giannis' future hanging in the balance: https://t.co/yxcmDnzQ6K

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) October 7, 2025

Woah. Unlike the KD-Kyrie stuff in 2019, this felt more genuine. The Knicks are finally a place to be with their stable infrastructure, existing star talent, and perennial playoff performance. This doesn’t feel like the media trying to find New York a savior; it feels like someone who wants to be the missing piece on a big market contender.

Now, the Knicks and Bucks did discuss a trade in the offseason, but that went nowhere. Obviously, Milwaukee will not trade Giannis unless that situation becomes untenable, and it isn’t at that point yet. That’s fine. But the fact that these discussions happened and that this report was leaked, you have to wonder if the Greek Freak’s eyes are wandering.

Obviously, we’re locked in on 2025-26. The Knicks have a real chance to come out of the Eastern Conference for the first time in 27 years and have real title aspirations. Until the ink is dry on this upcoming season, there’s no use in thinking about next summer. But many wondered what it would take to pry Giannis out of Milwaukee when the report dropped, and that’s what we’ll theorize today.

Can Giannis force his way to New York?​


Let’s be honest. The Knicks do not have the best package if Giannis became available. Not even close. Even if the Bucks don’t want picks (more on that later), there are other teams with more to offer.

The only way the Knicks can land the two-time MVP will be some good ol’ fashioned superstar politics.

Say the Bucks’ season goes south and Giannis demands a trade in the offseason. With his contract situation, the Bucks’ hands would be tied. Now, they’re going to do what’s best for them and try to get the best package possible, regardless of Giannis’ feelings. If that sounds ruthless to do to your franchise’s GOAT, just look at what the Blazers did to Damian Lillard.

So, the Knicks would lose a bidding war; we know this. The wild card is Giannis threatening his contract situation. If he says that he will not re-sign with any of the prospective teams except the Knicks, that opens a pathway. Do I find this likely? Probably not. He’s never been the type to be that confrontational, and the threat rings hollow when the Knicks will not be able to sign him in free agency in 2027 due to a lack of cap space.

But that’s a way. Now, what would a package look like?

The Trade Scenarios​


The Knicks do not have many draft assets after last year’s Mikal Bridges trade, but they do have something.

  • One unprotected first (2033, only available after the 2026 draft)
  • Two first-round pick swaps (2030, 2032)
  • The Wizards Pick (top-8 protected in 2026, will likely turn into ‘26/’27 seconds)
  • 2026 1st Rounder(?) (team can likely trade the player after the draft, trades become official on 7/6)
  • Six second-round picks (will become eight if Wizards’ pick doesn’t convey)

They aren’t flush with assets, but they aren’t the post-Bradley Beal trade Suns. Remember, Luka Doncic only went for one first-round pick, and the Knicks’ 2033 pick will be super valuable due to how short championship windows are.

But to get Doncic, the Lakers had to part ways with a top player in basketball, Anthony Davis. The Knicks’ equivalent is probably Karl-Anthony Towns, but the defensive drop-off is definitely considered there. The fit is also questionable, considering Myles Turner was just given a multi-year deal.

They could also go after the Knicks’ wings, trying to pry Bridges or OG Anunoby away. The challenge is going to be not only combating the aprons, but also the needs of the Bucks.

You might be asking why the Bucks would even humor a trade that has them gaining win-now talent. It might seem obvious to rebuild after a Giannis trade… until you look at their pick situation.

Screenshot-2025-10-09-at-11.57.53%E2%80%AFAM.png

Ouch. The smart move from that front office, barring a reconnaissance trade to recover those picks from Portland and New Orleans, would be to at least try to stay above water. They do not have the ability to tank, seeing as they do not control a single one of their own picks until 2031. They are completely at the whims of other teams’ abilities to swap picks.

You’re not able to mock up the trade machine for next offseason, but here are three blueprints based on current contracts:

(Disclaimer: these proposals will be without draft picks, as the best trade asset isn’t in the trade machine so it’s useless to mock it.)

Screenshot-2025-10-09-at-11.32.05%E2%80%AFAM.png

The biggest comparison to the Doncic trade is this, which is almost an exact 1-to-1. A straight-up trade doesn’t work, so I added Deuce McBride’s very inexpensive deal, which at that point will have just one year remaining.

Screenshot-2025-10-09-at-11.32.42%E2%80%AFAM.png

There’s also a scenario where the Bucks wouldn’t want Towns after signing Turner, so here’s a trade that works with Josh Hart and Anunoby.

Screenshot-2025-10-09-at-11.33.24%E2%80%AFAM.png

Lastly, a nuclear option that could lead to a much larger trade if the Bucks want to gut the Knicks’ wing depth.

Ultimately, it’s too far out to think about for much more than a thought experiment. A lot can change, and the Knicks’ flexibility would be hampered by a potential move into the second apron, Mitchell Robinson’s contract, and other factors out of their control. In my eyes, any trade that gets Giannis to New York would require multiple teams to get Milwaukee the draft assets they want while not totally bottoming out.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-bucks-nba-trade-rumors-bridges-towns-anunoby
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘It would drive us crazy. I know it would drive me crazy’

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The New York Knicks are off the schedule today.

What did you expect? It’s Saturday, go outside, take some fresh air.

Or if you prefer, read about what Coach Brown and a few others have recently said.

HE'S BACK AT THE SEASON TIP-OFF EVENT TOMORROW 👀@Da_Rizzler419 pic.twitter.com/rkrbxOI6Jg

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 10, 2025

Mike Brown​


On early shot quality:

“We ended up with 23 sprays for the game, which is pretty good. We didn’t shoot it well, and that’s OK. I thought we went through stretches where we took great shots. At the start of the game, we had a lot of great shots — the type of shots we wanted — and we missed, which I’m OK with, especially right now. I want them to keep taking those shots.”

On the need for the Knicks to not lose trust mid-game:

“After [the ball] didn’t go in through the first part of the first quarter, I thought our guys stopped trusting it a little bit. We started holding onto the ball too much. The ball wasn’t popping. The spacing wasn’t there. We weren’t touching the paint.”

On trusting the process over the result:

“I thought we had some good looks that we just missed. Especially right now, I don’t care if we win or lose as long as we keep trying to play the right way and trust it. We have not a good shooting team — [but] a great shooting team. We’re getting catch-and-shoot shots when our feet are set, the defense is collapsing, and then having to go back out. I’ll take that every day, any time of the day or night.”

On the need for consistency throughout games:

“I thought we got a lot of [those two-way stunts] until we started holding onto the ball and taking quick shots without touching the paint. We did take some tough ones, and in those instances, we’ll learn and we’ll grow. But we have to be a little bit more consistent with it throughout the course of the game.”

On team sloppiness and second-half improvements against the Wolves:

“I thought first half, we were little sloppy with it (the ball). We did improve in the second half by taking better care of the basketball. We ended up with 23 assists for the game, which is pretty good. We didn’t shoot it well, but that’s okay. I thought we went through stretches.”

On playing without a playbook:

“We want to play this way most of the time. We’ll have play calls because we want the ball in this person’s hands at this time and we want this guy here and that guy there. So we will do that. But right now, especially in the preseason, I just want them to be able to get used to playing this basketball and taking what the defense gives them.”

On spacing and floor geometry:

“Because Jalen filled the corner, it flattened the defense, whoever was guarding him was scared that he was going to get a 3-pointer, so they stayed out, which created the space for OG to get downhill. So little things like that, we look at and we emphasize because those are the great plays that are very small that won’t show up in the stat sheet that are going to make you a great offensive team at the end of the day.”

On emphasizing fundamentals:

“We’ve kind of restricted our guys to doing certain things. Again, we played the entire game out of our read-and-react early offense. We don’t have a single play call in yet. We play off of makes and misses. If a team makes, we do this; if a team misses, we do that. We just try to take what the defense gives us. So it’s hard sometimes because sometimes guys see an advantage or whatever and they want to attack it. But I think if you get great pace, great spacing, you touch the paint, you make quick decisions, you make ball reversals — if you get those things and you know how to play, it doesn’t matter what you do, you’re going to eventually get to a point where it’s gonna be hard to defend because the defense doesn’t know what’s coming. Something different is going to come every time.”

On redefining transition defense:

“Fast break, yeah, there are different things that we look at. I can’t remember what the rule is for the NBA in terms of — I think they just use shot clock, whether or not you score in the first six seconds, four seconds, whatever. There are other things we look at in terms of fast break points, which is why I said they had around 25 against us tonight because we weren’t always good at getting back with our next-play speed.”

