Knicks go from empty chairs to a full house in one day

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For weeks, the Knicks were the loneliest roster in the league: twelve players under contract, a couple of rumors, and a row of empty chairs. Training camp allows 21 bodies, and New York looked unprepared to fill their quota.

Ye of little faith. That changed yesterday when, in one furious paperwork spree, the front office rounded out the squad. Eleven players got inked, two were cut before their names were finalized, and the team reached its camp capacity.

The top-line additions are straightforward: Malcolm Brogdon and Landry Shamet bring veteran guard depth, while Alex Len adds size and a Mike Brown connection. Nothing says “roster balance” like carrying five centers, and it is sensible when one of those big men is injury-prone (cough-Mitch-cough).

The developmental tier features Tosan Evbuomwan, Mohamed Diawara, Kevin McCullar Jr., Trey Jemison III, Matt Ryan, and Garrison Mathews. Some of them will land two-way deals, others will end up in Westchester, but now every spot comes with real competition. Here are a few guys hoping to turn heads in camp.

Tosan Evbuomwan


A 6’8″ forward from Newcastle, England, Evbuomwan switched from football (the other kind) to basketball at 14. He starred at Princeton, where he scored 1,033 points, earned 2022 Ivy League Player of the Year award, and led a 2023 NCAA upset over Arizona. Undrafted, he played in Detroit’s system, had a coffee with Memphis in 2024, then signed with Brooklyn in 2025, averaging 9.5 points in 28 NBA games with a high of 22 against Utah. He stood out in the G League with outings like 39 points vs. Grand Rapids.

Mohamed Diawara


The 6’9″ Paris native rose through INSEP and Paris Basketball, earning 2022 Basketball Without Borders MVP and medals with France (U17 bronze, U20 gold). After loans to Poitiers and Cholet, he averaged 5.8 points and 3.1 rebounds in France’s top league, showcasing a 7’4″ wingspan and defensive versatility. Drafted 51st in 2025, he projects as a high-upside, switchable forward.

Kevin McCullar Jr.


At 6’7″, McCullar overcame injury at Texas Tech before transferring to Kansas, where he led the Big 12 in scoring as a senior (18.3 PPG) and finished 11th all-time in steals. A three-time Naismith DPOY semifinalist, he went 56th in 2024 and signed a two-way contract with New York. For the club, the sophomore could be a defensive stopper with connective offense if he has overcome his knee issues.

Trey Jemison III


The 6’10” center from Alabama transferred from Clemson to UAB, where he led Conference USA in rebounding. Undrafted in 2022, he bounced through Memphis, Washington, New Orleans, and the Lakers, flashing rebounding and rim protection with G League highs like an 18-board game vs. Osceola. He’s valued for his grit in the paint.

Matt Ryan


A 6’7″ sharpshooter and former Mr. New York Basketball, Ryan bounced from Notre Dame and Vanderbilt to a breakout year at Chattanooga. Undrafted in 2020, he worked delivery jobs before cracking the NBA with the Lakers, Timberwolves, and Pistons. Selected first overall in the 2024 G-League Draft by Westchester, he rejoined the Knicks twice in 2025. A career 37.5% three-point shooter, Ryan provides floor spacing.

Garrison Mathews


The 6’4″ Lipscomb legend (2,478 points) turned a handsome college career into NBA stints with Washington, Houston, Boston, and Atlanta, shooting 37% from deep across five seasons of limited action. A classic microwave scorer.

Alex Len


The 7’0″ Ukrainian center, drafted fifth in 2013, has logged 12 NBA seasons with Phoenix, Atlanta, Sacramento, Toronto, Washington, and the Lakers, averaging 6.7 points and 5.3 boards over 680 games. He played under Mike Brown in Sacramento, earning late-season minutes behind Sabonis. He joins the Knicks on an Exhibit 9 deal, potentially adding size and veteran depth to a crowded frontcourt.

Who ya like? Did you notice the trend of big men, too? One odd man out seems to be OAKAAKUYOAK Dennis Smith, Jr. He worked out for the team earlier this week but failed to stick, evidently.

Thus, after a long period of roster limbo, the Knicks now have a packed gym and some real contests on their hands. Bring on the gladiators!

Go Knicks.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-from-empty-chairs-to-a-full-house-in-one-day
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I haven’t played 2K after that’

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If you think it’s been too long since the last edition of the Bulletin, you’re not wrong.

If you can’t wait for the start of the season — hell, the preseason or even training camp or, yikes, media day — well, you’re like me and we’re almost there!

Here’s what a couple Knickerbockers have publicly said of late.

"He was just some chubby guy…we picked him 33rd…His go-to was a spin or move to the left & he'd fall away & never got the foul…Now his midrange is money…That's what you don't know when you draft…mental capacity…will they work hard to improve"

– Mark Cuban on Jalen Brunson pic.twitter.com/4wYCMrOgFN

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

Jalen Brunson


On team chemistry and continued improvement:
“I think we’ve been taking steady steps every year. The best part about our team is the chemistry we’ve grown and we’ve created. A lot of people help us on this journey, and to be able to be where we are now, it’s nothing to be satisfied about. Hopefully we don’t have that mindset going into the season where we think we’re just going to jump back into the Eastern Conference Finals. We need to be able to go through this process again and continue to get better and the fight to get over that hump.”

On the importance of team unity after roster changes:
“It’s going to take all of us. It’s not going to take just one change or another small thing. It’s going to take all of us together to kind of put everything aside and pull together.”

On Karl-Anthony Towns’ impact on the Knicks:
“He’s been phenomenal for us, in the locker room has been great. On the court, he’s been great. The things that he’s been able to do in a short period of time being a Knick has been amazing. Having him as a teammate has been really fun. I think that gets overlooked how good of a teammate he is. Obviously, he’s a great player and what he does on the court. But the teammate he is and what he brings to the locker room for us is special. So I’m really happy to have him.”

On why Karl-Anthony Towns is a unique player:
“Don’t think you can compare him. He shoots the ball so effortlessly, and he can make plays. He has great touch around the rim, so he’s pretty much his own person. He picks different games of styles of basketball, and kind of makes it into his own.”

On learning from playoff experience:
“I think our process and everything we’ve been doing going forward has been great for us. It’s been a great test, having learned. Everyone says, ‘Oh, you need to get experience.’ Well, this is us getting experience. This is literally us going through the trials and tribulations of being a good team. So continue to do that and just find a way to see what can we do to get over that hump.”

On personal goals vs. team success:
“All my personal goals are team-based. If everyone’s able to feed off that, that’s all I’m worried about. I’m not really worried about anything that benefits me solely if it doesn’t help us to get where we’re going.”

On not being a big NBA 2K fan:
“I’m not a big video game player and I’m not a big 2K player. I’m very thankful for my rating, obviously. I’m in the 90’s. I think in my first year in 2K I was made right-handed. I haven’t played 2K after that.”

Deuce McBride just released a children’s book titled “Deuce: The Champion of Friendship” 🔥 pic.twitter.com/xGpqDf2fVj

— The Strickland (@TheStrickland) June 18, 2025

Deuce McBride


On what excites him about Mike Brown’s new system:
“I’ve talked to [Brown] a lot, and I think the big thing is just going to be a lot of player movement. He’s giving us the foundation, and we’re just going to work off of it. So I’m really excited to see all our creativity with each other that we’ve been working on these last couple months. Really excited to see where it takes us.”

On becoming a father and author at the same time:
“It was a crazy thing to put out a children’s book and then have my daughter be born really at the same time, lining up. But it means so much more, just the fact that she’s going to grow up with a dad who was able to do something like this. And hopefully have more books coming after this.”

On Kobe Bryant’s post-retirement impact:
“It’s kind of interesting because I really wasn’t a Kobe fan growing up. And then after he retired and started leaving a legacy off the court of giving back to the game, that’s when I really became more of a fan of his. Since I was younger, I always wanted to grow up and be a role model for younger kids. And I felt like doing a children’s book would be a good start in leaving a good legacy.”

On the reception of his book:
“We’ve had some people order pretty large amounts of the book, people at the public readings for their classrooms and for their schools. So it’s been pretty well received.”

On planning his next book project:
“I’ve started thinking about the next book and excited to see where the journey takes me.”

Put this in the Smithsonian. #STAYME7O pic.twitter.com/TnHoVntJBK

— Knicks Fan TV 🏀🎥📺🏁 (@KnicksFanTv) September 6, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/73584/knicks-bulletin-i-havent-played-2k-after-that
 
Depth will once again be a strength for the Knicks

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It wasn’t that long ago that the #1 thing the Knicks could hang their hats on was their depth.

Go back to the 2022-23 season. The team had a good starting lineup of Jalen Brunson, RJ Barrett, Quentin Grimes, Julius Randle, and Mitchell Robinson, but that lineup didn’t gel that much. It was the bench, consisting of Immanuel Quickley, Isaiah Hartenstein, Deuce McBride, Josh Hart, and Obi Toppin. They had two veterans on lucrative deals, Evan Fournier and Derrick Rose, as emergency depth.

The next season, although Toppin departed, the team grew stronger with the addition of Donte DiVincenzo. From 2022 through the end of December 2023, the Knicks were as deep as any team in basketball, albeit with a lack of high-end talent to seriously contend. It was on December 30, however, that the Knicks began to coalesce and try to take the next step by sacrificing depth for elite talent. Out went Barrett, Randle, DiVincenzo, Grimes, and even Hartenstein through free agency; in came OG Anunoby, Karl-Anthony Towns, and Mikal Bridges.

Taking a sledgehammer to the depth was a necessary evil, but it also limited the Knicks’ ceiling in 2024-25. Predictably, Tom Thibodeau overused the starters with a lack of capable depth, and while the overuse didn’t backfire, the team would have few options when their starting five got predictable and turned into a negative lineup by the end of the season. Mixing in a healthy Robinson and McBride helped, but those lineups never gelled early because both battled injuries. Landry Shamet, Delon Wright, Precious Achiuwa, and Cam Payne filled in, but showed little aside from flashes.

"Yeah we here. F*ck you talkin bout"

–– Cam Payne to Dennis Schroder after Schroder pushes him down and Payne scores 9 of the Knicks 21 straight in the 4th pic.twitter.com/j7Ccx7hiiJ

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) April 20, 2025

Fast forward to mid-September. Training camp is about to begin across the league, and the only Knick to hit free agency last offseason that has a job is Shamet, who re-signed a week ago. The other three haven’t even secured a camp invite. That says something when the Knicks signed eleven people in about a week to fill their roster ahead of a preseason trip to Abu Dhabi. It would not be very hard to upgrade the depth from last season, but given their lack of resources, the Knicks did a great job.

They agreed to a veteran minimum contract with microwave bench scorer Jordan Clarkson after he cleared waivers to start free agency. Next, they inked forward Guerschon Yabusele to a two-year deal with the taxpayer mid-level exception. After two months of radio silence, they signed a small army to compete for the last roster spot(s), but ultimately, it’ll be between the incumbent Shamet and a valuable secondary ballhandler in Malcolm Brogdon. Even the two-way players have promise, as Tosan Evbuomwan and Trey Jemison III showed flashes last season of being able to fill in as emergency depth.

It really is night and day. Last year, you struggled to see how the Knicks could go beyond a nine-man rotation. There were nights that they had to go into their stash of unproven, not-ready rookies. This year, the Knicks will go in with a stable nine-man rotation with several options behind to mix and match.

We don’t know what Mike Brown will do with the starting lineup, but he has options. If he goes double big with Robinson alongside Towns, you could find spot minutes for second-year big Ariel Hukporti off the bench. If McBride starts, you could still use him in a variety of different lineups as a spot-up shooter that can share the floor and mask the defensive concerns of Brunson and Brogdon. He could even experiment with Yabusele as the fifth starter after his strong Eurobasket performance, and the team would have the depth to mix-and-match lineups.

Guerschon Yabusele 36 points and 6 threes vs Poland🐻 pic.twitter.com/SHnq0wEIbl

— Teg🚨 (@IQfor3) September 2, 2025

While the team isn’t perfectly fluid (example: Brunson will never share the floor with Clarkson, hopefully), they boast enough pieces to be able to run many different types of lineups.

You want defense? How’s a McBride, Bridges, Shamet, Anunoby, Robinson lineup sound?

Last possession of a quarter? You could see the big four and one of several offensive dynamos, depending on the situation.

Non-Brunson lineups? Brogdon can be the backup facilitator. If Mike Brown is creative enough with his rotations, he’ll be able to use Bridges and Anunoby in many different situations, staggering them to supplement lineups that feature substandard defenders. If Big Mitch is healthy, it’s even better.

The biggest problem in my mind is that this isn’t NBA2k. Players have egos, and the Knicks now might not have enough minutes to go around. My lone problem with signing a guy like Brogdon is that I struggle to come up with lineups that involve two of him, Clarkson, and Brunson. None of those guys are even average defenders, and when you add the possibility of KAT playing alongside them? Mike Brown is a great offensive mind, but I’m not sure sacrificing defense like this is the move.

Someone is gonna get upset with the lack of minutes. Prior to training camp last year, there were grumblings of a discontent DiVincenzo before the trade due to a likely reduced role. Veterans who sign short-term deals are always looking for an opportunity to parlay into a new payday. The Knicks need their big four to play a lot to get to where they need to go, so it’s not like they’ll be playing under 30 minutes a night.

