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Knicks Bulletin: ‘Leon held my son before me’

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Go outside. Enjoy the fresh air. Take a minute for yourself.

That’s only because starting next Wednesday, we’ll lock into the Knicks and the season that will bring the chip back to NYC.

Here’s the latest from MB, Mikal, and the Brunsons.

expect ACTION under a Mike Brown coached team❗💥

Coach Mike Brown sits down with Basketball Hall of Famer Ahmad Rashad to discuss the Knicks playing style.

Watch the full feature now: https://t.co/4evz50QVxQ pic.twitter.com/Smcd8UKqeG

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 18, 2025

Mike Brown


On using an anti-Thibs mentality and not chasing every damn game:

“The biggest thing is, you know, trying to make sure you watch everybody’s minutes instead of trying to chase games. There might be some games that, maybe throw the towel in early.”

On making a final roster decision:

“It’s been a competitive camp and I’ll tell you what, everybody that we’ve had in here deserves to be on the team, so it’s gonna be tough for us. But we’ll make the decision because we have to.”

On Mikal Bridges’ defensive effort:

“If a turnover happens or an offensive rebound happens, he does not hesitate or take an extra step in the opposite direction of the ball. Right away, his change of direction and the flip of the switch from offense to defense is amazing. Probably one of the best I’ve been around. For him to get a couple of blocks the way he did, that’s just a testament to what he can do defensively. I hope everybody is watching those small things that don’t always show up in the stat sheet. He’s a first-team all-defender. It’s evident. There’s no question in my mind what he does out on the floor. It’s a lot of the little things that he does that I hope don’t go unnoticed.”

On team health and development:

“I would love to have everyone together, especially trying to play the way we’re playing with it being new to everybody. But it is what it is and we’ve still got to go and win the game. But the result, whether we had everyone or we didn’t, is for us to understand, hey, this thing is going to be a marathon. It’s not a sprint. It’s not being at our peak on opening night. You’re always hoping and wishing you are, but they’re fighting their tails off. They’re learning quickly. They’re actually a little ahead of where I thought we’d be at this point. But again, the guys that have been out, they’re the key pieces to what we’re trying to do, so they haven’t gotten the reps, and for us to jell together from top to bottom is going to take a little more time than I thought probably because of the injuries, so we have more than capable guys that are ready to play whenever their numbers are called.”

Mikal Bridges is model for Mike Brown’s Knicks transformation https://t.co/ErRmK9c5Wp pic.twitter.com/Nbxd4khoUD

— New York Post (@nypost) October 19, 2025

Mikal Bridges


On defensive habits and accountability:

“We emphasize it more. He got me really forgetting the last play and getting back, getting the whole team on that. That’s how it’s supposed to be. He’s encouraging it every single day, putting pressure on us to do it every single time. He’s charting it, getting on us when we’re not doing it. Listening to him, he’s pushing us to the next level.”

On being more comfortable in New York entering this season:

“I feel more at home. Everybody being here, being in this arena, being around all you guys, it feels like home. It’s good.”

NY Post backpage today. Here’s the storyhttps://t.co/twAEC9gfqU pic.twitter.com/NtfDjkuEwI

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) October 19, 2025

Rick Brunson


On Jalen’s lack of effort in a particular high school game:

“He was playing against five guys that look like you. Jalen came out bulls–ting, f–king around. He didn’t play hard. He didn’t compete. Don’t take that uniform off. Meet me at Lifetime Fitness. Right around the corner from the school. Worked him out for an hour and a half. Killed him.”

On critics of his parenting:

“Some parent was like, ‘He’s going to kill that kid.’ Now he wants an autograph.”

On Jalen’s birth and Leon Rose:

“Leon held my son before me.”

On life overseas and finances:

“There was no FaceTime, no Skype, no pictures, none of that sh–. And I remember, I would call my wife, talk about the baby, but you couldn’t call a lot because it was expensive. Back then, I made $45,000. I think I came home with $45. I spent everything. I wasn’t making no money.”

On his first NBA call-up:

“I was in my hotel room in La Crosse, waiting to play a game. I get a phone call, he says, ‘Yo we’re going to call you up.’ I say, ‘Man get the f–-k out of here,’ and hung up the phone. Because we did that to each other all the time, prank you at the hotel like, ‘This is such and such from the Boston Celtics.’ So he calls back. ‘Rick, Rick, Rick, don’t hang up the phone, this is really Jim Paxson.’ He’s like, ‘Kenny Anderson and John Crotty got hurt, we’re going to call you up.’ I say, ‘Go to Connecticut tonight, pack up that apartment, and go take my stuff to Long Island.’ She was like, ‘What if they release you or cut you?’ I said, ‘If I get into this league, I’m never coming out.’”

On surviving the NBA:

“How many people can do that? Come to work every day like it could be your last day?”