On next-play speed:

“Whether we took a tough shot and now the ball is going the other way or we turned it over and the ball is going the other way, we’ve got to change like, boom, just like that. We go from offense to defense right now. If we take two extra [seconds] the opposite direction, now they’re running out on us, and they have an advantage in transition. They may not score it right away, but they’ll eventually swing-swing to a wide-open shot because we didn’t play with next-play speed all the time or we took a tough shot.”

On GM poll respect:

“I know they do it. I didn’t know they did it already. A lot of respect for you GMs.”

On ignoring outside opinions:

“Everybody is going to have an opinion. Just take care of yourself because if you start worrying about what the GMs thought or what the owner’s thought, or what the referee’s thought, man, we would be in trouble. It would drive us crazy. I know it would drive me crazy. So we just focus in on us and try to do the best we can for who we are.”

America’s Team pic.twitter.com/K9vhpEAw2E

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 10, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On being deemed untouchable in trade talks:

“Team sources have made it clear that Knicks point guard Jalen Brunson was, as expected, untouchable in these talks.”

On adjusting to Mike Brown’s system:

“We’re getting good looks, and we’re really trying to hit home all the stuff we’ve been working on all preseason. In basketball, sometimes it goes in, sometimes it doesn’t. But we just got to do the things we know contribute to winning.”

On offensive learning curve vs Minnesota:

“Everything is new, so attention to detail is going to be key for us to get better faster. All the little things we pick up, and we learn, we can’t just skip over that; we’ve got to really understand that those little things make a big difference. For us that’s the most important thing.”

On Brown’s system and mindset shift:

“What we’re working on is just the basics of our offense and everything. It’s going to take time. It’s not always going to be perfect but it’s all about how we’re going to continue to trust it, continue to learn it. And when things aren’t going well, are we going to revert to who we were in the past or are we going to continue to get better with what’s new to us? So got to continue to trust it.”

On adapting to new concepts:

“Everything is new. So attention to detail is key for us to try to get better, faster. So all the little things we picked up and we learned, we can’t just skip over that. We got to understand that all those little things can make a big difference. And so for us, that’s the most important thing.

always revert to with things like that — adapting to new things — as a kid I moved out seven or eight times, so I always was learning to find new teams, new school, new friends. So everything was always new. So adapting since a young age is always something I had to do. So I’m not nervous at all.”

"I love little Ty man" pic.twitter.com/CAzOq0OOdH

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 10, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On early offense structure:

“Just the pace and ball movement — the other team’s got to guard that. Them over-helping or trying to get back makes them scramble, and we got guys that can all make the right play. It’s just about getting to know each other, knowing where our spots are going to be. We shoot every day, trust one another, and try to find the right spots.”

On offense vs defense progress:

“Defensively, I think we’re a little bit more ahead of the offense. At that point, I think it’s more of a pride thing too, trusting your guys and [you] don’t want to get scored on offensively. And still trying to figure out our spots and guys on offense a little bit, but defense comes down to more heart and playing hard. I think that’s true [the defense is ahead of the offense]. But I think we’re still building in the right direction with both. Just keep stacking days.”

On structured vs reactive play:

“He just wants to implement playing fast because, honestly, especially the first three quarters, until mid-fourth, you don’t really need plays. You kind of just have concepts and you read and react and it makes it tougher for the defense, honestly, because they don’t know what’s happening because offensively you don’t even know what’s happening because you’re kind of just reading how you’re going to defend it. I think that’s fine. I think when the game starts slowing down in the fourth, the last five minutes, where each possession is a little bit more valuable [you need plays]. But the first three quarters, just going up and down, playing fast, trying to make the right read. I think you don’t really need plays.”

On Mike Brown’s coaching style:

“Just being on guys, holding guys accountable, preaching everything every single day. Him and his coaches – they all run a tight ship. You could tell that whatever we’re doing out there, they’re all on the same page, no matter what the situation is. And that’s a lot of credit to him because I think he’s the main leader, the vocal leader of his crew, and for everybody to be on the same page, it makes it easier for us players when they talk to us because any coach I talk to, you’re going to hear the same thing.

“So it’s been great, man. I love how he pushes us. Accountability. A couple plays, if he feels like you’re not doing the right thing, he’s going to let you know and why wouldn’t you want that? In the moment, some guys might be a little upset about it. But we’re going to get to where we’re going to get to. He’s ain’t going to be Mr. Nice Guy. He got to hold people accountable. He doesn’t do it in a disrespectful way. He wants greatness out of everybody. And just being accountable is great.”

We get it

It's all new

They're rusty

Give them time

To learn the handshakes pic.twitter.com/PwHcfFnRVl

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 10, 2025

Deuce McBride​


On read-and-react concepts:

“I feel like at any time a coach can drop a play and you know exactly what to do, but to be able to read and react to what’s out there — because at the end of the day, he’s on the sideline, so we have to play the way we’ve always been taught. And that’s to move the ball, play the right way, and get guys involved.”

On trusting Mike Brown’s approach:

“He’s the coach. If that’s his philosophy, that’s his philosophy. We’re going to follow it to the best of our ability.”

Mike & Ike appoints Josh Hart its Chief Candy Officer: “Stay tuned for the press conference” pic.twitter.com/9OWvQwnmQR

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 10, 2025

Charles Barkley​


On Giannis’ mindset and Milwaukee’s effort:

“You know, it’s interesting how these guys feel like they’re entitled to play for the championship every year. As a great player, you should feel like ‘I’m a great player, if I get any help, we’re going to win.’ You gotta give the Milwaukee Bucks credit. I wish a person would love me as much as the Bucks love Giannis. I really do.

“They went out and got him, Damian Lillard. They went out and got him Myles Turner. They have done everything possible to try to make the Bucks win again. So the notion that he doesn’t feel like they’re doing everything in their power, they have done everything.

“It’s unfortunate he feels like he is entitled to win a championship every year. Everybody wants to win a championship but the Bucks have done everything they possibly could. It’s disheartening for me to hear him thinking like ‘If we don’t win a championship this year, I wanna be out of here.’ I hate hearing that.”

Monica McBuckets getting ready for today’s Knicks Celebrity Game 👀 pic.twitter.com/71txHRt54h

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 11, 2025


Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...drive-us-crazy-i-know-it-would-drive-me-crazy
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘Two of his strides equal six of my strides’

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Get excited, the Knicks play meaningless basketball today!

Not only that, but there will be hoops happening inside Madison Square Garden for the first time since May!!

Here’s what Coach Brown, Mikal, KAT, Perk, and potential Greekerbocker have said during the past few hours.

Mike Brown has goosebumps thinking about coaching his first game at MSG as Knicks head coach tomorrow night, even in a preseason game pic.twitter.com/kNGgSInFV6

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 8, 2025

Mike Brown​


On Mikal Bridges’ defensive versatility:

“He will [guard the point of attack] some. If Reggie Miller was still playing, I’d throw him on Reggie, because I think he navigates screens well, and with those long strides, he can stay close to a shooter’s body, and then he’s contesting and he’s got long arms. But then if we need to put him on a point guard, because, again, he’s able to navigate through screens and if he does get hit, people still feel him. They feel him coming with his length, and so we’ll mix it up. He won’t always be at the point of the ball. He won’t always chase shooters.”

On not needing to clarify Bridges’ on-ball role:

“I haven’t asked him because I know he’s elite at it. He knows he’s elite at it. And that’s what he’s going to embrace. And so that gives us a luxury to be able to move Jalen [Brunson] and whoever else is on the floor around, because we know we can say, ‘OK, you know what? Tonight, Mikal’s gonna take this guy — he’s a shooter and a two-guard. Or tonight, he’s gonna take the head of the snake — the point guard — because of this and that.’ It allows us to have different options. And when you know you’re great or elite at something, you embrace it — and you go do that every night you’re on the floor.”

On staff members familiar with Bridges:

“So these guys have an idea of how he played and what his strengths were in Phoenix. And then you watch him a little bit in Brooklyn, too, or [watch him] play against you in Brooklyn. And you watch him last year in the playoffs and you just try to put guys at their strengths, and you hope guys will embrace those areas that are their strengths because they’re already the best in the world. And now, if you can put them in positions in terms of making sure the floor is spaced the right way with everybody else, the pace is there, the ball is moving, screens are set, whatever we’re trying to introduce, now it shines.”