Ultimately, it’s a blessing, not a curse. There’s a chance things could get messy down the road, but the moral of the story is that the Knicks have real depth again. If they can deploy it properly, there will be a variety of lineups that they can run and get experience with over the course of an 82-game season.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...obinson-brogdon-shamet-hart-clarkson-yabusele
 
2025-26 Player Preview: Jordan Clarkson

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Two seasons ago, just before the 2024 NBA trade deadline, I wrote a piece arguing why the Knicks should trade for Jordan Clarkson. The team needed depth and scoring off the bench, and I felt Clarkson’s game, along with his flashy personal style, was exactly what the Garden crowd would embrace. I wrote it with the utmost sincerity, with a touch of humor, but it ended up drawing more backlash than any article I’ve ever published. The comments came hard, targeting both Clarkson as a player and me for even suggesting the move.

The real reason the Knicks need Jordan Clarkson

Eighteen months later, I couldn’t be happier that he’s a Knick. Sure, he just turned 33 this past June, but his game hasn’t slowed down. I know there will be nights when he puts up 15 shots and can’t buy a bucket. But there will also be plenty of nights where he catches fire and becomes “Simply En Fuego.”

Over the past three seasons with the Jazz, Clarkson’s production has steadily declined. Just three years ago, he averaged nearly 21 points per game as Utah’s starting shooting guard. Since then, injuries have hampered his consistency, but when healthy he still provided valuable scoring punch, averaging just under 17 points in 28 minutes off the bench while shooting around 40% from the field over the past two seasons. It’s no secret that he wasn’t brought in for his defense, but if he can replicate his level of play on the offensive end, Clarkson could give the Knicks’ second unit the spark it has been missing since Immanuel Quickley’s departure two seasons ago.

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At 33, with injuries limiting him to just 153 games over the past three seasons, Clarkson comes with some risk. The Knicks acknowledged that by signing Malcolm Brogdon, adding another layer of backcourt stability. Brogdon isn’t expected to cut into Clarkson’s minutes, but if Clarkson ends up sidelined again, the Knicks now have reliable insurance.

While much of the Knicks’ rotation still carries question marks, whether among starters or role players, Clarkson’s expected role is certain for the time being. He’ll step in as the backup shooting guard, and fans can expect him to play roughly 25–30 minutes per game. Some nights he will drive us all mad, but I can also guarantee that there will be other nights that he becomes another Knicks fan favorite player.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-analysis/73382/2025-26-player-preview-jordan-clarkson
 
Knicks to work out three veterans as training camp approaches

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Eight days.

That’s how long until the Knicks have their media day before beginning their training camp the next day. Just eight days later, they’ll be in Abu Dhabi and take the floor for the first time in the preseason. That’s less than three weeks until Knicks basketball, albeit at noon on a Thursday in a foreign country.

Most of the Knicks’ roster and blueprint for success in the 2025-26 season is set, but the team still has plenty of openings on their training camp roster. Teams are allowed to carry up to 21 players on their camp roster, and the Knicks only currently have 15 players set (12 standard, 3 non-guaranteed contracts). Outside of them, they seem pretty likely to tender some sort of deal to bring Kevin McCullar Jr., Mo Diawara, and maybe even Dink Pate into camp for two-way consideration. That leaves three vacant spots, who can sign non-guaranteed deals and be easily waived before the start of the season.

As such, Leon Rose looks to fill that roster after already signing three veterans to non-guaranteed deals. Stefan Bondy of the New York Post revealed the Knicks intended to bring in Alex Len, Trey Jemison III, and former Knick Dennis Smith Jr. in for workouts and potentially a spot on the training camp roster.

Sources: Knicks working out DSJ this weekhttps://t.co/UnEqxP0Rl7

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) September 15, 2025

There’s value in bringing these guys in. Clearly, at this stage in the offseason, they’re just willing to get onto a training camp roster as teams fill their guaranteed roster spots. While not all of the veterans that won’t make the roster will stick around after, it’s reasonable to assume that one or more could wind up spending time with the team’s G-League affiliate, similar to T.J. Warren and Chuma Okeke last season, and be around if needed.

Len, drafted fifth overall back in 2013, is a 12-year veteran center who’s played for the Suns, Hawks, Kings, Raptors, Wizards, Kings, and Lakers. Len is a clear fit for this workout, spending 2.5 seasons in Sacramento under Mike Brown before the coach was fired and Len was bought out, spurning the eventual Eastern Conference champion Pacers for the Lakers, who saw him as so unplayable towards the end that they willingly let Rudy Gobert run around like prime Shaq in the first round. He has career averages of 6.7 points and 5.3 rebounds on 51.0% from the field and 32.3% from three (although on limited attempts).

Jemison III, undrafted in 2023 out of UAB, debuted with the Wizards in January 2024, playing a grand total of 89 seconds before signing on as a fill-in on the utterly decimated 2024 Memphis Grizzlies, who’s comical amount of injuries resulted in G-Leaguers like Jemison start 14 games. He would play 38 games in 2024-25 with the Pelicans and Lakers, as the 6’11” big man showed an ability to be capable emergency depth, averaging 4.2 points and 3.8 rebounds on 55.2% from the field over 63 games with the four teams.

Lastly, Smith Jr. is a familar face. DSJ was picked in the first round by the Mavericks in 2017, a pick that led to the Knicks being mocked for passing on him for Frank Ntilikina (neither panned out). Of course, DSJ fell out of favor after 1.5 years and the emergence of Luka Doncic, resulting in him being shipped to New York as the centerpiece for Kristaps Porzingis.

He would only play 58 games over parts of three seasons, occasionally wowing with his athleticism, but ultimately disappointing. He averaged 8.7 points, 3.7 assists, and 2.4 rebounds on ghastly 37.9/28.4/55.6 shooting splits. His 44.0 TS% as a Knick is ridiculously bad. The only player with a worse TS% in the last decade over a full season is 2015-16 Emmanuel Mudiay (coincidentally DSJ’s eventual teammate here). That’s not good! He did participate in the dunk contest once, though.

Ultimately, he fell out of favor and was banished from the rotation once Tom Thibodeau arrived in Tarrytown. Smith would play just three games in the 2020-21 season before the Knicks traded him to Detroit on February 8 for Derrick Rose, one of Leon Rose’s best moves as the team’s President of Basketball Operations. He would bounce around the league from there, playing for the Pistons, Trail Blazers, Hornets, and Nets before going overseas for the 2024-25 season. He would only play four total games for Real Madrid before parting ways in February.

I’d be shocked if any of these guys made the Knicks’ roster. Maybe in a pre-CBA world, they’d have a shot but the Knicks being so perilously close to the second apron means they can only roster one. Even if they make a move, it’s two at best, and you’d assume Landry Shamet and Malcolm Brogdon would be first in line.

But hey, more the merrier!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-len-trey-jemison-dennis-smith-brogdon-shamet
 
Knicks fill two-way roster spots ahead of training camp

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The Knicks made a million and one moves this week, filling out their training camp roster with a plethora of Exhibit 10 and Exhibit 9 deals. Amidst the flurry of Twitter notifications, I’ll forgive you if you missed the Knicks filling out all three of their two way roster spots along the way. But fill them they did.

There’s one familiar face and two Knicks newbies. Let’s take stock of who’ll split time between the Garden and Westchester this season.

Kevin McCullar Jr.

Last year’s 56th overall pick, McCullar’s rookie year on the Knicks was undermined by injury troubles. After a strong college career that finished up at Kansas, McCullar suffered a bone bruise down the stretch of his senior season. He subsequently missed Summer League and the majority of the season, only appearing in 13 games for the Westchester Knicks. Despite ramping back up to game speed, he played superb down the stretch, capitalized by back-to-back 20+ point triple doubles in March.

He kept the good play up this July, shining as one of the featured players at this year’s Summer League. After a 30-point performance in his second game, the Knicks were impressed enough to shut him down for the duration of the event.

His play was enough to convince the front office that he deserved another crack at a two-way deal, and New York put pen to paper earlier this week.

.@nyknicks Sign Kevin McCullar Jr. to a Two-Way Contract pic.twitter.com/mqOwQ7KkpS

— NY Knicks PR (@NY_KnicksPR) September 16, 2025

It’ll be exciting to see if McCullar can ultimately contribute with the parent club this season.

Trey Jemison

Jemison is an imposing 25-year-old center, measuring in at 6’11”, 260. He’s been a transactions report sweetheart, already playing for the Wizards, Grizzlies, Pelicans, and Lakers in his two years as a pro. The Knicks are his fifth team already, and he’s hoping he can stick in New York.

Jemison has appeared in 63 NBA games to this point, averaging 4.2 points and 3.8 rebounds a game. He’s a good vertical threat on both sides of the floor, and his rebounding chops make him a solid backup big candidate in the league.

For more on him:

If (and when) the Knicks center rotation gets banged up over the course of the year, Jemison could step in and provide decent plug-and-play minutes off the bench. It’ll be interesting to see his development over the course of the season in Westchester.

Tosan Evbuomwan

Evbuomwan is a versatile 24-year-old, a 6’8”, 220 lb forward, known for his offensive versatility and scoring chops.

The Princeton graduate burst onto NBA radars, starring for the 15-seed Tigers in the 2023 edition of March Madness, and also arrives in New York well-traveled. Most recently, Evbuomwan averaged 9.5 points per game for the Brooklyn Nets, showing flashes of consistent NBA production.

His strong three-point shooting at the G-League level hasn’t translated to the NBA – yet. If he can get his shot going like he knows he can, he could be a lock to get minutes at the highest level (even if not ultimately with the Knicks).

Obviously, it remains to be seen if he can play a role for the Knicks this year, but, interestingly, New York filled out the end of its roster with two older players with NBA experience.

The message is clear: the time to win is now.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...l-two-way-roster-spots-ahead-of-training-camp
 
If Jalen Brunson pulled a Kawhi Leonard, I’m done with the Knicks

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As Ballmergate continues to leak new details daily — or, depending on your stance, KawhiGate or UncleDennisgate — there is a growing sense the scandal is a $28 million canary in a big ol’ expensive coal mine called the NBA.

Some sports fans want to forever segregate the games they love from politics, social justice or anywhere people are suffering who shouldn’t be. If you’ve read me before, you know I don’t. A well-meaning work comrade once defended me after someone complained about my mixing of mediums. “Anyone who’s ever read Miranda knows he always brings politics into his sportswriting.” They meant well, but that’s never how I’ve thought about it.

We live in a world of constantly intersecting worlds. To write about people, period — athletes or otherwise — as if they exist in a vacumn apart from the rest of us is a child’s fantasy. Some people are rich enough to never give a damn. Not me, and never mine. I don’t add politics to the mix. It was always already there.

When Pablo Torre broke the news that former employees at the now-defunct Aspiration claimed Leonard was given a $28 million no-show endorsement deal to circumvent the salary cap, I thought “They’re def guilty, they’re too rich and powerful to get in any trouble, and Adam Silver is the owners’ mouthpiece incarnate. Ballmer’s the richest owner in the league. They’ll kill this story off in a week or so.” Turns out life has a funny, funny way . . .

This story matters, for so many reasons. The NBA’s latest collective bargaining agreement is a punishment pact its fans never asked for. The onset of free agency used to be as exciting a week as any in the NBA calendar. The dynamics at play as player power grew, most publicly via LeBron James in 2010 and Kevin Durant in 2016, offended the owners, i.e. dozens of billionaires used to floating above any and all concern in their bubbles of impunity. The fans — materially fundamental to the league, yet materially neglected by it — looooove free agency. Remember DeAndre Jordan and the emoji wars? This past offseason, the biggest player to switch teams was Myles Turner. The most suspenseful story has been Jonathan Kuminga and Quentin Grimes having staring contests with restricted free agency.

Whoopee.

Meanwhile, the league insists the new CBA is necessary to create more parity, insisting that’s what the fans want. Were you lucky enough to witness the 1960s Celtics? The ‘80s Celtics and Lakers? The ‘90s Bulls? The Shaq/Kobe Lakers? The Heatles? The Steph Warriors? You know what the reaction was as those teams ascended. Excitement. Tension. Drama. Could anyone knock them off their perch? If not, where did they stack up historically?

Not only does dismissing dynasties ignore the essential work 60 years of non-parity did making the league into what it is, what an insult to the legacies of teams like the Minneapolis Lakers, the Dr. J 76ers, Don Nelson’s Bucks, the ‘90s Knicks, the Rasheed Wallace Trail Blazers and the James Harden/Chris Paul Rockets. That’d be like applauding over-stressed, exhausted hospital workers in the early days of a terrifying, death-spiraling pandemic, only to have more and more children dying of treatable diseases like measles and whooping cough because too many too-comfortable people think science is black magic. Ignore the past and it rises up like bile in your throat.

When you’re on your deathbed, you think the Raptor-Laker-Buck-Warrior-Nugget-Celtic-Thunder one-and-done era of champions is gonna appear in the parade of life memories flashing before your eyes? (I included the Thunder ‘cuz the Knicks are winning the title this year, natch).

In politics and in sports, fuck-you money has become an infestation. The NBA insists, in spite of all evidence to the contrary, that fans want parity rather than dynasties; whatever profits came from those olden days is old money. Herb Simon may be 90 years old but he’s still alive, so his money’s new money and new money’s the money that talks. The only sport that’s never had a salary cap is MLB. The three that do, those paragons of fairness and enlightenment? All have significantly cut the players’ share of the revenue split after instituting a cap: since the NHL did in 2005, the players’ share is down from 57% to 50%; since the NBA’s cap in 1984, it’s 57% to 51%; the drop is steepest in the NFL, whose cap came in 1994 — 64% to 48% today.