On molding Jalen’s mentality:

“Do everything hard. Do everything like it’s your last one. Do everything like you’re playing against the great ones. That’s how I coach. And it’s a mentality. I was always coaching his mentality. ’Cause you don’t know what your skill level is going to be. If I got his mentality, then his skill level can get to where it got to now — and the rest is easy. How many people do you see have a great skill level but a bad mentality?”

On instilling mental toughness:

“I used to tell his mother, there’s something about him. Because I would f–-k with him mentally, and he just would never quit. Because he always wanted to prove me wrong. He always wanted to be better than me. That ate him up that he couldn’t beat and he couldn’t outtalk me.”

On losing to his son one-on-one and calling it a competitive life:

“I’ll never forget. I fouled him, I f—-d him up, and I remember going to his mother, I said, ‘I can’t play him no more. Because I’m going to hurt him.’ Because I don’t think I can beat him no more. And I’m going to get mad. He beat me the last time. And that was it. I would never play him ever again. He kept saying, ‘C’mon man.’ Nope.”

On Jalen’s mentality:

“I can’t say I taught him how to shoot. I taught him how to think. I taught him to be confident. I told him how to be a killer.”

“Seeing him work tirelessly…had the biggest impact on me”

Jalen Brunson’s dad played for 8 teams in 9 seasons

Never went to camp with a guaranteed contract

Always had to earn his spot

Right now guys are finding out if they made final cut

A moment Rick Brunson knows too well pic.twitter.com/m3tYLnkjd4

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

Jalen Brunson


On learning from his father’s work ethic:

“I remember the days in the summertime, him working tirelessly. And it didn’t kick in until later, until I was about 12 or 13, how much it helped me.”

On adapting to change:

“Obviously, it translated to basketball. You’re adapting to situations that you obviously don’t have control of. And so, are you going to sit there and point fingers and say, ‘This is what’s wrong with what’s going on?’ Or, are you going to adapt and get the best thing possible? And that’s what I learned. That’s what I took from growing up and moving all around.”

On outworking others:

“It made me want to outwork them. They had all the God-given talent with how athletic they were and the stuff they can do that were eye-openers. And me, my God-given talent was to just outwork people. And it showed.”

On using intelligence over athleticism:

“Everyone in the NBA jumps out of the gym. Everyone is 6-10 with a 7-foot wingspan. And they use their athleticism. I just try to use my brain and how smart I can be on the floor. And being lefty helps me every step of the way. Obviously, you got to change things here and there, but it’s worked this long.”

👤 BIG L & NAS

💿 U AINT GOTTA CHANCE

🚨 OUT NOW 🚨 pic.twitter.com/n6aPZsr71o

— OnThinIce (@OnThinlce) October 16, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/74350/knicks-bulletin-leon-held-my-son-before-me
 
This day in Knicks-tory: October 19th

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As part of a brand-new segment for this new season, we’re firing up the time machine and heading way back, day by day, to revisit some of the best moments that went down on this date in basketball history.

1967: Future Hall of Famer, and New York Knick, Walt Bellamy made his NBA debut as a Chicago Packer vs the New York Knicks. Bellamy had the quintessential NBA debut with 29 points and 17 rebounds.

The Knicks who were led by Johnny Green, Willie Naulls, and Richie Guerin, New York spoiled Bellamy’s NBA debut with a 120–103 victory. Green put together a dominant performance of his own, recording 25 points and 17 rebounds, while Naulls and Guerin added 25 and 21 points respectively.

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1973: Fifty-two years ago today, the defending champion New York Knicks were sitting at 3-1 and rolling into Cleveland to take on Austin Carr, and Lenny Wilkens’ Cleveland Cavaliers.

In 1973, the Knicks’ roster was loaded with talent and remarkable depth. Seven of the eight players who saw action that night would ultimately earn induction into the Basketball Hall of Fame. Led by Dave DeBusschere’s 24 points, 11 rebounds, and 4 assists, New York edged out Cleveland with a hard-fought 92–90 victory on the road.

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Did we miss any particular event from Knicks history which happened on this very date? If you think so, let us know in the comments section below!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-history/74368/this-day-in-knicks-tory-october-19th
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘They’re going to be tired of me talking about basketball’

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It’s Opening Week!

The Knicks will get into the Tarrytown lab today and tomorrow as they gear up for the season-opening matchup against Cleveland inside MSG on Wednesday evening.

Here’s what we’ve heard from Coach Brown and a few dudes in the last few hours.

On this day in 2021 pic.twitter.com/Bdat4SVROv

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

Mike Brown


On preseason injuries and building team chemistry:

“The guys that have been out, they’re the key pieces to what we’re trying to do. They haven’t gotten the reps and for us to jell together from top to bottom is gonna take a little more time than I thought.”