On Bridges’ two-way potential:

“When you look at him — and we’re trying to play fast — you know he can be if not the best runner in the NBA, at least in the top three. I mean, he can get out and go. He’s got long strides. Everything’s real fluid. He’s long. And now when he does do that, it puts a lot of pressure on our opponents because he’s getting to the corner, he can shoot the three and so he’s gonna flatten the defense, or he’s [cutting to the basket] and attacking and finishing at the rim before the defense can even think twice about it. We’re excited offensively, and then on the flip side defensively, he’s one of the best chasers that I’ve been around. So if you’ve got a guy that’s flying off of screens, he’s got a knack to navigate through screens and chase guys. And same with guys that play the pick-and-roll game. He’s long, so even if he gets cracked on a pick-and-roll a little bit, his will to want to pursue and especially contest from behind at that length is extremely, extremely impactful. So I think those are the areas that you should see him shine in this year.”

On Josh Hart’s illness status:

“I don’t know [if he’ll play], we’ll see tomorrow. But yes, he did not practice today. He was out today because he was sick.”

On not knowing details of Hart’s status:

“I don’t even know — I just get told he’s out because he’s sick or this or that. I was told he was out because he was sick. He wasn’t here [in practice].”

On losing a bet to Jalen Brunson:

“I don’t know if you’d call it running, but we try.”

On the free throw bet format:

“At the end of practice, they gotta make three free throws — three different guys gotta make one free throw, but it’s all gotta be in a row. If one of the three guys misses, then they hop to the baseline, they gotta go up and back — and they gotta do it until all three guys hit one free throw and it has to be in a row. So one of these times, Jalen hits it, he said, ‘Hey, we’ll do it again, but we want to bet y’all. If on the first go-around we make three in a row, then y’all gotta run.’”

On Brunson’s memory:

“Jalen’s one of them dudes that don’t forget. So he was like, ‘Hey, coach, we made three in a row. That was it. If we make three in a row on the first go-around, y’all gotta run.’ So he put us on the line and Mitch told us when to go.”

On MSG debut as Knicks coach:

“MSG is such an iconic venue, you know, and whether it’s a preseason game or regular-season game to be able to know that that’s your home court every night, and to do it for the first time… it gives you goose bumps.”

On Bridges’ stride:

“Two of his strides equal six of my strides.”

Mikal Bridges talks about why he's able to stay on the court and avoid injuries:

"My parents got some genes that help me absorb and recover quicker" pic.twitter.com/1pkewsLIcZ

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 8, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On the defensive identity under Mike Brown:

“I think our coverages [are] just a little different, when it comes to shifting and stuff like that: concepts, making sure our verbiage is always different with different coaches and different systems. I think more emphasis in being aggressive when you’re off the ball. Obviously the usual X’ing out, the help in rotation. I think every coach in the NBA has that. But just putting an emphasis on shifting and helping the guy on ball a little bit more.”

On the offensive system fitting his game:

“Yeah [the offense is a good fit] personally, yeah and then for our team as well. I think it’s a great fit for all of us. Talent we have and one through 15 — I mean, s–t, we’ve got 20 guys in there today, thought in this camp so 1 through 20, it’s for everybody. Everybody be unselfish and making the right play and being aggressive. Not just personally me, I think it helps the team a lot.”

On work and improvement:

“I think I’ll be better. Yeah, just be better throughout the whole year. [In the] playoffs, defensively I was better. I still think I could have been better and done more on both sides. People think I had a pretty good playoffs, but I still think I could have done a lot more. [So] start the season off strong, be better than I was last year.”

On embracing early coaching attention:

“We drill them every day. We have a lot of drills throughout training camp and now. We had an earlier training camp. Even working out before, the coaches’ attention to detail and pushing us, so it’s become second nature.”

On improving year-to-year:

“Just be better throughout the whole year. Start the season off strong, be better than I was last year.”

KAT: "It's gonna be a little bit––"

Somewhere in room: (ESPN chime)

KAT (looks at phone): "Did I say something and y'all tweet some shi?" pic.twitter.com/lVmjXa7oEy

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 9, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On Mitchell Robinson:

“He’s very gifted with his feet, just the way he can maneuver around the court. I had good expectations of what I thought of Mitch walking in, especially on the offensive end, how I can maximize his offensive game. But even he surprised me with his ability.”

On embracing a demanding new role:

“It’s a job, but I’m blessed that he’s trusted me with it.”

On learning the offense:

“Uhh, we working. We’re trying to figure it out so we can be the best version of ourselves come opening night. But yeah, we’re working. We’re continuing to get more comfortable with it and understand where we can be as impactful as possible with it.”

Giannis: "It's temptation…like you go outside & people look at you: 'oh he's kind of handsome'…starts when season ends til season begins…people approach me & my agent: 'hey this possibility'…My decision today is I'm here…As long as we have opportunity to win…I'm here baby" pic.twitter.com/Eqme5RmCwd

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 8, 2025

Giannis Antetokounmpo (Wannabe Knick)​


On staying committed to the Bucks:

“I think I’ve communicated with my teammates, communicated with the people I respect and love the moment I step onto this court or in this facility, I wear this jersey, the rest does not matter. I’m locked into whatever I have in front of me. Now, if in six, seven months, I change my mind, I think that’s human too. You’re allowed to make any decision you want, but I’m locked in. I’m locked into this team. I’m locked into these guys, to this group and to this coaching staff and to myself.”

On leadership and blocking out noise:

“I believe in my teammates. I’m here to lead this team wherever we can go, and it’s definitely going to be hard. We’re going to take it day by day, but I’m here. So all that extra stuff does not matter.”

On his main goal and clarity:

“I’ve said this many times: I want to be in a situation that I can win. I believe in this team. I believe in my teammates. I’m here to lead this team to wherever we can go. It’s definitely going to be hard. We’re going to take it day by day, but I’m here. So all the extra stuff does not matter. I’ve communicated with my teammates, communicated with the people I respect and love, that the moment I step on this court or in this facility, I wear this jersey, the rest does not matter. I’m locked into whatever I have in front of me. Now, if in six, seven months I change my mind, I think that’s human, too.”

On offseason rumors and commitment:

“It’s temptation. That starts when the season ends until the season begins. There’s going to be a lot of people that are going to approach me or approach my agent and they’re going to say this is a possibility, that’s a possibility … but at the end of the day, ultimately, I’m going to make a decision. And my decision today is that I’m here and I’m committed to this team.”

Road Trippin’: Perkins: Giannis gotta grow a set. He gotta grow a set. He has to grow some balls. He don’t want to be there. He’s scared to say it. The Bucks know that he don’t want to be there. The Bucks know this — but they are in denial… it was a desperate move when they… pic.twitter.com/0mw5NQN9PN

— MrBuckBuck (@MrBuckBuckNBA) October 9, 2025

Kendrick Perkins (Former NBA Player)​


On the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors:

“Every off-season, every time the season ends for the Bucks, ‘Oh, Giannis is gonna want out,’ and then, out of desperation, to try to please Giannis, and rightfully so, they make moves. Do those moves work all the time? Absolutely not.”

On Giannis’ indecision:

“Giannis has to grow a set. He has to grow some balls. He don’t wanna be there, he’s scared to say it. The Bucks know that he don’t wanna be there… but they are in denial.”

Directed by Jalen Brunson, the Knicks had their coaching staff and trainers run sprints during practice 🤣 pic.twitter.com/lGCQ31icq2

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 8, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...in-two-of-his-strides-equal-six-of-my-strides
 
Preseason Game Preview: Knicks vs. Timberwolves, Oct. 9, 2025

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The New York Knicks are back stateside after sweeping the Philadelphia 76ers in their two-game NBA Abu Dhabi 2025 preseason series at Etihad Arena.

New York opened with a 99–84 win on October 2, fueled by Miles McBride’s 12 points off the bench and Mitchell Robinson’s 16 rebounds, while Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns added 11 apiece. Then they completed the sweep with a 113–104 victory behind Brunson’s 14 points, OG Anunoby’s 13, and another burly outing from Mitch.

The Minnesota Timberwolves, meanwhile, are still sorting things out.

They split their first two preseason games, beating the Denver Nuggets 126–116 before falling to the Indiana Pacers 135–134 in overtime. The win over Denver, with stars Anthony Edwards, Julius Randle, and Mike Conley resting, proved that the team has some depth. Bones Hyland led with 18 points, rookie Joan Beringer added 14, and Rob Dillingham handed out nine assists.

The home loss to Indiana was a different story. Despite strong showings from Jaden McDaniels, Rudy Gobert, and Naz Reid, Minnesota’s defense faltered late. Eighteen players touched the hardwood in the loss.