NBA fans have always loved dynasties, whether rooting for them, against them or just marveling at the spectacle. We know adding a cap guarantees less money over time for the players. It doesn’t benefit the fans. It doesn’t benefit the players. It benefits those with the fuck-you money. Ballmer keeps testing the limits of whatever standards of credulity we still claim to cling to, even as Torre continues to overhand smash every weak defense the Clippers have lobbed. Ballmer’s obscenely wealthy, even among the obscenely wealthy. If anyone might wager his moneybin’s big enough to lie and buy all the justice he needs, it’d be Ballmer. And the league would help. At least he hasn’t poured gas on the controversy by saying Magic Johnson having HIV means he’s no hero. Ballmer’s their boy.

James Dolan is not. So when a friend messaged me tonight “Did you hear about Pablo Torre looking into the Brunson contract?” . . . you know when theatres decorate with masks showing one laughing face and one crying? It me. When your team is finally legit for the first time since pre-9/11 yet their owner is channeling his inner Al Davis, often being the lone turd in his billionaire brothers’ punch bowl, you can’t help but laugh, and cry, and repeat.

When Ballmer took over in L.A., he succeeded an unholy and barely sentient amalgam of Theoden’s dementia (before Gandalf breaks the spell) and Donald Trump’s racism, sexism and aura of sleaze. Most importantly to the league, the Clippers were a trainwreck under Sterling for 30 years. Ballmer is the richest boss in the Association and the Clippers have posted 14 straight winning seasons, most of them 50-plus wins (or that pace during COVID-shortened seasons). Ballmer may violate the one thing the league insists is its competitive line in the sand, but he can simply build them a new beach, one with no cumbersome accountability to worry about. Look to your left. Look to your right. It’s happening all over.

I don’t know any Clippers fans — I don’t think I ever have. I suspect any rule-breaking and lying on Ballmer’s part means less to many of them than their team being a model of stability and success that finally has its own arena — the one hosting this year’s All-Star Game. There is this bizarre, vocal minority of usually younger Knick fans who’ve Stockholm Syndromed themselves into thinking Dolan is some unfairly targeted scapegoat, but I imagine a supermajority of Knick fans would not halt their stride if they heard Lucky Sperm Jim were in hot water.

But Brunson? I can’t go there. I can’t. I won’t. If it turns out Brunson worked with the Knicks to arrange some kind of off-the-books salary cap shenanigans, I’m done. I’m out. Maybe because it’s scummy. Maybe more for lying about it while accepting so much praise for lying about it. If they’re lying. Which maybe they’re not?

The most disappointing movie I’ve ever seen was House of 1000 Corpses. Spoiler: it is not an uplifting film. Spoiler II: it ends with a girl who’s been kidnapped, imprisoned and tortured all throughout finally escaping. She finds a road and is walking down it when she flags down a passing car. If I remember correctly it’s a cop? She tells him everything that happened to her, and her friends — all of whom are dead — and he tells her to get in. When she does, he drives her right back to the house. Turns out he’s in on it too. Fuck that. I can live without light. What I can’t live without is hope.

Jalen Brunson hasn’t just been the Knicks’ best player the past three years. He hasn’t just scored a lotta points or thrown some nice dimes. I don’t know if the Knicks will ever win it all with him leading the way. I’d love that, but I don’t need it. Brunson’s already done enough that I dreamed of seeing and feeling but never thought possible. Take his public face as the Knick captain.

Patrick Ewing had a mixed relationship with the public. Sometimes he could be aloof in interviews. He could sound — or be portrayed as having sounded — like he wanted to be both left alone and adored by the very same fans he didn’t seem to adore. I couldn’t stand when he’d be interviewed after losing to Chicago and insist every time that the Knicks were the better team. The first time, I was 13 and thought he was a prophet, ahead of his time. The next time he said it, I thought, “That’s leadership. He’s keeping them motivated.” Eventually, it can’t not sound like what it is: delusional. Could be a Georgetown thing; Alonzo Mourning lost to the Knicks three years straight and swore each time from the losing locker room that the Heat were the better team.

Carmelo Anthony was too cool for school, which is cool when you’re the scoring champ leading your team to its first only good year in over a decade. When that one year is the only good year you lead them to, the grace the fans and media extended starts to shrink. I do think athletes like Melo are easy to paint as selfishly caring about their personal interests more than the team’s needs, not because they’re inordinately selfish — how many of you honestly care more about your performance at work than everything else in your life? — but because there’s more money and more media than ever. We have a greater understanding of what athletes can indulge in and more coverage of that indulging at the exact same time that more and more of us don’t have enough of what we need.

Brunson winning next year’s slam dunk contest would surprise me less than learning he agreed to an off-the-books end-around, that someone whose father made more than $5 million playing ball, who himself earned that much in Dallas before signing a $104 million deal with the Knicks, then extending for another $156 mil, whose seeming selflessness earned him all the praise and adulation and faith of a long-suffering fan base that’s collectively mentally ill after waiting so long through so much ugliness for a reason to hope . . . lied about it? All because the world and everything in it is still not enough?

Everything Brunson says and does suggests this is the guy. He’s Him. We cycled from one false messiah through another over the years before a miracle occurred. And yet if it turns out there’s fire where there’s smoke, it’s a bridge too far for me. I’ll thank the ‘bockers for all the memories and be on my way.

I used to be an NFL fan — Jets and Giants. I stopped following both around 2012. There was nowhere for me to turn as a fan and not feel gross. The owners would give their own mothers CTE if it meant higher profits. The media covering the sport grew increasingly docile and hands-off as they went from covering the league to partnering with it (Pablo Torre writes for The Athletic, not ESPN or NBC; if he worked for one of the NBA’s media partners, does this story ever see the light of day?). The players had bigger problems with the possibility of a gay teammate than one who beat and rapes women. Sayonara.

I’ve always thought I sensed something different about Brunson, an obvious and brilliant intelligence. Maybe I did. Maybe I projected what I wanted to see. Maybe he’s a slick actor; maybe he’s the real deal. But the NBA is supposed to be entertaining. It’s supposed to be a diversion from *gestures at a burning world*. It’s supposed to feel good, be fun.

Millions and millions and millions and millions of people within these borders are less safe than they used to be. Some are my family. My friends. My former students. One is me. The rapists and the racists and the eugencists are all having a moment while the money keeps funneling up and the pain keeps pouring down. At the heart of it is the same genocidal illogic that’d explain Brunson and Dolan, the son of a millionaire and the son of a billionaire, cheating — that the only thing those who have it all long for is more.

In a time when more and more of us make do with less and less, I can’t write a possible Brunson scandal off as just “business as usual.” Business as usual is killing us all. I can’t deal with it killing the Knicks, my favorite escape, finally being good. Say it ain’t so, Jalen. C’mon, man.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ulled-a-kawhi-leonard-im-done-with-the-knicks
 
40 Questions Knicks fans will want to ask on Tuesday’s Media Day

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For most of the NBA, Media Day isn’t until late September. But for New York Knicks fans, this particular Christmas-like event will come earlier this year.

Given that New York is among the teams participating in this year’s Abu Dhabi preseason games, the Knicks will get an early start with Media Day scheduled for Tuesday, Sept. 23.

For a fanbase that has been waiting more than half a century to celebrate a title, waiting 24 more hours to watch and hear their superheroes at the podium won’t hurt that much.

After a summer of minimal “chaotic” roster changes but a mammoth shift on the bench coming off the Knicks’ first taste of Eastern Conference Finals basketball in over two decades, the 2025–26 season starts right about now.

Media Day will allow us to see how the Mike Brown era begins to take shape, as Knicks fans will finally hear from the new honcho outside of his introductory presser, get a look at the team’s superstars from Jalen Brunson to Karl-Anthony Towns and everyone in between, and listen to the first words coming out of Jordan Clarkson and Guerschon Yabusele’s mouths while clad in orange and blue threads.

Questions this time will matter more than ever as New York embarks on a legitimate title-or-bust season, and we cannot be more excited about it.


The First Words from the New Mike Brown Era


What should Knicks fans want to hear?

We’ve put together a list of potential Media Day questions we’d love to see answered. Use this as a checklist — and think about which players or staff you want to hear from, and what you’d like to hear them say.


The Roster: Fit, Flow, and First Impressions

  1. How is the chemistry going to work with a few new faces set to take on large second-unit roles?
  2. Will the leadership dynamic change with Tom Thibodeau gone?
  3. Who’s the loudest voice?
  4. Who’s setting the tone from the get-go, judging by their answers at Media Day?
  5. What’s the one word you’d use to describe this year’s team?

  1. How do Malcolm Brogdon and other backups see themselves fitting if they make the final roster?
  2. What does Jordan Clarkson bring to the Knicks other than #leaguefits?
  3. What role is envisioned for Guerschon Yabusele, and how much will he play early on?
  4. What’s the energy like in the locker room during the first hours together?
  5. Which new teammate surprised you the most when you first got to meet him?

  1. What part of the playbook are you picking up quickest after joining the Knicks?
  2. What feels most different about this camp compared to last year, if you were there already?
  3. Who do you expect to guard most in practice, and how can that help you?
  4. What specific offseason work did you focus on?
  5. Who’s the young player with the highest upside going into camp?

  1. What’s your biggest adjustment so far?
  2. How do you handle training camp so you arrive at the regular season at your peak?
  3. Who’s the funniest teammate around?
  4. Who will be playing DJ inside the locker room?
  5. What’s your biggest off-court hobby?

The Coaching Staff: Mike Brown’s Vision


With Mike Brown replacing Tom Thibodeau, the tone shift will be front and center.

  1. What defines a successful first year on the MSG sideline?
  2. What’s your top priority for training camp?
  3. How will you deal with accountability compared to Thibodeau’s demanding style?
  4. What’s the most important lesson you’ve carried into your first season with the Knicks?
  5. Which assistant coach will feature most prominently next to you?
  6. Will we see a 10-man-deep rotation this year?

  1. Will we see more ball movement and offensive focus, or will you instill a strong focus on defense first?
  2. What will be the defining defensive trait of this team under your guidance?
  3. What does the ideal pace of play look like to you?
  4. What’s the biggest change Knicks fans should expect stylistically?
  5. How will you manage the point guard minutes between Brunson and all backup options?
  6. How do you integrate offensive-minded players like Clarkson into your system?

The Front Office: Big Picture Moves


Fans deserve answers on the team’s vision, and although we know the Knicks FO will remain silent — and then some — there are a few questions to ask Brown and the players that might reveal some stuff.

  1. Why did you feel now was the time to move on from Tom Thibodeau?
  2. What role did player input have in the hiring of Mike Brown?
  3. How close does the front office believe this roster is to title contention in terms of pending moves to make?
  4. What’s the long-term vision for this core with the Knicks going absolutely all-in for the championship now?
  5. What’s your message to fans about the 2025–26 Knicks? Title or bust?


Media Day is the first checkpoint of the season and the first time this year we’ll get to watch and listen to our beloved Knickerbockers. So, what do you want to hear most?

Let us know in the comments section below:

  1. Which question above matters most to you?
  2. Who are you most excited to hear from on Media Day?
  3. Would you ask anything else to those present at Media Day on Tuesday?

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ons-knicks-fans-cant-wait-to-ask-on-media-day
 
Knicks Bulletin — Media Day Spectacular: ‘If I don’t start, I’ll probably ask for a trade’

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Can’t believe my eyes, fam.

The New York Knicks gathered for the first time after an endless summer of nothing, answering all sorts of questions at Media Day before the squad gets training camp going this week and plays their first preseason game in Abu Dhabi in less than ten days!

Here’s everything we heard from Mike Brown and his pupils on Tuesday.

Mike Brown is asked about utilizing Jalen Brunson off the ball:

"The biggest thing I want to do for him is get easy shots. One of the easiest shots is a spray three…I'm a big proponent of touching the paint and spraying that basketball for a catch-and-shoot three" pic.twitter.com/ywzk3Z8CPY

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Mike Brown


On playing time philosophy and his plan for the new Knicks rotation:
“I try to play as many guys as I can, man.”

On the Knicks’ roster construction and training camp competition:
“We feel like the group Leon [Rose] and his staff have put together is talented and deep. So you have to be methodical when it comes to declaring, ‘Hey, these guys are going to start.’ That will materialize throughout camp.”

On naming the starting lineup:
“It’s too early to lock in a starting lineup. We’ll let camp play out.”

On using Jalen Brunson off the ball:

utilizing Jalen Brunson off the ball:

“The biggest thing I want to do for him is get easy shots. One of the easiest shots is a spray three.

“I’m a big proponent of touching the paint and spraying that basketball for a catch-and-shoot three.”

On his expectations for the 2025-26 Knicks season:
“First thing, I don’t know if anyone has higher expectations than me. I love being in a position where you feel expectations.”

On how the starting lineup will look and who will make it:
“It will materialize throughout camp. I think it’s too early to go in and say hey, this is what’s going to happen. The roster, Leon did a fantastic job putting together a talented, deep roster, and so you have to be methodical with your approach when it comes to declaring, okay, these guys are going to start.”

On Mikal Bridges:

“His momma raised him right.”

Jalen Brunson: "We're gonna have a set of goals and we're gonna––"

(door opens)

Rick Brunson "Speak well son"

(door closes)

Jalen: "They shoulda took him too"

🤣pic.twitter.com/Bo8nkn5ltw

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) September 23, 2025

Jalen Brunson


On Tom Thibodeau’s firing:
“It’s sad to see a man I’ve known for a long time part ways with this organization. He’s meant a lot to me. I’ve expressed that to him publicly and personally. He’s meant a lot to my career up to this point.”