The Wolves’ offense looks promising, but defensive lapses continue to be a soft spot. Tonight, their starting lineup is projected to be Mike Conley, Anthony Edwards, Jaden McDaniels (GTD), Julius Randle, and Rudy Gobert.

On the Timberwolves injury report, Jaylen Clark, Joe Ingles, Jaden McDaniels, and Leonard Miller are all listed as game-time-decisions. For the Knicks, Josh Hart is listed as a GTD with back spasms.

When the two last squared off, on January 17 at MSG, the Minnesota Timberwolves beat the New York Knicks 116–99. Anthony Edwards led the way with 36 points, 13 rebounds, and seven assists, hitting eight threes. Naz Reid added 23 points and six threes, while Jalen Brunson paced the Knicks with 26 points and five assists. Tonight at the Garden, look for a scrappy effort from both teams with New York pulling ahead down the stretch.

Go Knicks.

Game Details


Who: New York Knicks (2-0) vs Minnesota Timberwolves (1-1)

When: Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025, 7:30 p.m. ET

Where: Madison Square Garden, NYC

Watch: NBA TV / League Pass / MSG

Follow: @ptknicksblog

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ame-preview-knicks-vs-timberwolves-oct-9-2025
 
Preseason Game Preview: Knicks vs. Wizards, Oct. 13, 2025

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The Knicks return to Madison Square Garden on Monday night for their fourth and penultimate preseason game, hosting the wayward Washington Wizards.

New York sits at 3–0 this preseason after grinding out a 100–95 win over the Timberwolves on Thursday. Mike Brown’s squad has used the exhibition slate to learn the ropes of the new coach’s pace-and-space system and the results have been tantalizing.

Washington enters 0–1 after a last-second 113–112 loss to Toronto on Sunday night, and they’ll complete a back-to-back in New York. The ’Zards finished last season 18–64, only a slight uptick from their franchise-worst 15-win campaign the year before. Rookie Tre Johnson and second-year center Alex Sarr headline a youthful core, and they’re supported by Bub Carrington and well-seasoned vets, CJ McColllum and Khris Middleton. The team’s strengths lie in depth, athleticism, and rim protection, but inexperience, lack of star power, and seven straight losing seasons point to another lottery-bound year.

For the Knicks, Monday offers another chance to tighten the bench rotation and reinforce Brown’s system before the real schedule begins. Expect Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, Mikal Bridges, and OG Anunoby to log light minutes while the second unit—Miles McBride, Pacôme Dadiet, and new faces Jordan Clarkson and Malcolm Brogdon—gets another long look. On the injury report, Josh Hart remains a game-time decision. He missed the T’wolves game due to illness.

The Knicks are favored in tonight’s tilt for good reason. The ‘Bockers have looked disciplined and connected, with Mitchell Robinson in top form, the starters sharing the ball with panache, and deep bench. Anything can happen, but count on the Knicks to take care of business. Knicks by +10.

Game Details

Who: New York Knicks (3-0) vs Washington Wizards (0-1)

When: Monday, Oct. 13, 2025, 7:30 p.m. ET

Where: Madison Square Garden, NYC

Watch: NBA TV / League Pass / MSG

Follow: @ptknicksblog

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...on-game-preview-knicks-vs-wizards-oct-13-2025
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘This is probably a worse basketball game overall’

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We were getting so comfortable with the Knicks endless winning that Monday’s loss hurt us bad.

Nah, not really, but it still stank.

Here’s a bunch of quotes from Coach Brown and a few other folks as the NYK approach deadline date for rostered players to make the cut or pack their bags.

"Our starters did not bring the energy. This is probably a worse basketball game overall and we did it in spurts"

Mike Brown gives an opening statement after the Knicks' preseason loss to Washington and called it a "great learning experience" pic.twitter.com/2Rr9jLFm4S

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 14, 2025

Mike Brown​


On the awuful preseason loss to Washington:

“Our starters did not bring the energy. This is probably a worse basketball game overall and we did it in spurts.”

On the Wizards’ approach and Knicks’ execution:

“They didn’t do anything tricky. They were just in the right spot defensively. They tried to play the way that we’ve been playing throughout the preseason, every day in practice and it showed at times to be very good basketball.”

“We needed to do better collectively as a unit when it came to doing the little things, starting with boxing out we weren’t great at it. Defensively, we weren’t great in our shifts, and we’d been pretty darn good in those two areas so far.”

On defensive struggles and learning from Monday’s loss:

“Great film to learn from, because we made a lot of mistakes that were uncharacteristic of how we’ve played so far.”

On silver linings despite the poor game against the lowly Wizards:

“Offensively, we didn’t do anything different when that second group came in. Guys just spaced the floor, they tried to play with pace. It wasn’t there all the time, but they tried to do it. Great learning experience. We’ll all grow from it and hopefully take a step forward instead of thinking we took a step backwards because we didn’t play well tonight.”

On Guerschon Yabusele’s adaptation to playing center:

“It’s gonna be a bit of a learning curve for him.”

On Dadiet’s size and development:

“He’s just gotta continue to understand how big he is. He’s long. He’s a big wing. And at times, he doesn’t utilize it. We always talk about playing big, playing big, playing big. And he doesn’t utilize it all the time. And that’s just being young. At times, he’s a little quiet and he’s a little unsure of what he should be saying or doing.

“So we keep trying to throw him into the fire as much as possible. It’s something that I’d like to do come regular season. I don’t know how many minutes he’s gonna get per game. But he definitely has a chance to be a player in this league for a long time, and you wanna help try to speed that development up because you see a lot of good things.

“You see he can run, you see he can cut, he’s big… you see he does a pretty good job of finishing and shoot the basketball. And you couple that with his ability to play defense, and you have a pretty good young prospect, especially for his age.”

On Tyler Kolek’s contribution:

“I thought the guys coming off the bench, they did a great job, Tyler gave us great minutes.”

“Tyler gave us some great minutes. His pace was great for us offensively — he touched the paint and sprayed it, we’re a big spray team, and he tried to reach space after he got off it. Then defensively he tried to talk and bring energy. I thought he was really good.”

“Being the smaller guy, you have to sacrifice your body. For me, it’s a great step from seeing the opportunity in Abu Dhabi and then tonight he actually tried to take the hit, so now hopefully we’ll go from there and he’ll take a couple of hits.”

On leaving the starters and a few other important players out Monday:

“It’s important. We want to try to give some guys some extended minutes to take a look at them tonight. It’s important because they’ve all been busting their behinds, and making that decision is extremely tough.”

“Landry and Ariel, those two more so than the other guys, I was probably going to start Ariel, but he’s sick, and then Landry obviously is competing for a roster spot as well, and he’s sick as well.”

Pacôme Dadiet on the pressure with roster cuts:

"There's always pressure. I don't really look at stuff like this. I try to stay focused on basketball and what I can control" pic.twitter.com/XxKZhl6b8W

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 14, 2025

Pacome Dadiet​


On dealing with the pressure of the impending roster cuts:

“There’s always pressure. I don’t really look at stuff like this. I try to stay focused on basketball and what I can control.”

Tyler Kolek was asked if the roster situation gave him more urgency in tonight's preseason game:

"There's urgency every single day. They say the hardest thing is not to get in this league, but to stay in this league" pic.twitter.com/1BSUvMc0vp

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 14, 2025

Tyler Kolek​


On whether the roster situation gave him more urgency in the preseason:

“There’s urgency every single day. They say the hardest thing is not to get in this league, but to stay in this league.”

On his mindset going into any and every game:

“My approach is to come out and try to win the game. To just come out and play hard for my team — I’m not coming out here to show other people what I can do, I’m here for my guys, my team, my coaching staff.”

Pablo Torre “Do you think the Knicks may have circumvented the cap taking Jalen Brunson from your Mavs?“

Mark Cuban “IDK…Think there was a lot at play”

“That’s behind me. More power to JB

“Was I happy they only got dinged for a 2nd round pick? No…Should’ve been far worse” https://t.co/DWYRzuhEsG pic.twitter.com/pl1G0CzuSf

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 14, 2025

Mark Cuban​


On the tampering case involving Jalen Brunson and the Knicks, and whether or not New York circumvented the cap:

“I don’t know, I just think there was a lot at play there.”

On whether the punishment was sufficient:

“That’s behind me, we’re proud of JB, we’re proud of everything. Was I happy that they only got dinged for a second-round pick? No. No, it should’ve been far worse. But, it is what it is.”

.@wemby doing Wemby things pic.twitter.com/zAEE7z0L5A

— San Antonio Spurs (@spurs) October 14, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...s-is-probably-a-worse-basketball-game-overall
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘That’s what they said. It’s a tough roster. Let’s see what happens.’

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No Knicks preseason basketball today, thank God if it meant watching that attrocious thing from Monday once again.

New York have one exhibition left on Friday, but more importantly, they will have to make a very serious decision by Saturday’s deadline.

For now, here’s what we’ve heard from Coach Brown and a few other folks in the past few hours.

(📸 Nino Man) pic.twitter.com/0FtstlA7sh

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 15, 2025

Mike Brown​


On Pacome Dadiet needing playing time:

“Just getting minutes, getting minutes. I think the G League is fantastic for anybody so whether he’s getting minutes there or he’s getting minutes with us, just getting minutes in general is going to be great for him because he’s a really young guy. He’s got a chance to be really, really good — especially at his size, you can do a lot of things with it and so just getting playing time.”

On letting assistants lead huddles in preseason games:

“I’ve done it quite a bit. Did it with Sacramento. Actually, I got it from Steve (Kerr). When I was with Steve in Golden State, I led the huddle multiple times in multiple games. Throughout the course of a game probably almost 90 percent of the time — I didn’t even tell him what I was about to tell the guys defensively. He had that much trust in me. And it helped me grow.

“It helped save (Kerr’s) voice and gave the players another voice to hear. So I did it in Sacramento. I liked it. I’m going to try it here. Our offensive coordinator is Chris Jent. Our defensive coordinator is Brendan O’Connor, BOC. All those guys as well as everybody else, they’ve done a fantastic job coaching, so to give them an opportunity during games is something that I’ll do.”

On Guerschon Yabusele’s adaptation to playing center:

“I thought it was a great opportunity for him to get some time at the center position. It’s tough for him and he was thinking a little too much, which is gonna happen. And it kind of brought his game to a halt in other areas. I thought the second half, his energy, his activity, was a lot better. He started feeling a little bit more comfortable in the second half, but it’s going to be a little bit of a learning curve for him.”

KNICKS TRIO 🇫🇷 🇫🇷 🇫🇷

🔸 Guerschon Yabusele : 11 PTS, 5 REB, 2 AST
🔸 Pacôme Dadiet : 8 PTS, 6 REB
🔸 Mohamed Diawara : 5 PTS, 2 REB pic.twitter.com/lVBigTW5ed

— NBA France (@NBAFRANCE) October 14, 2025

Guerschon Yabusele​


On adapting to Brown’s system and moving between the four and five spots:

“For sure, it’s pretty big [of a learning curve] in the offense, and also like running, so the biggest key for me was to just run all the time, try to run to the basket to try to make the other teams tired.”

On Brown’s timeout to address his mistakes during Monday’s game:

“We had a conversation about what was happening in the game. We talked about a situation that was there, and what he wanted me to do better.”

On trying to fit in:

“I’m really trying to be as much as I can be focused to try to get every detail to make sure I’m at the right spot. For me, it’s a new team with new guys so I really try to fit into the system and be a solution not a problem.”

On his advice to Pacome Dadiet to stay relevant in the NBA:

“Keep shooting. That’s the best part about it. Whether you want to take it or not, the shot’s going to be there and you’re gonna be open. And the teams will make adjustments.

“In this league, if somebody thinks you’re not a shooter, they’re going to leave you wide open. So you got to prove to them that you’re a shooter. You got to prove to them you have confidence. I remember being in this spot when I was in Boston and I wasn’t really playing, so I kind of get it, where he is right now. But you got to push. You got lots of guys here to learn from and talk to guys so we just try to give him confidence and make sure when he goes there he doesn’t think about nothing.”

Garrison Mathews, like others, was told by Knicks he's got a real chance at a roster spot. Despite being on an Exhibit 10 deal, the sharpshooter told me he's not going to the G League if waived — "No shot."

More here as deadline nears for Knicks decision on final spot(s):…

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) October 15, 2025

Garrison Mathews​


On having a real chance at competing for a roster spot:

“That’s what (the Knicks) said (to veteran players’ agents). It’s a tough roster; let’s see what happens.”

On whether or not he’ll join a G-League team if the Knicks cut him:

“No chance.”

On his spacing value and making his case to join the Knicks roster:

“I bring a lot of spacing, and hopefully my space can help. Some of these guys get downhill. We’ve got great ball handlers on the team. So just the gravity I pull from defenders, hopefully it can help those guys out a little bit.”

On wanting to be part of a contender:

“[The Knicks] got a lot of stuff going for them. And I think they’re going to be a contender. I’m just hoping I can be a part of it.”

"And if there are NBA franchises interested in hiring a female, I'm here too, because you've got to be ready to take on that and all the things that it comes with."

Dawn Staley's response to a question about being the first woman NBA head coach 👏 pic.twitter.com/M3dhPitU3w

— espnW (@espnW) October 14, 2025

Dawn Staley​


On the chances of seeing a woman hired as an NBA head coach:

“No, I don’t [believe it will happen in my lifetime]. And I hope I’m wrong.”

On the challenges of being a female head coach:

“It’s not just hiring the first female coach. Because one, if I’m the Knicks coach and you have a five-game losing streak, it’s not going to be about the losing streak. It’s going to be about being a female coach. So you as an organization and a franchise, you have to be prepared about that and strong enough to endure those types of instances when you’re a female coach.”

On her motivation for interviewing with the Knicks and his hopes for landing the gig:

“Not really a whole lot. I did the Knicks interview because I’ve known Leon Rose for 30 years. I have a connection to him and Worldwide Wes. I’ve known them all my life. It was a real interview, and I like to see what they’re talking about.”

On offering help to other women pursuing NBA jobs:

“If there’s somebody that’s interested in knowing and being the first female NBA coach, I got all the information. Come see me because I’ll get you prepared for the interview. If there are NBA franchises that are interested in hiring a female, I’m here too because you have to be ready to take on that and all the things that come with it.”

it ain’t hard to tell… The Garden was the inspo 🧵👀 @DoorDash

🛒 -> https://t.co/xlnoi66CVI pic.twitter.com/1CCvzpgzyW

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 15, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...said-its-a-tough-roster-lets-see-what-happens
 
Malcolm Brogdon announces retirement from the NBA

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There were a lot of rumblings about how the Knicks would handle the last few spots on their roster. It seems inevitable that Mohamed Diawara, the No. 51 pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, is due to sign a standard deal to fill one spot, but the team still had just enough room to sign one player to a veteran minimum, or even sign two players and make a trade.

The competition seemed to include incumbent Landry Shamet, sharpshooting wing Garrison Matthews, Alex Len, and former Sixth Man Of The Year Malcolm Brogdon. The Knicks were keen on keeping two of these vets, so trade rumors circulated over the likes of Tyler Kolek, Pačome Dadiet, and even Deuce McBride.

Ultimately, the big decision was made several days before the Knicks had to decide on Saturday, but it was made by one of the players themselves. On Wednesday, Malcolm Brogdon announced his retirement from the game of basketball.

Just in: After nine NBA seasons, New York Knicks guard Malcolm Brogdon has decided to retire from basketball, he tells ESPN. Brogdon became the 2017 Rookie of the Year and 2023 Sixth Man of the Year after being drafted No. 36 in 2016. pic.twitter.com/nablWsQ9mu

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) October 15, 2025

It’s admirable to step away from the game at this point for Brogdon, whose story is a great one from when he was drafted in the second round by the Milwaukee Bucks in 2016. Too many players go out when their bodies fail them, or the league no longer sees a use for them. However, Brogdon decided to end it on his own terms despite a very good chance to crack the Knicks’ rotation.

Brogdon was selected No. 36 overall out of Virginia, where he was a two-time All-American in five seasons, but was entering the NBA as one of the oldest rookies in basketball, turning 24 in December of his rookie year. In a weak rookie class that saw Ben Simmons miss the entire season due to injury and saw many young players undergo growing pains, Brogdon became the first second-round pick ever to win Rookie of the Year, beating out Dario Saric and Joel Embiid, who played 31 games in his “rookie” year after missing two seasons with a foot injury.