On recovering from last season’s conference finals loss:
“It took me a while. Obviously, you think about it. It’s always good to have short-term memory to focus on what’s going on ahead and figure out how you can be better. You can learn from the things in the past. But it’s definitely not something easy to just get over.”

On his ankle injury and his health entering training camp:
“No setbacks. I feel great.”

"I love it here. I love the fans, the culture, the staff, the front office, the teammates. That's probably the biggest thing.

Last year was tough throughout the season. Playoffs helped a little bit. But I can appreciate the fans and everybody.

A lot of people thought I might be… pic.twitter.com/G4wCLSDW58

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Mikal Bridges


On taking less money to sign with the Knicks:
“I think if I came in here and preached how much I want to win then tried to take every dollar and make it difficult for the organization, I would be a fraud, and that’s not who I am.

“I love it here. I love the fans, the culture, the staff, the front office, and the teammates. That’s probably the biggest thing. Last year was tough throughout the season. The playoffs helped a little bit. But I can appreciate the fans and everybody.

“A lot of people thought I might be upset because they were getting on me a little too hard. But I think I was more mad at myself in the situation, because everything they want is what I want. It’s not like a, ‘Why y’all getting on me?’

“Some things can be a little too crazy, but that’s just life how it is. We all want the same goal.”

On last season’s conference finals loss:
“Getting that close and losing, no, it was not fun at all.

“Use that for fuel, take it day by day. Can’t get to June without going through all these other months.”

On Mike Brown’s offense:
“I played against those Sacramento teams and how fast they were –– it was not fun guarding those guys.

“We all know how to hoop, we all love each other, so just go out there, try to make the right read, and win games.”

On Tom Thibodeau’s firing:
“Anybody losing their job – I’m a human first, always – so I feel for somebody going through that. I always appreciated Thibs here, a great guy and everything. Always felt for him.”

On what was the best thing that happened to him this offseason:
“Spent a lot of time with my dog.”

Q: "Do you have a preference, center or power forward?"

KAT: "My preference is winning"pic.twitter.com/VaE2X4GuEf

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) September 23, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns


On his reaction to being traded from the Timberwolves to the Knicks:
“Obviously, it stung. I called that place home for nine years. I’ve built my life there, I’ve had so many memories there. So, it’s kind of like that first breakup. It was tough.”

On his preference for the starting lineup:
“My preference is winning. That’s the only preference I got.”

On supposingly having a “knee procedure” during the summer:
“No, I did not have a knee–where are you hearing this? Who did that, Centel?”

On the vibes ahead of the upcoming season:
“It’s gonna be a fun year, man. We’ve got a great team. Everyone’s coming back feeling good about themselves.”

Josh Hart starts out an answer about willing to do whatever the Knicks need in regards to their starting lineup with a joke: "If I don't start, I'll probably ask for a trade" 🤣

He continues: "I had the best year of my career last year, but that's in the past. I think I'm a… pic.twitter.com/lkrkbM43py

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Josh Hart


On playing through finger injury:
“I don’t want to go into too much detail, but obviously I got a procedure on it then kind of re-aggravated it somewhat recently. So I’ll probably just rock out with a splint this season and try to fix it again next summer.

“I don’t think about it too much. If I can’t play how I play, I’ll figure out a different path. But right now the full expectation is to go out and hoop. Then, end of the year — now I actually know what’s wrong instead of last year, realizing it’s worse than I thought. That said, I’ll be good.”

On Tom Thibodeau:
“I love Thibs and will always love Thibs. He put me in the position to be successful and get paid.”

On Mike Brown:
“Very excited about his addition.”

On the idea of not starting:
“If I don’t start, I’ll probably ask for a trade.”

On what he envisions as his role this season:
“I had the best year of my career last year, but that’s in the past. I think I’m a starter in the league. I think I deserve to be a starter in the league.

“But at the end of the day, it’s about what’s best for the team. Last year, I talked about sacrifice the whole time and being a good steward of my gifts and those kind of things.

“It would be extremely selfish for me to go out there and demand to start. Whatever Mike [Brown] wants to do, or doesn’t want to do, I’m cool with.”

On New York basketball:
“With all due respect to other places I’ve played, New York is the Mecca.

“People really wear their heart on their sleeves. They come to show love That energy is what makes you feel that difference. Everything’s better in New York.”

First Day of School 📸 pic.twitter.com/j66pacN8aU

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-if-i-dont-start-ill-probably-ask-for-a-trade
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘If he said that, then my idea already goes to thinking of Steph Curry’

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I acknowledge there might be repetition in today’s Bulletin.

My excuse: yesterday was a mad day for Knicks Nation, and we rushed to give you all of the coverage from Media Day as it unfolded, as quickly as we could following the wrapping up of the open-mic sessions.

Anyway, here’s everything I think was said yesterday after going through all the quotes and soundbites heard on Tuesday.

Mike Brown is asked about utilizing Jalen Brunson off the ball:

"The biggest thing I want to do for him is get easy shots. One of the easiest shots is a spray three…I'm a big proponent of touching the paint and spraying that basketball for a catch-and-shoot three" pic.twitter.com/ywzk3Z8CPY

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Mike Brown​


On establishing a team identity and style at training camp:

“That will emerge as we make the decisions. But one thing we want to make sure we do offensively is we want to play fast, get the floor spaced — not just in the full court but in the half court, too — with a certain cadence. And then defensively, we want to be physical. We want to get people to feel us. And we want to do so without fouling. So those are two things at the forefront of what I’d like to get accomplished with this team.”

On helping Jalen Brunson and creating easier opportunities for teammates:

“He seems like he’s a versatile player. The biggest thing I want to do for him is try to get him — as well as everyone else — easy shots. And one of the easiest shots in the game of basketball is a spray three. I’m a big proponent of touching the paint and spraying that basketball for a catch-and-shoot three. Within what we do, we are going to try to give [Jalen] a lot of those situations.”

On Brunson embracing an off-ball role:

“We want [him] to keep moving. The little bit that we’ve seen so far from Jalen during these optional workouts, he seems like he’s embraced it. Because you have to be in great condition to play this way.”

On how to get a slow team to play faster:

“That’s the first thing. Tell them to be faster.”

On how pace begins with wing play, not point guard tempo:

“For us, the biggest thing is get to the corners. We got to have guys who are capable of getting to the corners quickly. If you have guys who commit to the corners — especially guys who can shoot the ball and make plays like we do on this team — then that’s going to flatten the defense. And it’s going to start the dominoes to fall. So we emphasize that.”

On playing time philosophy:

“If you look at what I’ve done in the past, it’s usually 9-and-a-half to 10 guys. I try to play as many guys as I can. Even when I was in Sacramento and we had an injury during the season, there was a point in time when I started a two-way guy in Keon Ellis. So I’m going to try to play who is going to help us win — and I’m going to try to get guys an opportunity. Hopefully, with as deep as our roster is, everybody will get an opportunity at some point in the course of the season.”

On embracing pressure and expectations:

“When you have a target on your back, you have to bring your best every time you step on the floor.”

Rick Brunson poked his head into Jalen Brunson's media availability. Jalen's response:

"They should've took him, too" 😭😭 pic.twitter.com/qN6h99AdYY

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On adapting to a new role and style under Mike Brown:

“I made it work. I’ve always been in different roles throughout my career, even in college. When I lock in on a role, figure out how I’m going to be best with it I’ve done pretty well with it. So try to keep that same thing going.”

On accepting changes for the team’s success:

“Yeah, we’ve got to obviously be willing to adapt, be willing to change, figure how we’re going to be the best team possible moving forward. If you want to win you’ll do it. It’s that simple.”

Josh Hart talks more about needing to wear a splint this season:

"I hate playing with anything on my hands, I don't have a good feel for it. Might take a little getting used to, but that's the best scenario for me right now. I want to be out there with these guys." pic.twitter.com/9M0uUYd6Di

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Josh Hart​


On questions still surrounding the team’s identity:

“I don’t really know, honestly. I think we are going to have to figure it out.”

On how playing fast could unlock the team’s potential:

“I think playing fast is gonna help us get to another level. When you got guys like Mikal and OG [Anunoby], who can play very good off the catch and getting them into transition and getting them into position where they can attack the basket and make plays. And then you got guys obviously like Deuce, who can attack the rim and knock down shots, it causes the defense to collapse, which gives Jalen and KAT more space. The ball finds energy. We do that, obviously it trickles into all other aspects: making sure defensively we’re there and communicating and those kinds of things. So, I think it’s gonna help a lot.”

On playing with a splint due to finger injury:

“I’m just trying to get used to it, and then get through the season with it. I don’t wanna go into too much detail, but I obviously got a procedure on it and then kinda re-aggravated it somewhat recently. So probably just rock out with a splint this season and try to fix it again next summer.”

On adjusting to the injury during the season:

“It’s something that a lot of people have it. I don’t think about it too much. I just try to go out there and play how I play, and if I can’t play how I play and be aggressive and kind of have that toughness mentality I normally play with, then I have to figure out a different path. But right now, the full expectation is to go out there and hoop and help this team be successful and at the end of the year — [maybe I will get surgery] when I have some downtime and I actually know what’s wrong instead of last year thinking it was one thing and then taking a break and getting back into basketball and it was worse than I thought. With that being said, I’ll be good.”

"It's gonna be a fun year, man. We've got a great team. Everyone's coming back feeling good about themselves"

– Karl-Anthony Towns pic.twitter.com/Bsv9h6BkOX

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On helping Jalen Brunson get better looks in the offense:

“If Mike has said that, then we’re going to have to do a better job of getting [Jalen] open. And in a way like Steph Curry, we’re going to have to go find ways to make it easier for him to get the ball in space and help him get clean looks at the rim. Again, I don’t know too much right now, but what I can say is if he said that, then my idea already goes to thinking of Steph Curry. How do we find ways to get him open with screens and movement that can help make it easier on him getting to the basket or shooting the ball?”

On what to expect from the team this season:

“I don’t know truthfully yet. But I know just for us, we just going to go out there, I can’t speak on that yet because I truly don’t know, but what I can say is that I know our team is unified and our team has the continuity needed to achieve great things and we showed that last year and we’re going to build off of that from last year to this year and put our best foot forward this year.”

On the team’s high expectations:

“I think last year showed us that we can do anything possible with our minds and we made the sacrifices and we’ve shown the world that we’re willing to sacrifice for the betterment of the team. So I expect nothing less than that this year. I feel our team is going to be even more unified. It’s going to have more continuity, a whole year together, an offseason obviously is going to give us a better understanding of each other and we understand the opportunity that’s in front of us.”

On his health and denying surgery rumors:

“Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Don’t put those words out there. I did not have finger surgery or knee surgery. No, I did not have a knee procedure. … Who [posted] that? [NBA] Centel?”

On what new additions bring to the team:

“I’ve played JC [Jordan Clarkson] for years [out West]. He’s a fierce competitor. Obviously we all know what he can do when he’s scoring the basketball. So he’s going to be a benefit for us — a huge benefit. And Guerschon, we’ve all seen what he can do. Biggest stages, he’s showed up. And those are two big additions to our team. I’m excited for this team. We have great depth. That gives us a chance to feel good about any part of the season — whatever the trials and tribulations, the ups and downs — we have a team that’s fully ready to go regardless of the situation.”

"Getting that close and losing, it was not fun at all. You can be more grateful, but our expectations are different. We use that for fuel…you can't get to June without going through all these other months. Worry about the now and get prepared."

– Mikal Bridges pic.twitter.com/gUqpR3YlAl

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On why he took less money to stay with the Knicks:

“I think if I came in here and preached how much I want to win and tried to take every dollar and make it difficult for the organization, I’d seem like a fraud and that’s not who I am. I want to win bad, and whatever it takes.”

On prioritizing teammates getting paid over personal salary:

“I love all our guys here, so why wouldn’t I want the next man up who needs some money, why wouldn’t I give them an opportunity to get paid as well? So I think I’ve got a good amount of money. I don’t think a couple more Ms will change my life.”

On Jalen Brunson setting the tone with his own pay cut:

“Knowing Jalen and being around him, that’s the same thing — his mindset is wanting to win bad. Do whatever it takes to win, and he cares about his teammates, too, and is gonna make sure everybody eats in this situation.”

On re-signing with New York and his relationship with the fans:

“[I re-signed here] because I love it here. Love the fans, love the culture, love the staff and everybody, front office, everything, teammates. That’s probably the biggest thing. I know throughout last year, last year was tough throughout the season and the playoffs helped a little bit, but I think I just appreciate the fans and everybody. I think a lot of people thought I might be upset because everybody was getting on me too hard, but I think I was more mad at myself because everything they want was what I want. So it’s not like a ‘Why y’all gettin on me?’ Some things get a little too crazy, but that’s just life how it is.”

Fired

2025 ECF 2024 champs pic.twitter.com/MedKbVKaOH

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) September 23, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/73685/knicks-bulletin-xxxx
 
5 reasons John Hollinger is wrong about the 2025-26 Knicks

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In his annual projecting of five NBA teams who’ll finish below their projected win total, The Athletic’s John Hollinger included the New York Knicks. The line he used has them winning 53.5 games this season. Hollinger thinks they’ll win fewer.

He’s wrong. In like five different ways. Lemme show you, alternating his reasons with the appropriate counterargument. For free.