(2016) Rookie Malcolm Brogdon dunks on Kyrie and LeBron in the same game —

Crazy. 🔥🔥

(via @HilltopNBA)

pic.twitter.com/acFIeZ9Oxn

— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) April 30, 2025

He continued to get better throughout his three seasons as a Buck, becoming a full-time starter alongside Giannis Antetokounmpo by the 2018-19 season and averaging 15.6 points and 3.2 assists on an elite 61.4 TS% despite some occasional injuries. His second-round contract expired after that season and he inked a four-year, $85 million deal with the Indiana Pacers as part of a sign-and-trade.

He further advanced his game in Indiana, averaging 18.9 points a night over 146 games across three seasons. He was limited to just 36 games in 2021-22, and with his injuries beginning to become a trend, the Pacers sold low by shipping him to the Boston Celtics for five players and a first-round pick. The five players were mostly cap filler, but the Pacers did acquire future Knicks’ tormentor Aaron Nesmith in this deal.

His lone year in Boston was great. In 67 games as the team’s sixth man, he averaged 14.9 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 3.6 assists, shooting a career-high 44.4% from deep and capturing Sixth Man of the Year in controversial fashion over our very own Immanuel Quickley. Brogdon was shipped out to the Portland Trail Blazers in the offseason in the deal that sent Jrue Holiday to Boston.

The last two years have been rough for Brogdon, playing a combined 64 games with the Blazers and Washington Wizards on non-competitive teams. His efficiency regressed and he turned in the worst year of his career (adjusting for usage) in 2024-25, but it was fair to assume that he just needed a rejuvenation from the gutters in Washington.

On September 15, the Knicks inked Brogdon to a non-guaranteed deal to compete for that last roster spot in a surprising move that thrilled the fanbase. Without a true bench ballhandler, Brogdon seemed like an obvious fit. Unfortunately, he looked a tad off at times and was generally unimpressive in the preseason, scoring 17 points with 8 assists and 9 rebounds in four games. He was a positive in the first three, posting a plus-19, but struggled with efficiency (5-17 FG, 2-8 3pt), and was a dreadful minus-30 in 18 minutes against the Wizards on Monday.

Newest Knicks Malcolm Brogdon get his first 3 as a Knick! pic.twitter.com/kr5hb5AyPj

— Knicks Fan TV 🏀🎥📺🏁 (@KnicksFanTv) October 2, 2025

For the Knicks, this likely brings the roster battle down to Shamet and Matthews, but it’s fair to wonder if the team feels the need to keep both. Both players are sharpshooting wings that do a lot of the same things, and keeping both would be redundant, especially at the expense of a young, promising wing in Dadiet and a floor general in Kolek (who might be the second-best ballhandler on the roster!). Not to mention that McBride should not be dangled in any trade talks.

Ultimately, how many second-rounders can ask for a better career than this? He played 463 games across nine seasons, started 296 of them, played on five different playoff teams and 43 total games, and averaged 15.3 points a night for his career. Not to mention, he’ll always have the 2016-17 Rookie of the Year and 2022-23 Sixth Man of the Year awards on his mantle.

Congratulations on your retirement, Malcolm!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...on-retirement-nba-kolek-dadiet-mcbride-shamet
 
REPORT: Knicks only have trade suitors for Deuce McBride amid roster crunch

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The New York Knicks’ roster crunch is about to come.

With the deadline to finalize their 2025–26 roster fast approaching and just a few days to make a final call, the Knicks face hard choices after loading up on veteran free agents late in the summer without room to carry them all into the regular-season squad.

The Knicks decided to chase and ink a few veteran, experienced players this offseason to complement an already-strong starting five and provide depth to it, strengthening a supporting cast that has been the weak link of the roster in the past couple of seasons.

A look at parameters for ‘extremely tough’ roster decision Knicks need to make by 5p on Saturday; Mike Brown says Steve Kerr helped him grow as a coach in GSW; Brown is looking to do the same for his coaching staff in NY: https://t.co/Q8jWVukyGl

— Ian Begley (@IanBegley) October 14, 2025

The three veterans competing for two roster spots are Malcolm Brogdon, Landry Shamet, and Garrison Matthews. Of those, at least one will necesarily have to go. Possibly, even if unlikely, the Knicks could also choose to add just one veteran to their final roster, letting the other two go.

“If the Knicks want to keep two of those three, trades involving Miles McBride, Pacome Dadiet, or Tyler Kolek are the most direct paths to do so.

“The Knicks also want to compete for an NBA championship this season. So every roster spot – and the decisions made around those spots – is crucial.” — SNY’s Ian Begley

Shamet and Brogdon have reportedly “held the edge” through training camp, and Mathews has also made his case because of his spacing and three-point-shooting prowess. However, keeping multiple veterans will force New York to sacrifice one or more younger players due to financial reasons.

“They will probably trade one of them to make room for two of Shamet, Brogdon, or Mathews,” Begley wrote.

NEW POD

Joined by @krispursiainen for an insider breakdown on the battle for the @nyknicks final roster spots.

-Do Mike Brown's comments on Pacome Dadiet offer any hints?
-Do Dadiet and Kolek actually have any trade value around the league?

LINKS BELOW! pic.twitter.com/KGjhI1b2Gk

— Locked On Knicks (@LockedOnKnicks) October 14, 2025

Kris Pursiainen of ClutchPoints dropped an even tougher report for Knicks fans to swallow, revealing on Wednesday AM that the Knicks are finding little traction in the market for their fringe players.

“Aside from McBride, the market for their other young talent has been dry,” sources familiar with the situation told Pursiainen.

“New York is still weighing its options ahead of Saturday’s deadline. Cap flexibility in the near future is also playing a role in their decision-making.” — ClutchPoints’ Kris Pursiainen

McBride remains the lone player generating meaningful outside interest, but with the Knicks getting into the 2025-26 season with one and only one goal in mind—title or bust—it wouldn’t make much sense to get rid of Deuce to just add two of Shamet/Brogdon/Matthews.

“League sources tell ClutchPoints that rival teams have made ‘worthwhile’ offers for the 25-year-old guard, which is unsurprising.” — ClutchPoints’ Kris Pursiainen

McBride averaged 9.5 points and 2.9 assists per game last season while shooting 38.6 percent from deep, establishing himself as a reliable rotation piece. He seems more confident about his game and role with the team this season, judging by his preseason outings, so it’s reasonable to expect those numbers to go up a notch this year.

Trading McBride, however, would require serious hesitation about his long-term future in New York, something the Knicks don’t believe is the case, or at least has not been reported anywhere.

“One source familiar with New York’s situation said that for the team to want to deal McBride, they’d need to have serious doubt that they could agree to a second extension with their 2021 draft pick.” — ClutchPoints’ Kris Pursiainen

The Knicks have until Saturday to cut any player to waive a player on a non-guaranteed contract and not incur a salary-cap charge. Then, the franchise will need to submit the final cap-compliant roster by Monday at 5 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-suitors-for-deuce-mcbride-amid-roster-crunch
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I’m just gonna go all out and lay it all out there’

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One day, just one day is all you have to wait to watch the Knicks play again.

I’d rather not, however, because it’s the preseason and you very well know how that might go.

Here’s some stuff heard around the Knickerbocker fam of late.

Reporter: "This might be a dumb question…"

Mike Brown: "It's not dumb."

Reporter: "We'll see"

Other reporter: "Wait" 😂 pic.twitter.com/Ky8adt6OK5

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 15, 2025

Mike Brown​


On Josh Hart’s ramp-up process:

“They’re ramping it up a little bit.”

On Hart’s preseason finale status and camp depth:

“Well, I don’t know yet [if he’ll be available for Friday], but first thing is, that’s why you got — we got 21 guys [in training camp]. We always talk about next man up, next man up and keep yourself ready because you never know when your number’s called. So it’s two-fold: It gets those guys mentally ready for that. It gives other guys opportunities. It gives me an opportunity to see others.”

On Hart’s importance and long-term outlook:

“At the end of the day, Josh is an extremely important part of our process. We know this is gonna be a process.”

On building a competitive culture:

“Hundred percent, yeah, and sometimes, we play a ton of games. Everybody in this business is a pro, and anybody that’s a pro can have an exceptional night. So sometimes, it just wasn’t meant for you to win, but if you’re trying to adhere to what your standard is, it’s all you can ask for, like you said, at certain times. You move on. But those things have to be here day-in, day-out, night-in, night-out, 24/7, 365 days a year.”

On realistic expectations for the start of the season:

“It’s not gonna happen Game 1, Game 2 — we’re not gonna come out, could we come out blazing? Yeah, who knows. We’re gonna have our highs. We’re gonna have our lows. Can’t get too high if it’s going good. Can’t get too low if it’s not. We gotta stay even-keeled and know that this is a marathon and not a sprint, at the end of the day.”

On testing team standards through adversity:

“That’s when you really know if people can adhere to stuff is when you hit adversity. Do you go right, do you go left or do you fight through it as a connected group?”

On building team culture and sacrifice:

“Our standard… is first thing, everybody’s got to sacrifice. You’ve got to sacrifice for one another at all times.”

On pushing OG Anunoby to run more:

“I know I’m pushing him to do that because I think he can be really, really good, him and Mikal in the open floor.”

"I guess when the game is sped up and there's more drive-and-kicks and taking shots that are open. I think it's an emphasis for everyone to shoot when open."

OG Anunoby was asked about the Knicks taking nearly 300 three-pointers so far in the preseason: pic.twitter.com/OVITXDKjWr

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 15, 2025

OG Anunoby​


On the team’s approach during preseason:

“I think we’re excited for the season to start. But we’re also still fortunate for these days to learn, grow, figure ourselves out and prepare for the long season.”

On adapting to Brown’s defensive system:

“Just the ball handler, the person guarding the ball knowing there’s help behind you and knowing where it’s coming from and the just everyone being on a string. We’re figuring it out as well. We’re not used to it fully, but it’s getting better and better, and I think the coaches are doing a good job of emphasizing to us, showing us on film where we need to be, and then we go out there and try to execute.”

On the team’s long-term trajectory:

“We just want to peak toward the end [of the regular season] and into the playoffs.”

On prioritizing development early in the season:

“Of course, you always want to win 50 games straight, but also you realize it’s a long season, so you’d rather learn and grow — especially early in the year — and figure stuff out.”

On developing his offensive decision-making:

“Knowing what to do when.”

On younger teammates fighting for roster spots:

“They all work really hard, they ask questions, they’re eager to learn and they play hard.”

On the team’s uptick in three-point shooting:

“I guess when the game is sped up and there’s more drive-and-kicks and taking shots that are open. I think it’s an emphasis for everyone to shoot when open.”

On learning Brown’s systems:

“I think we’re picking up on what he wants us to do.”

"We know what the situation is. There's no questions around what the reality of that is."

Landry Shamet talks about his conversations with the Knicks before he decided to return: pic.twitter.com/E7Ij6LvikU

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 15, 2025

Landry Shamet​


On his understanding with the Knicks entering camp:

“We know what the situation is. There’s no questions around what the reality of that is.”

On new offensive and defensive structure:

“Having a structure where everybody’s clear and understands our triggers and what we’re trying to do.”

On competing for a spot while being a good teammate:

“In this league, you’re measured on your pro, your readiness, and if you’re a good teammate. Those are things you can control.”

On lessons from the Eastern Conference Finals:

“There’s only a few things you can control — your energy, how you show up, what kind of teammate you’re going to be, your approach.”

Malcolm Brogdon posted this 24 hours ago pic.twitter.com/6W3fy0f8sD

— Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod 🇸🇴 (@big_business_) October 15, 2025

Malcolm Brogdon​


On his retirement:

“Today, I officially begin my transition out of my basketball career. I have proudly given my mind, body and spirit to the game over the last few decades. With the many sacrifices it took to get here, I have received many rewards.

I am deeply grateful to have arrived to this point on my own terms and now to be able to reap the benefits of my career with my family and friends. Thank you, from the bottom of my heart, to all who have had a place in my journey.”

Sometimes you have to slide for the win!

AN EPIC TIC-TAC-TOE GAME AT MSG 😱 pic.twitter.com/VqJsFd1kVW

— NBA (@NBA) October 14, 2025

Ghedalia Gold-Pastor​


On going all out to win in the tic-tac-toe war at MSG:

“I was like ‘I’m just gonna go all out and lay it all out there.’ And I did it. It was awesome. It was incredible.”

On his mindset before the contest:

“(The plan was) just lay it all out on the line. I don’t know if I’ll ever get another opportunity like this, ever, in an incredible arena with so many people there. I was like, ‘All right, I’m not going out of here with a loss.’”

On what he’ll do with the $500 prize:

“I might frame the check. Never even deposit it, we’ll see. Never forget the moment. I’ll see if I can get it autographed from the team.”

On setting the tone for the Knicks:

“We want to see the Knicks bring the same work ethic, the same will to win, the same competitive drive to what they do day in, day out. Just like I left it all up there on the floor for this tic-tac-toe game.”

This is an absolutely insane story behind Tupac's “Brenda’s Got a Baby” 🤯

Jeff Pearlman tracked down Davonn Hodge — the real baby the song was written about. What happened after that is truly unbelievable. pic.twitter.com/qttRiPsKyu

— Ariel Helwani (@arielhelwani) October 15, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ust-gonna-go-all-out-and-lay-it-all-out-there
 
Why do the Knicks sign and immediately release players every preseason?

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If you’re on social media, you probably noticed that the Knicks’ PR page was going into overdrive on Thursday, announcing various signings to Exhibit 10 contracts before being cut hours (or even minutes) later. While it might seem odd, you can find examples of this in prior years as well:

Knicks Waive Moses Brown

— NY Knicks PR (@NY_KnicksPR) October 10, 2024
Knicks waive Mamadi Diakite, Brandon Goodwin, Isaiah Roby and Duane Washington Jr.

— NY Knicks PR (@NY_KnicksPR) October 21, 2023
.@nyknicks Sign Brandon Goodwin, Waived Dwayne Bacon pic.twitter.com/jf3Sh7uxrS

— NY Knicks PR (@NY_KnicksPR) October 14, 2021

So what’s the big deal? Why do NBA teams do this every preseason?

Well, it’s as simple as acquiring their G-League rights. The NBA allows teams to designate four waived players as “affiliate players”. Now, players have a say in said decision, but if they sign a G-League contract, they’ll be assigned to the Westchester Knicks. But if you’re willingly signing an Exhibit 10 on the final day of the preseason, this reality has likely been communicated to you, so all of this is planned out. More information regarding eligibility and salary can be found here.

The Knicks signed and waived five players on Thursday, which is one above that limit. That said, I’d assume you find all five of them make their way to Westchester in the coming days.

Donovan Williams is no stranger to Westchester, as the 6’6” guard spent the 2024-25 season with the Knicks’ G-League affiliate. Williams was an undrafted free agent out of UNLV in 2022 and spent time with the G-League affiliates of the Nets, Hawks, and Warriors. He made his NBA debut on April 4, 2023, and scored four points in four minutes across two games with the Hawks that year. In Westchester last season, he averaged 19 points and 4.7 rebounds on 45.5% from the field and 39.8% from three in 19 games.

Isaiah Roby is a familiar name, as he spent time with the Knicks during training camp in 2023. After losing a competition for the last roster spot, he played nine games in Westchester, averaging 13.8 points and 9.4 rebounds on 42.9% from the field and 41.5% from three. The former No. 45 pick in 2019 has 151 games of NBA experience with the Thunder and Spurs from 2020 to 2023.

ROBY DOWN THE LANE💥 pic.twitter.com/WcoaSl6aSM

— Westchester Knicks (@wcknicks) March 27, 2024

Adama Bal briefly made it four Frenchmen on the Knicks’ roster, joining Pačome Dadiet, Mo Diawara, and Guerschon Yabusele. Bal was born in France, but played four years of college with Arizona and Santa Clara before going undrafted and signing to play in France in July. The 6’7” guard made two All-WCC First Teams.

Adama Bal with 23-4-3 on 9/11 FG vs Pepperdine

Continues to take advantage of opportunity, leading the way for Santa Clara as a shotmaker & playmaker. pic.twitter.com/tzZInsGthi

— Keandre Ashley (@HoopIntelllect) January 26, 2024

Romeo Langford might be the most well-known name here. The former No. 14 pick in the 2019 NBA Draft out of Indiana was a big disappointment for the Celtics across three seasons, only playing 94 games and only making 11 starts before he was traded to the Spurs in the infamous Derrick White trade. From there, he played just 47 more games in the NBA before going overseas in 2024, spending time in France for BCM Gravelines-Dunkerque last year.