Hollinger: “The Knicks won 51 games last season with a coach (Tom Thibodeau) who is renowned for his willingness to totally disregard any bigger-picture ramifications in pursuit of wins in the here and now. And we’re saying, after replacing him, that they’ll win more regular-season games this season? The logic doesn’t compute.“

Clever girl, Johnnie! But sophisms don’t fly here at P&T. It’s true, Thibs loves winning the way we all wish somebody loved us — unconditionally, with total abandon. And yes, that led him to play five starters 35+ minutes per game, only the 10th time that’s happened in league history. But while dying in the name of love gets us right in the feels, a far greater love indeed is living for the one you love. Most coaches get fired for losing. Thibs got canned ‘cuz his way of winning is Pyrrhic.

Mike Brown’s got two 50-win seasons and two 60-win seasons under his belt as a head coach. He just led the Sacramento Kings, who are if Groundhog Day were about Fredo Corleone, to their best two years in 20. He isn’t any less driven to win than Thibodeau. Only now when the Knicks are up 25 with four minutes left in a game, he’s not gonna leave ‘em in another three and a half minutes. Ideally, Brown translates into winning smarter, not harder — or less.

Hollinger: “Yes, the Knicks’ top seven players are good and the East is weak, but New York was also mostly healthy last season (Mitchell Robinson being the main exception); the five starters missed a total of 40 games.”

First, can we not just gloss over the first two truths he rushes past? The Knicks’ top seven players are good. They were last season when none of them Towns arrived like five minutes before training camp and had never played with Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart, OG Anunoby or Mikal Bridges; Bridges had college experience with Brunson and Hart but no professional history with any of them. They were new to each other and still managed to win 51 games learning on the job.

And need I remind you — stop me if you’ve heard this one — the Knicks went 0-10 a year ago against the league’s three winningest teams. One of those teams doesn’t exist anymore, in Boston, so that’s 2-4 wins the Knicks figure to add this time around. It’s difficult to sweep a really good team 4-0 two years in a row, so if for no other reason than probability it’s safe to say the Knicks don’t lose every game they play against Cleveland this season (winning on opening night would take care of it!). And the Thunder . . . are still really gosh darn good. The Knicks could definitely lose both games against OKC again. Still, they should pick up a decent haul by improving their record against the Celtics and Cavs.

Orlando should be better, and possibly Detroit. The Knicks were 3-1 last year against the Magic, 1-3 against the Pistons. I don’t see them losing much ground there. Who else in the East are we talking about? The Bucks? The 76ers? The Hawks? New York went 7-0 against the first two, 3-2 against Team Trae. You see them dropping from 10-2 to 6-6 against them? Since when is Myles Turner Bill Russell? Since when do the Sixers know what they’re doing? Mr. Young’s carriage turned into a pumpkin four years and he hasn’t been back to the big-time since. The top of the East isn’t going to beat the Knicks up any. As for the bottom half, the less said the better.

And while Jordan Clarkson, Guerschon Yabusele and whoever emerges from the Malison Brogthews/Mattdry Shayan royal rumble for the last two veteran minimum spots aren’t ceiling raisers, many of them are in fact pro basketball players. Hollinger’s right that the Knicks are unlikely to enjoy the good health they did a year ago. He neglects that they’re also better built to withstand the inevitable bumps and bruises — within reason, natch.

Hollinger: “Meanwhile, any upside of this roster already seems pretty much locked in, right? All the key players are either in their prime or turning the corner out of it, except reserve guard Miles McBride. There are no notable young players waiting in the wings, and New York has no assets left (or space below the collective bargaining agreement’s second-apron payroll threshold, for that matter) to acquire more.”

12 months ago, most of the Knicks had never played together. Now they have. Boston and Cleveland weren’t just two of the league’s most talented teams a year ago; most of their key players had already played hundreds of games together. The Knicks were equally talented, but nowhere near as experienced. You remember your early days of lovemaking? You learned anything since? I’m willing to bet you have. Willing to bet the Knicks have, too. The roster is better than last year, they’re more familiar with one another and they shared winning and losing deep in the playoffs as a family. They’re working from a stronger starting point.

Hollinger: “As a secondary consideration, the depth situation beyond the top eight players looks somewhat dire, particularly at forward. The Knicks are forced by their second-apron situation to keep only 14 players and may need to backstop the last two roster spots with late second-round picks who normally would be on two-way contracts. Pacôme Dadiet and Tyler Kolek don’t exactly seem primed to take the league by storm either. Should injuries hit, this could slide downhill fast.”

You can make the case philosophically for why the Knicks should be full speed ahead and damn the torpedoes chasing a title when they’re closer than they’ve been since the 1990s. You can just as easily claim they can’t afford to overlook developing a youthful vanguard, given every rotation player besides Miles McBride was born in the 1990s and none besides Deuce come cheap. What you can’t argue is that their last two roster spots going to players who in the past might not have received them, and who might be now more for reasons of finances and flexibility than pure merit, is exclusively a Knicks thing. It’s growing increasingly common under the new CBA.

Jake Fisher wrote in The Stein Line that the Warriors “are planning to have No. 56 overall pick Will Richard on the Opening Night roster in part because Richard’s first NBA contract would put the minimum possible strain on Golden State’s tax bill. Cleveland had agents abuzz before the draft because the Cavaliers had gotten the word out that whoever they drafted at No. 49 was likely to be signed … and then they backed it up by doing exactly that with second-round selection Tyrese Proctor of Duke.”

It sucks that teams feel pushed to prioritize anything other than talent when rounding out their roster. But if it’s happening across the board, it’s not likely to hurt the Knicks more than it is any other team, especially given their added depth this year.

Hollinger: “Maybe I’m too pessimistic; the Knicks’ roster is strong at the top, and the East is a soft puddle. But go back to the big picture: Transitioning from Thibodeau to Mike Brown wasn’t a move made for the sake of increasing the regular-season win total. I suspect the results will also reflect that.”

The hiring of Mike Brown was the Knicks coming out of the closet as Veruca Salt. Under Thibodeau, their regular-season successes came at the expense of ultimate playoff glories. Now, they want it all, and they want it now. There’s reasons to doubt; there always are. But there are just as many if not more to think the best is yet to come.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...n-hollinger-is-wrong-about-the-2025-26-knicks
 
2025-26 Matchup Preview: Atlanta Hawks

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Four years ago, the Knicks were unceremoniously booted from their first playoff appearance since 2013 by a young, exciting Atlanta Hawks team that would go on to finish two games shy of the NBA Finals. In the last four seasons, the Hawks have regressed to a perennial play-in team, missing the playoffs in each of the last two seasons after play-in exits, while the Knicks have emerged as contenders, improving every year to being on the cusp of the NBA Finals themselves in 2025.

After four years of debilitating mediocrity, the Hawks have retooled and made moves to attempt to make a move in a weakened Eastern Conference. Have they done enough to revitalize this rivalry, or will it remain a one-sided (one-player) beef?

Knicks’ Record vs Atlanta in 2024-25: 3-2

  • November 6, 2024: Hawks won 121-116
  • December 11, 2024: Hawks won 108-100 (NBA Cup Quarterfinal)
  • January 20, 2025: Knicks won 119-110
  • February 12, 2025: Knicks won 149-148 (OT)
  • April 5, 2025: Knicks won 121-105

While the two teams didn’t come close to fighting for playoff seeding or squaring off in the playoffs, their regular-season matchups had plenty of fire. Starting in November, the Knicks were still trying to figure stuff out with their brand new crew and were the recipients of the Zaccharie Risacher breakout game. The French rookie dropped 33 points in his best performance of his young career, as the Hawks took down the Knicks in Atlanta to open the season series.

The two teams faced off in the NBA Cup in December, which saw the Knicks open up a double-digit lead early and lead by as much as 10 in the third quarter, only to get smothered in the second half. A 29-8 run over just under nine minutes in the third quarter flipped the game and saw the Hawks advance to Vegas. In the closing seconds, Trae Young mimic’d rolling dice on the Knicks’ logo in a situation that was deeply overblown.

From there, the Knicks didn’t lose again to Atlanta. In January, the Knicks rallied from a shaky first half with an explosive third quarter. Mikal Bridges and Jalen Brunson combined to score 60 points on 24-for-35 from the field in a needed win for morale at MSG.

In February, the two teams faced off in a playoff-like atmosphere with preseason levels of defensive intensity. Nobody could defend worth a damn, as the two teams combined for 297 points in an OT affair. Trae was spectacular (38-19), but the Knicks got 44 from Karl Anthony Towns, 36 from Brunson, and 26 from… Precious Achiuwa? The Big Sneeze started with OG Anunoby out (in case you wondered why the defense was so poor) and had one of his best games in a Knicks’ uniform.

The matchup in April was a rare fifth game in the season series. The Hawks were stuck in play-in irrelevance and were without Jalen Johnson, Clint Capela, and others. The Knicks were without Brunson, Mitchell Robinson, and Deuce McBride themselves, but eviscerated the Hawks’ defense. They led by as much as 33 and scored 108 points through three quarters before coasting and making it look closer than it was.

Knicks/Hawks 2025-26 Schedule:


Sat, Dec 27, 2025: Knicks @ Hawks (8:00, MSG)

Fri, Jan 2, 2026: Hawks @ Knicks (7:30, Prime Video)

Mon, Apr 6, 2026: Knicks @ Hawks (7:00, Peacock)

Atlanta’s Offseason Moves:


In:

  • Kristaps Porzingis (trade)
  • Nickeil Alexander-Walker (FA)
  • Luke Kennard (FA)
  • N’Faly Dante (FA)
  • Asa Newell (draft)

Out:

  • Clint Capela (Rockets)
  • Caris LeVert (Pistons)
  • Terance Mann (Nets)
  • Larry Nance Jr. (Cavaliers)
  • Georges Niang (Celtics then Jazz)

The Hawks’ big move was swapping out their big men, finally moving on from Clint Capela to acquire Kristaps Porzingis from the unloading Celtics. Porzingis has tortured the Knicks since he was traded to the Mavericks in 2019, but was a ghost in last year’s postseason due to a mysterious illness. Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Luke Kennard also jump on board to add key depth, shooting, and defense.

They not only lost Capela, but microwave scorers in LeVert and Mann. Georges Niang was a hair away from cashing a crushing buzzer-beater against the Knicks last season, but has been banished to Utah.

Projected Starters


PG: Trae Young (ATL) / Jalen Brunson (NYK)

SG: Nickeil Alexander-Walker (ATL) / Mikal Bridges (NYK)

SF: Dyson Daniels (ATL) / OG Anunoby (NYK)

PF: Jalen Johnson (ATL) / Karl-Anthony Towns (NYK)

C: Kristaps Porzingis (ATL) / Mitchell Robinson (NYK)

Both of these lineups are in flux. Four of Atlanta’s starters feel locked in, but NAW could be pushed to the bench for the likes of sharpshooter Luke Kennard, defensive big man Onyeka Okongwu, or Zaccharie Risacher. It could be based on matchups or just evolve over the course of the season. Of course, there’s the Deuce McBride/Josh Hart/Mitchell Robinson debate for the Knicks’ fifth starter, as well.

These lineups would have a lot of defense. Young isn’t a good defender at all, but the Hawks can overwhelm you with their mountains of wings, especially with Jalen Johnson returning from injury. The question is how well they can create offense outside of Trae. He’s liable to some really shaky performances. Do they have enough to overcome?

Knicks’ Predicted Record vs Atlanta this season: 2-1


The Hawks always seem to get up for the Knicks. Despite not many holdovers left from 2021, they seem to enjoy playing the role of villain, specifically Trae Young. Two games in Atlanta don’t help, but the Knicks have more than enough to win this season series as long as they stay healthy. We won’t see them until the dying days of 2025, so we’ll know a lot about these two teams heading into their first duel.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...fs-trae-young-brunson-towns-porzingis-bridges
 
Bridges clears the slate for year two

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New Knicks coach Mike Brown went out of his way to highlight Mikal Bridges’ work ethic at Media Day this week, noting that Bridges has been in the gym almost every day, sometimes twice a day.

What is he doing in the gym, exactly? Bridges said he is working on creating more off the dribble, which is great. We just hope he isn’t tinkering with his shot again. Last season, he emerged from camp with an awkward shooting form that made everyone scratch their heads.

During his 20 minutes at the mic this week, Bridges focused on his recent contract extension, reflected on last season’s Eastern Conference Finals loss, expressed excitement for the new coaching regime under Brown, and embraced the idea of a deeper rotation.

His commitment to the team seems legitimate. Bridges, who has never missed a game in his collegiate or professional career, emphasized a team-first mentality, particularly in explaining his decision to sign a four-year, $150 million extension ($6 million below the max) through 2029, with a 2030 player option. “If I came here, preaching about how much I want to win, and I try to take every dollar to make it difficult for the organization? I’ll seem like a fraud. That’s not who I am. I want to win bad.”

Last year, his first with the Knicks, reunited him with Villanova teammates Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart. Despite some playoff heroics, it wasn’t an easy debut season in New York. Fans grew frustrated with his inconsistency, reluctance to draw contact, and hesitancy to shoot. Exhibit A: the overtime loss to Lakers on March 6, 2025, when Mikal played 43 minutes but attempted just six shots, finishing with six points.

“Last year was tough,” said Bridges, striking a mature tone. “A lot of people thought I might be upset because they were getting on me a little too hard. But I think I was more mad at myself in the situation, because everything they want is what I want. […] We all want the same goal.”