Ibrahima Diallo is a Senegal native who played five collegiate seasons across three programs. After being a benchwarmer with Ohio State for two years, he transferred to San Jose State, where he led the Mountain West in blocks in 2022-23 before playing his fifth year at UCF, leading the Big 12 in blocks. The 6’10” big was a regular for the Spurs’ G-League affiliate last year, averaging 5.3 points, 6.1 rebounds, and 2.1 blocks in 32 games.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...aiah-roby-romeo-langford-donovan-williams-nba
 
Preseason Game Thread: Knicks vs. Hornets, Oct. 17, 2025

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The Knicks wrap up their preseason at Madison Square Garden, hosting the Charlotte Hornets in their final tune-up before the regular season. The Knicks are dealing with some injuries and roster flux, while the Hornets looked pretty good in their recent beatdown of Memphis. It’s a meaningless game on paper—but a strong finish would make for good vibes on opening night next week.

Tip-off is 7:30 pm EST on MSG Network. This is your game thread. This is At the Hive. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Be cool and considerate. And go Knicks!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...son-game-thread-knicks-vs-hornets-oct-17-2025
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘Every time I watch it, I get goosebumps’

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No more preseason play for the New York Knicks after they capped their exhibition tour with a 4-1 record.

The next time you watch your Knickerbockers play basketball will be Wednesday, when they take on the Cleveland Wannabe-Knicks.

Here’s the latest we’ve heard from Coach Brown and a couple players.

Mike Brown has shown the Knicks the clip of DK Metcalf chasing down Budda Baker after intercepting Russell Wilson to demonstrate buy-in of the "next play speed"

"I've watched it 100 times, it gives me goosebumps just to see somebody make the play" pic.twitter.com/EmnKTr1R3l

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 18, 2025

Mike Brown​


On Mitchell Robinson and preseason injuries:

“Mitch (was) out, load management, and then the other three guys we’re just being a little cautious with.”

On not having the full roster available during preseason:

“I would love to have everyone together, especially trying to play the way we’re playing with it being new to everybody, but it is what it is and we’ve still gotta go and win games.

Whether we had everyone or we didn’t [it’s important] for us to understand, ‘Hey this thing is going to be a marathon. It’s not a sprint.’ It’s not being at our peak on opening night. You’re always hoping and wishing you are, but they’re fighting their tail off. They’re learning quickly. They’re actually a little ahead of where I thought we’d be at this point.”

On final roster decisions:

“The door’s always open for a guy to gain an opportunity.

But the whole time, myself and [team president] Leon [Rose] and his group, we’ve been having discussions. Our minds change, just like everyone else’s minds change from time to time. But we’ll get through tonight and then take a little bit more time and then make the decision.”

On building rhythm entering the regular season:

“I’d love to have everyone together, especially trying to play the way we’re playing — it’s new to everybody.

But it is what it is. Whether we had everyone or not, this is a marathon, not a sprint. You hope to be sharp by opening night, but the goal is to keep moving forward.”

On injuries impact on his plans and the team progression:

“They’re learning quickly — actually a little ahead of where I thought we’d be.

But the guys who’ve been out, they’re the key pieces to what we’re trying to do. They haven’t gotten the reps, and for us to jell from top to bottom is gonna take more time than I thought, probably because of the injuries.

We’ve got capable guys ready to play when their numbers are called, and that’s what I’m looking forward to seeing.”

On players stepping up:

“I’ve said this before: any time you’re missing guys, it’s next man up.

Knock on wood, we could be missing guys during the season. So this is just another opportunity for players to step up and get a chance to play. We’ll go out and play with who’s available.”

On Mitchell Robinson’s availability:

“If it was a regular-season game — or a playoff game — to my understanding, Mitch was going to play.”

On what he saw from the team in the final preseason game:

“I thought we did some pretty good things tonight, especially starting two young guys in [Mohamed Diawara] and [Trey Jemison], but we played in spurts too many times.

We just gotta be a little more consistent with what we’re doing. And if we do, we’re gonna have a chance to be pretty good.”

On Jalen Brunson’s leadership:

“Great, great person. On top of that, his work ethic, I’ve been around some great ones, and his work ethic is right up there with them, if not exceeding some of them. That in itself gives him an opportunity to lead by example.

Now you factor in the fact that he’s not afraid to speak up, because if you’re in a leadership role, not everybody’s gonna like you all the time, and you have to be conscious of it.

But at times you gotta be direct because you don’t have time to beat around the bush and people have to feel that when you say something, not only do you believe in it, but you want them to believe in it as well. Definitely not afraid to use his voice. And I love him.”

On system execution and Jalen Brunson’s role:

“It’s gonna take some time for us to really, really click.

But you could see there are signs of it when we play with pace, not just in the full court, but naturally in the half court when the floor is spaced in the right way and we can get some easy shots, based on the talent that we have on this team if we keep the game simple and it starts with Jalen having a good feel, which he does, and just playing basketball from there.”

On Mikal Bridges’ impact:

“Mikal, he was really good.

He had six deflections in his minutes and a couple steals; both those guys got 50/50 balls, we won the battle in that area.”

On Mikal Bridges’ defensive intangibles:

“Mikal’s next play speed is unbelievable.

If a turnover happens or an offensive rebound happens, he does not hesitate, take an extra step in the opposite direction of the ball, right away, his change of direction and the flip of a switch from offense to defense is amazing. Probably one of the best I’ve been around.

And for him to get a couple of blocks the way he did, that’s just a testament to what he can do defensively, and I hope everybody is watching those small things that don’t always show up in the stat sheet because he’s a first-team all-defender. It’s evident.

There’s no question in my mind what he does out on the floor. And it’s a lot of the little things that he does that I hope don’t go unnoticed.”

On hoping for a close game to assess rotations:

“Don’t tell the players you said this, there was a part of me that hoped the game was a little close.

If it was a blowout, if we were getting our behind kicked or we were kicking their behind, then I would’ve been in a dilemma. I wanted Jalen and Mikal to play 34 minutes regardless. So it was a good enough game on our part and Charlotte’s part for it to happen.”

On how many players he planned to play:

“I went in wanting to play 10 guys, to take a look at 10 guys.

I have a minutes sheet I did, and I wanted to try to play the guys that I wanted to just take a look at.”

"A success" – Jalen Brunson on how he feels about the first @nyknicks preseason with Mike Brown as head coach.@jalenbrunson1 | @BillPidto | #NewYorkForever pic.twitter.com/Zu2geOP2bX

— KNICKS ON MSG (@KnicksMSGN) October 18, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On team progress:

“I think for us, as long as we’re moving forward every step of the way and getting better every single day, that’s where we want to be.

We don’t want to be plateaued, we don’t want to be one spot. We want to continue to get better every day. And there are going to be days where we don’t get better and we play bad and we take steps back, but it’s all about how we progress and move forward. So I mean, we’re not where we want to be, but we’re going to work to get there and continue to get better.”

On playing regular-season minutes in the preseason finale:

“It felt good. Got my rest last game, and I was scheduled to play tonight and played.”

On why preseason reps matter:

“This is the best type of experience you can get.

You could do all the stuff in practice you want, or whatever, as much as you try to simulate it, it’s not game reps.”

On where the team stands:

“We have a lot to do to be where we want to be.

It’s all gonna come down to how hard we work, how much we’re willing to sacrifice, and just staying together through the ups and downs.”

On his love for DK Metcalf:

“Russell Wilson threw an interception at the goal line. If you watch DK Metcalf, it was bam, right now. He went from possibly catching the ball or scoring a touchdown, then an interception happened. He didn’t hesitate, didn’t step toward the sideline — it was right now.

Every time I watch it, I get goosebumps. I’ve watched it probably 100 times.”

"He's a first team all-defender. It's evident. There's no question in my mind of what he does out on the floor. It's a lot of the little things he does that I hope don't go unnoticed"

Mike Brown lauded the defensive effort of Mikal Bridges tonight: pic.twitter.com/pgPx4U6QA0

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 18, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On the state of the team heading into the regular season:

“We’re still learning each other.

Still learning the system. Obviously, we still got a lot of guys out. So, I think it’ll be better once we get our full team back, and get our full rhythm.”

On the identity the team is trying to build:

“We’re still trying to figure out who we are.

Obviously we’re missing some key guys, but I think we’re starting to get a little bit of a rhythm. But it’s going to take time, and we just gotta keep working at it.”

On playing through defensive lapses:

“We can’t let our offense affect our defense.

We gotta find ways to be solid on defense even if shots aren’t falling.”

Alan Hahn: “Leon Rose…You talk about somebody who’s obsessed with winning a championship—I got to spend a little time with him in the summer and it’s impossible not to notice it. It’s all he wants to do right now. He knows they’re close” pic.twitter.com/KY7h5Kwb67

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 18, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...lletin-every-time-i-watch-it-i-get-goosebumps
 
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