He added, “I love it here. I love the fans, the culture, the staff, the front office, the teammates. That’s probably the biggest thing.”

Embarking on his eighth NBA campaign, Bridges is embracing an expanded leadership role. He said he’s mentoring younger players, calling it an opportunity he’s never had before. “The young dudes, they’re hilarious. Kinda makes me think what I was coming out of college,” he said. “Great dudes, great kids. Biggest thing about them is they work hard. Seeing how much they’ve gotten better…is really cool.”

Last season, the 29-year-old 3&D wing averaged 17.6 points while playing all 82 games. He also set a career high in minutes per game (37) and led the league with 3,036 total minutes. Considering Brown’s comments, Bridges may play fewer minutes this year—so perhaps the same amount of wear and tear, after all?

Following the summer break, the slate is wiped clean. A new coach brings the promise of positive improvements. Make no mistake, though: Bridges will be a starter on a team with championship aspirations. If he starts passing up open shots again, the Garden crowd won’t hesitate to express its feelings.

Go Knicks.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-analysis/73760/bridges-clears-the-slate-for-year-two
 
2025-26 Matchup Preview: Boston Celtics

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Dynasties are effectively dead in the Apron Era. The team that had to learn that the hard way was the Boston Celtics.

After steamrolling all of basketball to coast to their 18th championship in 2024, they were the standard in the NBA. Years of finetuning a core around Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum had finally yielded an unstoppable force, one that bombarded you with three-pointers and didn’t field any defensive weaknesses. An absolute juggernaut. If not for the Cavaliers’ remarkable regular season last year, they would’ve coasted to a second straight top seed in the East.

In the regular season, they tore the Knicks apart. A team that was built to topple this monster was getting ground to a pulp. Entering the second-round playoff series, many expected the Celtics to steamroll the Knicks just like they did in the regular season. Only this time, the Knicks had an answer for Joe Mazzulla’s perfect formula.

Two (three?) thrilling comebacks, some lucky breaks, a back-breaking injury for Boston, and a joyous beatdown in Game 6 at MSG completed the biggest playoff series victory for the franchise in the 21st century. In the aftermath, Boston encountered a long rehab for Tatum and a crippling luxury tax, electing to tear down their roster and use 2025-26 as a transition year.

This sets up an interesting dynamic. For the first time in a long time, the Knicks will go into the season expecting to be better than the Celtics. What a difference a year makes.

Knicks’ Record vs Boston in 2024-25: 4-6 (but 4-2 when it counted, baby!)

  • October 22, 2024: Celtics won 132-109
  • February 8, 2025: Celtics won 131-104
  • February 23, 2025: Celtics won 118-105
  • April 8, 2025: Celtics won 119-117 (OT)
  • ECSF Game 1: Knicks won 108-105 (OT)
  • ECSF Game 2: Knicks won 91-90
  • ECSF Game 3: Celtics won 115-93
  • ECSF Game 4: Knicks won 121-113
  • ECSF Game 5: Celtics won 127-102
  • ECSF Game 6: Knicks won 119-81

There’s no point in talking about the regular season series here. It was three blowouts that saw the firebombing Celts make 65 total threes and completely neutralize Karl-Anthony Towns. Good signs were shown in the final meeting of the regular season, where the Knicks had the win snatched out of their hands by a clutch Tatum triple at the death before falling in overtime.

In Game 1, the Celtics threatened to run the same play as they had all season, blitzing the Knicks to a 75-55 lead in the third quarter. However, a common theme of the 2025 Knicks playoff run was rallying back from improbably deficits. They managed to come all the way back, squander a six-point advantage, and prevail in OT thanks to the defensive heroics of Mikal Bridges.

Game 2 was the exact same script. Boston sprinted out to an early 13-point lead and got it up to 20 with 15:12 to go in the game. Just like last game, a defensive masterpiece late, along with a fourth-quarter barrage by Bridges, stunned the reigning champs. It was Bridges (again) who forced the game-winning stop.

Game 3 was a good ol’ fashioned Boston beatdown. All those misses that led to huge comebacks in Beantown were drained in the World’s Most Famous Arena. Another poor offensive game for the Knicks, coupled with a 20-for-40 performance by the Celtics, led to a blowout win for the visitors.

Game 4 saw another double-digit Boston lead vanish, this time in hostile territory. Jalen Brunson put up a superhero performance, dropping an efficient 39 and going shot-for-shot with Tatum before he blew out his Achilles as the Knicks headed for a 3-1 lead. Tatum’s injury took him out for the series and will cause him to miss most (if not all) of the 2025-26 season.

Boston rebounded to blow the Knicks out of the water while shorthanded in Game 5, but that inspiring effort at TD Garden was their last gasp. A 48-minute rout led to a prolonged celebration in the entire second half, as the Knicks led by as much as 41 to advance to their first Eastern Conference Finals in 25 years.

Knicks vs. Celtics — 2025-26 Schedule:

  • Fri, Oct 24, 2025: Celtics @ Knicks (7:30, Prime Video)
  • Tue, Dec 2, 2025: Knicks @ Celtics (8:00, NBC/Peacock)
  • Sun, Feb 8, 2026: Knicks @ Celtics (12:30, ABC)
  • Thu, Apr 9, 2026: Celtics @ Knicks (7:30, Prime Video)

Zero games on MSG. Two of them are not even on television. Sports in 2025.

Boston’s Offseason Moves:


In:

  • Chris Boucher (FA)
  • Luka Garza (FA)
  • Josh Minott (FA)
  • Anfernee Simons (trade)
  • Hugo Gonzalez (draft)
  • Noah Penda (draft)

Out:

  • Jrue Holiday (Blazers)
  • Luke Kornet (Spurs)
  • Kristaps Porzingis (Hawks)
  • Georges Niang (acquired from Hawks, dealt to Jazz)
  • Torrey Craig (unsigned)
  • Al Horford (unsigned/Warriors)

The Celtics lost a ton of high-end talent, especially when factoring in the Tatum injury. The second apron stops for nobody. Only Simons figures to be playing a big role, with the others filling out as depth while the Payton Pritchard’s and Sam Hauser’s of the world step into the vacancies.

Projected Starters


PG: Payton Pritchard (BOS) / Jalen Brunson (NYK)

SG: Derrick White (BOS) / Deuce McBride (NYK)

SF: Jaylen Brown (BOS) / Mikal Bridges (NYK)

PF: Chris Boucher (BOS) / OG Anunoby (NYK)

C: Neemias Queta/Luka Garza (BOS) / Karl-Anthony Towns (NYK)

Goodness gracious. Compare this to the Holiday-White-Brown-Tatum-Porzingis lineup with Horford, Kornet, and Pritchard off the bench that they featured in the playoffs only five months ago. It’s astonishing.

For the record, I think Mike Brown will have Robinson as his fifth starter, but McBride makes more sense for this suddenly small Celtics team. Pritchard is my early favorite for Most Improved Player, mostly because he will get a significantly larger role. Boucher is the only guy with size that makes sense for the four, while the decision between Queta and Garza will come down to whether Mazzulla still thinks they can bombard threes with this suddenly ragtag group.

The X-factor? Are the rumors of Tatum’s Achilles recovery true? If he somehow came back in astonishing time, it transforms the lineup.

Knicks’ Predicted Record vs Boston this season: 3-1


As long as the Knicks are healthy, they should be able to win the season series against Boston and snap a skid of losing 8 of 9 to them the last two seasons. If Tatum returns sooner than expected, those later meetings could feature a real challenge.

After two years as the sport’s standard, it feels like the Celtics will be battling to even avoid the play-in tournament.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...eview-nba-tatum-brown-derrick-white-pritchard
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘He left $6 million. I’m not counting, though’

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As Friday came, Friday went. Best news? It’s weekend time!

The Knicks also held their first players-on-players, offense-vs-defense, five-on-five scrimmage of the preseason and the results, according to the man leading the sessions, couldn’t have been better. Oh boy, color me excited.

Here’s what we heard from Coach Brown, Hoodie Brunson, KAT, and Ogugua as New York slowly-but-surely starts to pack its collective bag on the way to Abu Dhabi to face the 76ers next Thursday.

"KAT, we're going to move him around a lot. He's not just going to play the 5. He'll be all over the floor – his ability to shoot the basketball will show because we're going to move him around."

Mike Brown talks about Karl-Anthony Towns' role in the Knicks' offense through the… pic.twitter.com/R6YSrA9P98

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 26, 2025

Mike Brown​


On the team’s early progress in training camp:

“I tell you what, the team is probably a little bit ahead on both sides of the ball than what I expected we’d be at this point. They’ve been working hard. They’ve been trying to pick up stuff on both ends of the floor as quickly as possible.”

On how the team looked during the first preseason scrimmage, held on Friday:

“Their attentiveness has been great. Today was the first time where we really had a chance to bump heads and scrimmage. So when you go against a different color jersey instead of just going through it 5-on-0 or against the coaches, it’s a little different. But our guys did a good job. It’ll be even more different when we go against Philly in Abu Dhabi. I like our progress so far — but we’ve still got a long way to go.”

On what to expect from the Knicks’ transition defense and team rules:

“If we can follow those rules, we know we’ll have a pretty good chance of being a good defensive transition team.”

On what ‘next-play-speed’ means and bringing it to New York:

“If we turn the ball over, or somebody misses a shot that we hoped they wouldn’t take, and the other team is breaking the other way, we go from offense to defense just like that. Now we’re sprinting back. Having that next play speed ability at a very high level is something, in my opinion, that separates really good teams from great teams.”

On OG Anunoby’s defensive potential:

“First-team All-Defense. He is more than capable. Really it’s up to him. That’s how good he is. He’s a first-team — and I’ve been around those guys. Bruce Bowen. Tim Duncan. I’ve been around a few of them, and he’s right there.”

On his relationship with OG:

“Many people don’t know this, but OG and I have a previous relationship and I reached out to OG in 2020 [when he coached the Nigerian national team]. I reached out to most of my Nigerians in the league because there are a ton of them. And we were in conversation. He was close to playing on that team, but we sparked a relationship back then, and we even had lunch to talk about it during the course of the season when I was in Golden State. I think he might’ve been in Toronto and they came to town. We grabbed lunch, but we’ve been in contact via text and on the phone a couple times. He’s a really great guy, a fantastic guy, and he does have some personality. Sometimes he lets it out. Sometimes he doesn’t.”

On raising the team’s 3-point attempts:

“I mean, if we get 40 I’m cool with it. If we get 40-plus, I’m cool with it, but they’ve gotta be good 3s.”

On the need for quality-shot attempts:

“We’ve got a couple of guys that we’ll allow to dance with it and let it go, and they know who they are, but if we play like we’re capable of — with pace, especially spacing, and the paint touches — we should generate a lot of catch-and-shoot 3s. If you’re open and your feet are set, especially if that ball hits the paint or we’ve got a cut or roll and it pulls the defense in and now we get a spray to a 3, we better let it fly. We better let it fly.”

On Landry Shamet’s impact:

“Offensively, his pace in the full court — he does a great job of sprinting the floor.”

On Karl-Anthony Towns’ role and versatility:

“They’re different players, but their skill set is at an extremely high level. So there are gonna be some things that Sabonis did do that for sure KAT can do when he’s at the five, and then vice-versa [when he’s at the four]. KAT, we’re gonna move him around a lot. He’s not gonna just play the five. So he’ll be all over the floor and his ability to shoot the basketball will show because we’re gonna move him around.”

KAT got moves pic.twitter.com/7ciohd2k2D

— Kristian Winfield (@Krisplashed) September 26, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On having frontcourt flexibility with Mitchell Robinson and Josh Hart:

“With Josh, I step into my traditional center role, which is something I’ve been known for early in my career and recent in my career I’ve been playing as four, too. With Mitch, it allows me to kind of tap into that experience and [at the four], I’ve found ways to be successful. Just different ways of attacking and different ways we could play our game and be playing Knicks basketball. So regardless of if it’s Josh in the game or it is Mitch in the game, I feel very confident with either one of them, that we have a great chance of winning.”

OG Anunoby says making First Team All-Defense and winning Defensive Player of the Year are always his goals heading into a new season:

"Defense wins championships" pic.twitter.com/NWzR5yAnGD

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 26, 2025

OG Anunoby​


On his defensive focus and personal goals:

“For sure, defense, that’s what wins games, championships. So it’s very important to me. Defensive player of the year, first-team All-Defense, those are always my goals.”

On embracing Mike Brown’s system:

“Mainly defense is all the same. Just getting into the ball more. Every team wants to get into the ball. But getting into the ball, a lot of talk early and often. It’s communication.”

On improving daily under coach Brown:

“We’re learning each and every day. It’s getting better and better.”

On the Knicks roster depth:

“We’ve always had a great team. Every player on the roster is capable of playing and make an impact.”

On the ECF loss to the Pacers:

“It stays with you as motivation…you never forget what happened, how close we were.”

Jalen Brunson is asked about how long it could take for him to get acclimated under Mike Brown:

"I don't how long it's going to take me, but hopefully relatively fast. I'll continue to get better off of it.

Even with Thibs the past couple years, we were still learning how to do… pic.twitter.com/hZKgxQTIlD

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 26, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On adjusting to Mike Brown’s system:

“I don’t how long it’s going to take me, but hopefully relatively fast. I’ll continue to get better off of it. Even with Thibs the past couple years, we were still learning how to do certain things, getting better at certain things. I don’t want to say I’m going to ‘master’ it at any point, I’m just going to continue getting better and better and be more fluent at it. It’s going to be a process, for sure.”

On the changes brought by Brown:

“Things are different obviously, but certain things are definitely different than what we’ve done in the past couple of years. But we knew that coming in. It’s all about how we adapt, how we adjust, and how quickly we do so. Making sure we help each other learn.”

On his offseason body transformation:

“A little lighter, more toned. It’s important for me to get my body in the best shape possible.”

On summer rest:

“It’s all about adapting. I truly needed it.”

On early impressions of Mike Brown:

“Most importantly, just communicating on both sides of ball and putting each other in places we need to be.”

On receiving the Kobe PE shoes:

“It means the world to me. To be able to wear his shoe and have a little input on it, as well. I’m really excited to have this opportunity. His family is amazing. We’ll see what comes down the line.”

On Mikal Bridges’ decision to leave money on the table to re-sign with the Knicks:

“He left $6 million. I’m not counting, though.”

Patrick Ewing at Knicks camp with Ariel Hukporti & Allan Houston pic.twitter.com/x5j2r9yo2c

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) September 26, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...etin-he-left-6-million-im-not-counting-though
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I started my own farm, so all of my stuff is legit fresh, organic’

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The moment we were all waiting for arrived on Thursday as Big Mitch took to the podium to speak about all things, including building a farm in Nashville.

Starting role? New contract? To hell with that, Mitch’s the freshest member of the Organic Fam.

Here’s everything from Thursday, and then some, from your beloved Knickerbockers.

Mike Brown attended a high school football game recently and had someone come up to him asking about how he deals with the pressure of being an NBA head coach

Here was his response

"I appreciate your empathy, but that's part of the reason I get paid what I get paid. I've got to… pic.twitter.com/P0bjaVTTYO

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 25, 2025

Mike Brown​


On dealing with public pressure in New York:

“I went to Scarsdale High School opening night football game. And watched the first half and then it was halftime. … I stayed in the stands … and there was a mom in there that stayed because she had a seventh-grade son and she recognized me. We started talking about me in Sacramento, and then what happened here, and she was like, ‘Oh, my gosh, how did you do that pressure, your job’s on the line all the time?’ And I said, ‘You know what? I said, I appreciate you,’ but I said, it’s part of the reason I get paid what I get paid. I got to deal with it. And it’s public. Well, I’m getting paid by Mr. Dolan to be able to deal with it. And so I said, I appreciate ya, but don’t feel sorry for me, because I’m gonna be OK at the end of the day.”

On embracing expectations:

“I like what people may call pressure, because that means there’s importance. Not just with you, because everything I do I feel is important, but there’s importance placed upon everything you do, and everybody has expectations because they want to enjoy the moment. And so I said, I embrace that. Because nobody’s expectations are bigger than mine.”

On learning from past coaching experiences:

“So that’s kind of how I look at it as, I get paid to go through certain things to deal with certain things, to make certain decisions. And my expectations are higher than probably yours, yours and yours, and I embrace whatever comes my way that comes along with being in this spot. And if something were to happen, like it happened in Sacramento or Cleveland or whatever, you just learn and you grow. You have to take every single thing you do and try to flip it into a learning experience, to grow a little here, grow a little there. That’s where I feel like I’ve done in every situation.”

On expectations driving his motivation:

“I’m excited by the expectations. My own expectations are higher than yours, than yours, than yours.”

On embracing the role of head coach in New York:

“You have to take every single thing you do and try to flip it into a learning experience. A little here, a little there. I embrace what comes along with this spot.”

On Mitchell Robinson’s impact on the court:

“He is a monster on the glass. In Sacramento, we tried to emphasize that if our big had to help and leave Mitch, our weak side had to crack back — even if it meant picking up a foul — because he can win a game on the offensive glass alone. That to me hasn’t changed.”

On defining player roles before the season opener:

“Ideally, it would be great to have everybody’s role defined before the first game. Now, they can change throughout the course of the season, but hopefully going into Game 1, we as coaches — and Billy Lange — get to a point where we have everybody’s role defined. And not only that, but they embrace it so that everybody knows specifically what they need to do. We’ve got a lot of guys and we’re a new staff. So if we get a little behind, maybe it doesn’t happen until after the first or second game. I don’t know. But ideally, I’d like to have all that done before Game 1.”

On offensive concepts and preseason goals:

“The way we play, I want to get to a point where we can play conceptually and everyone is on the same page. Our staples are really important for us: pace, spacing, paint touches, quick decisions, ball reversals…those things are extremely important to us. Now you take it a step further and in our early offense we have what we call our ‘automatics.’ Our automatics are basically reads. If the ball goes this way and a body goes that way, then that tells the next player you have to go this way or that way. To play conceptually without calls, in my opinion, is to your advantage because the defense doesn’t know what’s coming. You have a couple of different options you can do every time the ball moves or somebody else moves, and it’s your choice. If you’re doing it with pace, with the floor spaced very well, we become hard to guard. Implementing that is going to take a little bit of time. We’re going to play out of that quite a bit in the preseason. It’s even going to get frustrating for the players because they’re going to see matchups and they’re just going to want the ball in this guy’s hands or that guy’s hands and want to go score. But the preseason for us — like everything, but the preseason more importantly — is a step by step process, and we don’t want to skip any steps, even if it means slowing down with our development a little bit. Laying that foundation of our concepts so we can play freely within the concepts is going to be the first step for us offensively.”

On using Karl-Anthony Towns more creatively:

“The biggest thing is we want to move KAT around. We don’t want to keep him in the trail spot or at the top of the floor all the time. We want to move him around to the weak corner, strong corner, weak wing and sometimes as the push man offensively.”

On Towns’ passing and offensive versatility:

“When he is at the 5, we feel he’s a really good passer. Sometimes he’ll be at the rim. Sometimes he’ll be at the elbow. When he’s at the elbow, that’s when he’s going to be in a big decision-making role, and we feel he’s more than capable of making good decisions with the basketball, whether it’s a (dribble hand off), pass to the cutter. We also feel when we do pass to him on the elbow and have movement and floor spacing around him that he’s a huge threat. He’s one dribble away from laying it up or doing what he does best, which is realize where the contact is and draw a foul.”

On using the depth of the Knicks roster:

“Now it’s our job to figure out how to use this group. Knowing that you have guys that you can throw into the game at any time is exciting . . . To be able to have guys, especially veteran guys that have been there and done that at your disposal makes it a lot of fun for a coach. Now like I said it’s my job to spend time and it’s going to take some time finding the right combinations to put out there on any given time.”

On open competition for final roster spots:

“There’s no one ahead of anyone yet.”

On Jordan Clarkson’s mentality and skillset:

“He’s a professional scorer. He’s a capable passer. But I like the mindset that he has. You want guys that aren’t afraid of the moment, aren’t afraid to take the shot, aren’t afraid to go get it. Because the more guys that you have like that, that puts pressure and a little bit of fear on your opponent. Because when the ball touches his hands, and your opponent isn’t doing their job. That thing’s going up and it’s probably going to go in.”

On Guerschon Yabusele’s journey back to the NBA:

“When you get drafted and don’t make it, it can do a lot of things to you mentally. It can make you say things like, ‘Screw the NBA. I don’t want to come back,’ or it can make you say, ‘You know what? I’m an NBA player and I’m going to do what I need to do to get back and be there as long as I want to be there.’ Seeing that process tells you a lot about him as a person. That’s a vastly competitive spirit and competitive nature that I’m looking for when it comes to being a New York Knick. Going back overseas allowed him to work on his game, refine his tools and skill set. It just took him to another level. At his size, he knows he has to be versatile to thrive, and not just offensively, but defensively, too.”

On competition in camp regardless of contract type:

“Whether you’re here on a guaranteed deal, you’re here on a nonguaranteed deal, you’re competing your butt off. And at the end of the day, we have a lot of time to make a decision on what’s gonna happen, and we’ll figure out who we need to fit and who needs to fit, but it’s gonna be a process.”

Deuce McBride is asked what he's noticed about Mike Brown's coaching style so far:

"He's been communicating with a lot of guys, also allowing a lot more people to talk and to really get a feel for what's going on" pic.twitter.com/d4zrUTcfhk

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 25, 2025

Deuce McBride​


On using the Pacers loss as motivation:

“I’m still stung by the loss now.”

On the Knicks’ new offensive system under Mike Brown:

“A lot more player movement, ball movement. Last year, at times, we got stagnant and we depended on a lot of isolation shots, which is tough down the stretch. This year, it’s going to be a little more freedom.”

On Mike Brown’s coaching style:

“He’s been communicating with a lot of guys, also allowing a lot more people to talk and to really get a feel for what’s going on.”

On the Knicks’ coaching change:

“You never wish for anybody to lose their job, I wish [Tom Thibodeau] the best. Coming in with Mike, excited for something different. That’s the great thing about the league — things change and you see who adapts.”

Mitchell Robinson started up his own farm this summer in Nashville pic.twitter.com/DFekonRPMm

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 25, 2025

Mitchell Robinson​


On starting a farm in Nashville:

“I started my own farm, so all of my stuff is legit fresh, organic, stuff like that, so kind of moving forward with that. Chickens, all kinds of stuff.”

On how he learned to farm:

“You gotta know people, they’ll teach you a lot.”

On whether he cooks or not:

“No. Hell no. [My people] gotta go out there, grab it, and bring it.”

On buying into the new coaching staff:

“I’m excited to play for him. Been here going on eight years now. Third coach. I’m just gonna get in there and give him the same energy I gave all the other coaches: Hard work and keep it moving.”

On whether starting or coming off the bench matters to him:

“Nah. It don’t matter to me at all. I started before. I came off the bench before. I did great in both. So it’s whatever.”

On his contract year mindset:

“I’m gonna come out here and play hard still regardless, whether it’s my last or my first. Just come out here and play hard. But at the same time I’m gonna let my agent handle that part of it. I’m just gonna play basketball.”

On handling medical decisions around back-to-backs:

“Imma let [the medical staff] handle that. They’re gonna tell me. I just go with the flow. The season ain’t really start yet. We’re just in training camp.”

On potential free agency next summer:

“My agent will handle that.”

"Guys know – you throw it to me, it's getting in the air. The majority of the time, I feel like I'm open. That comes with a grain of salt – I know I've got to take good shots and play the right way as well."

– Jordan Clarkson on his role with the Knicks pic.twitter.com/YiHPjbJjw9

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 24, 2025

Jordan Clarkson​


On why he joined the Knicks:

“The team is really good. They’re playing for something.”

On the cryptic message he sent Josh Hart after being bought out:

“I just sent him a ’00.’ He didn’t know what it meant, but I’m here.”

On fitting in with the Knicks’ system:

“All of it’s communication. For me, I’m going to be myself in between what’s going on already. I’m going to hang my hat on that. I’m going to make my changes or whatever I have to do to fit in here and play the right way. We’ll figure that out. Definitely, down the line, I think all the guys know if they show (the ball to me), it’s going to get in the air. The majority of the time I feel like I’m open. It comes with a grain of salt. I have to take good shots and play the right way, as well.”

On conversations with Jalen Brunson before joining the Knicks:

“That was just me telling him, ‘if you ever need to come off the bench and the timing is right, I’m here. I’m not looking for the ball but if you get in trouble in the last five, I’ll be around if you need somebody to throw it to.’ Those were just little tidbits I’d throw to him like when we were at World Cup and stuff to put in his ear. But that was just all playful talk. But shoot, I’m here now.”

Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart both say the best part of their summer was the time they spent with their respective children pic.twitter.com/10kHcxq7qG

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On pressure and expectations this season:

“There’s no championship or bust pressure. Obviously, the goal is to win a championship, but each season starts out new.”

“New York was an amazing time. It was a great place. I loved it…But it also comes with a lot…At the end of that time, I was kind of at my darkest moment. Just miserable…I would just be in there watching TV in a dark room”

— Julius Randle https://t.co/cbgeDlRhPA pic.twitter.com/hpCL1Ghro4

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) September 26, 2025

Julius Randle​


On his time in New York:

“New York was an amazing time. It was a great place. I loved it. I had a lot of great moments there and great experiences and met a lot of great people and played a lot of great games. You get to play in the Garden, you know? Have all those experiences. But it also comes with a lot, too, man. It comes with a lot of different things. And it’s a lot to navigate.”

On the scrutiny of playing in New York:

“You know how New York is, man. You’re under a different microscope. So it’s like, you’re not just battling and trying to win. It seems like you’re battling a million different things.”

On hitting rock bottom during his last season in New York:

“At the end of that time, I was kind of at my darkest moment. Just miserable, like in a way where I just was not having fun going to work every single day.”

On how his mental health affected his home life:

“I would just be in there watching TV in a dark room. I didn’t even want to show my face. I kind of just wanted to be left alone and, like, in hiding. Just very frustrated and angry and all those different emotions. It just wasn’t a good place to be in.”

On the shock of the trade:

“When I got traded, I’m like damn, I can’t believe this got taken from me. It’s like, you worked so hard to build something, and it was just snatched away.”

On adjusting to the Timberwolves:

“Once I got here, I was like it was a breath of fresh air. I’ve been loving it ever since, even when things weren’t going as good.”


Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...arm-so-all-of-my-stuff-is-legit-fresh-organic
 
What Josh Hart’s finger injury could mean for the Knicks

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Ahead of what very well may be the most highly anticipated Knicks season of all time, fans were excited about Tuesday’s annual media day. It would be an opportunity for us all to hear about their thoughts on the coaching change, the new additions to their bench, what they did during the offseason, and how they felt going into the upcoming season. But what many predicted to be a joyous and exciting day was slightly thrown off track when Josh Hart took his turn at the podium to field questions.

It took mere seconds before everyone in the room noticed an abnormally swollen and oddly bent ring finger on his right hand. And moments later, Hart confirmed that he had recently re-aggregated his surgically repaired finger. He went on to add that instead of addressing the injury now and returning a few weeks into the season, he’s chosen to try and play out the season with a splint and fix it again next offseason.

Josh Hart reaggravated a finger injury recently that he had a procedure for over the summer and believes he'll have to wear a splint this season pic.twitter.com/mFJcp7AKq6

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) September 23, 2025

Hart isn’t the best player on the team. Or the second, or third, and probably not even the fourth. But his importance to this Knicks team cannot be understated. He was misused and overused last season, and that, in turn, led to his weaknesses and deficiencies being exposed. But we cannot forget everything he does for this team.

He’s arguably the best rebounding guard in the league. He’s a one-man wrecking ball, capable of starting a fast break all by himself. He’s the heart and soul of this team. And, despite being an inconsistent defender at times last season, he’s still a reliable defender for the most part.

The good news is, his finger injury is unlikely to stop him from doing all the things he’s good at. I’d be surprised to see Hart, who played with this injured finger for a large portion of last season, rebound any worse or hustle any less. What this injury does do, though, is bring up even more questions around Hart as a shooter, which in turn leads to even more questions surrounding him as a starter.

Even when all 10 of his fingers are healthy, Hart is a shaky, inconsistent, and unwilling shooter at best. And at his worst, he, as we all saw last season, becomes an offensive liability that not only limits his own impact but also lowers the ceiling of the team’s two best players, Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns. Now with a noticeably swollen and bent finger on his shooting hand, the overwhelming belief is that he’ll be just as, if not more, hesitant and inconsistent with his outside shooting, and that makes the prospect of starting him even more questionable than it already was before.

If new head coach Mike Brown really wants to put Brunson and Towns in the best positions to succeed, and build an offense centered around ball movement and spacing, Hart should not, scratch that, cannot start. Hart can, and I believe will, continue to play a pivotal role on this team. The finger injury should not impact his strengths much, and I expect him to keep rebounding at an elite rate, while being a solid secondary ball handler in the second unit, and showing some positive regression as a defender. But this injury should be the nail in the coffin on the “should Hart start” conversation.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...harts-finger-injury-could-mean-for-the-knicks
 
2025-26 Player Preview: Tyler Kolek

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A Tyler Kolek season preview written right after last season would look a lot different than the one unfolding in front of your eyes now.

Alas, after a tumultuous couple of weeks out of the New York front office, it’s unclear what Kolek’s role will be with New York moving forward. Kolek, last year’s second rounder out of Marquette, came out of college with heaps of praise. The body of work was incredible, and Kolek finished up his four-year college career poised to make an immediate impact at the NBA level. He’s a true floor general, a great passer who thrived as a playmaker, with the highest IQ out of all 10 guys on the floor.

Crafty.

After a stellar training camp and preseason heading into last year, Kolek impressed in limited action with the Knicks while shining at the G League level for the Westchester squad as well.

Despite Tom Thibodeau repeatedly overlooking Kolek in the pecking order throughout the season, the fanbase still remained hopeful about the Marquette alum’s future with the Knicks.

Expectations were high heading into this year’s Summer League, and frankly, Kolek disappointed. His three-ball was inconsistent. He piled up turnovers. While he had his moments, including a strong 24-point showing in his final game, Vegas showed that there was a lot of room left for growth.

The Knicks were quick to pick up on the fact. They responded by loading up their training camp roster with seasoned guards, adding Malcolm Brogdon, Landry Shamet, and Garrison Matthews in the past few weeks. The transactions paint a pretty clear picture of the lack of trust the Knicks have in their former draft pick to run the bench unit, and the talking heads have picked up on the fact.

Tyler Kolek is a potential trade candidate for the Knicks, and they’ve already received an offer from another team, per @krispursiainen

“Jalen Brunson, Miles ‘Deuce' McBride, and new additions in Jordan Clarkson and Brogdon would give the team depth at guard. This could logjam… pic.twitter.com/gfh13iBIRA

— NBACentral (@TheDunkCentral) September 12, 2025

With a new coach in town, it remains to be seen what Kolek’s future with New York looks like. Clearly, he’s a talented player, but his defensive concerns and age (24) mean that his upside may be limited.

At the end of the day, Kolek is a baller. All he did throughout college was perform, and he was put in a tough spot to contribute last year with Thibodeau at the helm. I’d argue that he deserves another year with the organization to try and put things together. If you disagreed, though, I wouldn’t call you wrong. There’s not much room for growth in his game. The Knicks need to win now. Development isn’t their main priority.

Kolek deserves a real look at the NBA level, but the way things have been going, it would be surprising if he ever got one in New York.

What are your thoughts on Kolek’s future in the NBA? Sound off in the comments. Let’s hear your takes.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-analysis/73824/2025-26-player-preview-tyler-kolek
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘Here, I think there’s a real shot’

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You’re barely waking up but your Knickerbockers have been up and running for hours on end with Abu Dhabi’s time eight hours into the future.

Back to the present. Or to the past, maybe. I don’t even know what day I live on.

Here’s what we’ve been able to get from a few New York Knicks, including coach Brown, before the hella long trip to the UAE on Sunday.

Mike Brown on Landry Shamet: "His pace in full court…always sprints to corner…with shooting ability puts alot of pressure on D…also flattens D…driving lanes [expand]…Half court…can create offense for teammates just with his gravity…Defensively unafraid…will guard whoever" pic.twitter.com/aVGYyNUpUg

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) September 29, 2025

Mike Brown​


On letting it fly from deep:

“If you’re open and your feet are set — especially if that ball hits the paint, or we’ve got a cut or roll that pulls the defense in, and now we get a spray to a three? We better let it fly. We better let it fly.”

On team standards and sacrifice:

“One of the big things when we’re talking about our standards and I’ve hit this before: The first one is sacrifice, second one is connectivity, competitive spirit, a belief in the overall process and each other. All that is coupled by accountability, and that to me hits home on the first one: You sacrifice. You sacrifice who you are and what you are for the betterment of the team, and there’s no better way to show that publicly, you get to show your teammates and everyone else than to do what they did. And it just sets the tone going for that ‘that’s what this team’s about’ because that’s what those individuals are about and that’s what they’re going to bring to the team.”

On Malcolm Brogdon’s presence:

“He’s been great. He has a steadiness about him that is fantastic to be around, especially with us throwing a lot of stuff at the new group.”

On Landry Shamet’s game:

“His pace in full court, he’s always sprinting to the corner and with his shooting ability, he puts a lot of pressure on D and also flattens D and driving lanes [expand]. Half-court, he can create offense for teammates just with his gravity. Defensively unafraid, will guard whoever”

On managing player schedules before Abu Dhabi trip:

“One thing we may try to do is when we land, we don’t want guys going to sleep. We’ll go to the hotel, hang out a little bit and then we’re gonna strategically practice at a certain time to keep their bodies right.”

On staying awake after arrival in Abu Dhabi:

“We want to make sure they stay up.”

Malcolm Brogdon: "Going into my 10th year, I wanted to be in a good organization that's competing and trying to win a championship. I had that in Milwaukee, Boston, and here I think there's a real shot."

— James L. Edwards III (@JLEdwardsIII) September 28, 2025

Malcolm Brogdon​


On playing on a non-guaranteed deal:

“I come here with the expectation I’m going to make the team. I feel what I bring to the table and have to offer, I can help this team. The decision is out of my control but I feel like I have what it takes to help this team.”

On moving to the Knicks and competing:

“Going into my 10th year, I wanted to be in a good organization that’s competing and trying to win a championship. I had that in Milwaukee, Boston, and here I think there’s a real shot.”

On his role taking pressure off Brunson:

“Anything that can take pressure off Jalen is the big goal going forward with this team. That’s what I want to do this year: Take pressure off him on both sides of the ball — and everybody else.”

On adapting quickly:

“The last three years I’ve had three different systems, different playing styles and different coaches. I do think that gives me an edge on other new guys coming here, being able to adjust fast. I think that’s what this league is all about: Who can adjust fastest.”

On choosing New York:

“I was really set on being on the Knicks. It’s a privilege to put this jersey on and compete with this team, especially with where they are and the year they came off of. I didn’t want to be anywhere else.”

On his versatility:

“This is a roster that in the past has been in need of more ball handlers and more creators, more versatile players that can handle the ball. I think I bring that. I can help guard. I’m a Swiss Army knife in a lot of ways and have a lot of strengths.”

On Jalen Brunson:

“He’s an excellent player. A superstar in this league.”

otw! knicks basketball #InAbuDhabi 📍 pic.twitter.com/5nCSaLbvrz

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) September 28, 2025

Josh Hart​


On Malcolm Brogdon:

“He’s someone who has been in the league for a while and makes other guys better. He doesn’t play sped up.”

Jalen Brunson​


On generating good shots early in the system:

“Generating good shots, yes. The volume, perhaps not yet. We’re still trying to understand concepts, understand where we need to be on the floor — our pace, spacing, and stuff like that. I think once we understand that and know where everyone’s going to be, whether we’re making plays for ourselves or for others, that’ll be a lot easier.”

EXCLUSIVE: John Wallace on Knicks’ Coaching Change and Giving Back https://t.co/Sog566XJ29 via @HeavyOnSports

— alder almo (@alderalmo) September 27, 2025

John Wallace​


On understanding the Knicks’ playoff heartbreak:

“That’s how I know what they went through this summer in terms of the amount of work you can put in, because you don’t want to have that same feeling in the following summer. So you work as hard as you possibly can. You’re trying to improve on certain things that you can improve on, so you can not only be a better player, but be able to be a better asset to your team at the same time.”

On the Knicks’ veteran core:

“The core group of guys on the Knicks are all seasoned vets. They all have their money. Now it’s all about winning and figuring out a way to win. When you have someone like Jalen Brunson, who’s all about winning, and the rest of those guys — KAT (Karl-Anthony Towns), OG [Anunoby], Mikal [Bridges] — they’ve all made the necessary sacrifices in terms of just trying to be a winner. They’re all winners. Now the next step is trying to create that formula to win in the NBA at the highest level. They fell a little short last year. Hopefully, they’re able to tweak a couple of things and get over that hump this year.”

On the coaching change:

“Anytime you have a coaching change that pumps new life, a new voice, it’s a new energy. Coach Thibs was my rookie coach, someone I’ve known a very long time, and he did a great job in terms of creating a new culture — the hard work, carrying yourself the right way, playing hard all the time. That culture is in place. Now, if Mike Brown can bring the type of offensive ingenuity he applied to the Sacramento Kings in 2023 when they led the NBA in scoring, that’s going to be a huge asset. If the Knicks can flow and play like that, they’ll be headed in the right direction.”

NEW: Steve Ballmer quietly donated $1.875M to charity of Aspiration co-founder who "conned" him — 1.5+ years after Clippers ended deal, as feds closed in.

"It does not make any iota of sense," an insider says, "to be both hoodwinked and bamboozled yet continuously giving money." pic.twitter.com/xdx2WgGkex

— Pablo Torre Finds Out (@pablofindsout) September 29, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/73832/knicks-bulletin-here-i-think-theres-a-real-shot
 
Jalen Brunson ranked 10th best player in the league, 2nd best player in the east

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The NBA season is right around the corner, which means it’s time for media outlets to come out with their rankings and list of the best players in the league. Earlier today, ESPN revealed its list of the 10 best players in the league, where Knicks’ point guard, Jalen Brunson, just made the cut at 10, which is two spots better than the ranking he received last year.

Currently, he sits behind Anthony Edwards, Stephen Curry, LeBron James, and Kevin Durant, who rank sixth through tenth respectively, while placing just ahead of Jalen Williams, Cade Cunningham, Evan Mobley, Anthony Davis, and Donovan Mitchell, who round out the top 11 through 15.

Over on NBA.com, where they rank players within their own conference, Brunson ranks second in the East behind consensus top-five player in the world, Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Knicks fans may, in their own biased opinion, rank Brunson higher. And rightfully so. While Curry, James, and Durant all have a championship pedigree and longevity on their side, there’s an argument to be made that Brunson has been on par, if not better, than those three, at least for stretches over the last couple of years. And it feels like at the end of every year, we see Brunson’s playoff performances elevate him to new heights, only for him to come down in preseason rankings the following season.

That being said, it all comes down to nitpicking. There are days when Curry, James, and or Durant are ahead of Brunson. Shoot, there are days when they still look like the top five players in the league. Likewise, there are nights, and even multiple week-long stretches, where Brunson looks like he belongs in the top five discussion. Such is the nature of trying to rank the best players in the world who are, in their own right, very talented and very accomplished.

Even if you disagree with Brunson’s meaningless preseason rankings, all one needs to do is look back a few years to put things into perspective. Prior to the point guard’s history-changing arrival in New York, Carmelo Anthony was the only player who could make the “top 10 players in the league” list over a two-decade span.

Now, we have a perennial All-Star point guard that has made multiple All-NBA teams, and is often considered a top two player in his conference, one of the most clutch players in the league, a playoff riser, and is climbing steadily as one of the franchise’s best players ever. And let’s be honest, Brunson likely doesn’t care about where he ranks and what the media thinks of him, so neither should Knicks fans.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...yer-in-the-league-2nd-best-player-in-the-east
 
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