On building relationships over basketball:

“We’re going to have plenty of time to talk about basketball to a point where they’re going to be tired of me talking about basketball. I want to get to know them for who they are because this relationship is about trust. It doesn’t start talking about basketball. It starts with him getting to know me and me getting to know him. What better way to do that than talk about your family, what you like to do, where you live and where you like to spend your offseason? Now, I can really get to know him for who he is.”

On believeing in the Towns-Robinson pairing:

“First thing is skillsets are a lot better or people are at least recognizing it with bigger guys. And because of the attention to detail that everybody gives to spacing, you want more length. You want more length to make the court look smaller defensively. Long shots lead to long rebounds, so you want more length out there to get rebounds and stuff like that. And then everybody switches a lot. If a guy messes up on a switch or they switch a small guy on a big, that’s something that, again, with people paying attention to spacing with player movement, you can take advantage of not only in post-up situations, where a guy can turn and just shoot over a guy, but offensive rebounds are a big emphasis now.”

On learning from Steve Kerr:

“It doesn’t matter who you are. If he thinks you can help, he’s going to throw you out there.”

On player readiness and accountability:

“If a guy hadn’t played in a few games, [Steve Kerr] may not tell you — he’ll just call your number. It sends a message: stay ready. Not just physically, but mentally. Because you might go in that game, and whether it’s 30 seconds or 10 minutes, you’ve got to bring something — not points, but effort and energy.”

On his rotation philosophy:

“If you look at what I’ve done, it’s usually nine-and-a-half to 10 guys. I try to play as many as I can. Even in Sac, when we had an injury, I started a two-way guy in Keon Ellis. So I’m going to play whoever helps us win and try to get guys an opportunity. With how deep our roster is, everybody should get one at some point.”

On player development and Pacome Dadiet’s outlook:

“I think the G League is fantastic for anybody. So whether [Pacome’s] getting minutes there or with us, just getting minutes is great for him. He’s got a chance to be really, really good — especially at his size. You can do a lot with it.”

On expecting competition for minutes:

“Whoever goes and grabs it. We feel like we have a deep roster. A lot of guys will have an opportunity to grab whatever minutes might’ve been there or might not have been there. We’ll figure it out at the end who’s gonna get them.”

August 5, 1962: Patrick Ewing is born in Jamaica

August 6, 1962: Jamaica declares independence

Happy Jamaican Heroes Day 🇯🇲 pic.twitter.com/RtvinpB2eO

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

Jalen Brunson


On building trust with Mike Brown:

“It was a point of his to make sure that I was comfortable with him and getting to know him. The relationship piece is very important to him as it is to me.”

Mikal Bridges


On Mike Brown’s system:

“I like it a lot. The biggest thing that helps is that a lot of us were here last year, and I feel like you can learn plays a little bit faster than concepts. With concepts, you have to start from the beginning and really grow them out and work on them every single day. With plays, you draw up some plays and learn them, but I think we’ll learn them pretty fast.”

Mitchell Robinson


On Brown’s defensive system:

“It’s a different style. It’s sort of like a zone but not quite. We’ve never really did that. We’ve always played man-to-man defense. The adjustments we have to make, the communication, different calls that we didn’t have last year. It’s a totally different ball game.”

Pacome Dadiet


On his preparation and mindset:

“Honestly, I just go back in the gym. That’s the only thing I can do. I put a lot of work in this summer. I just trust it.”

On Mike Brown’s track record with youth:

“Obviously the past few years, we’ve seen Mike put young players on the floor — players who didn’t really get opportunities. He’s well known for this. So it’s good for me.”

Matt Barnes: “Mike Brown to the Knicks will it work?…F*ck no… Mike’s a great person, to me he’s not a leader of men…He was my coach w the Lakers..Kobe & Ron Artest used to walk all over that motherf*cker…Sacramento…lost respect of the team quickly…Too nice for his own good” pic.twitter.com/5GN7SJFDtx

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 19, 2025

Matt Barnes


On Mike Brown’s lack of leadership chops:

“The one thing about Mike Brown is that the first year is always good. Mike is a great person. He’s just, to me, not a leader of men. I couldn’t imagine it now because these kids are making so much money. You have to have their respect.”

On Brown’s dealing with player defiance in Los Angeles:

“I tell you, and rest in peace to my dog Kobe, he and Ron Artest, they walked all over that motherf—ker. They used to sub themselves in and out of games. I’m just like, ‘Oh, s—t.’”

On Brown’s strengths and weaknesses:

“I think Mike is a great assistant coach. I wish him the best, but I’ve seen it firsthand. In Sacramento, his first year, he came in, brought the Golden State system, they made the playoffs for the first time, and then he lost the respect of the team quickly. So now you’re going to a New York media market that’s gonna try to eat you up for every mistake. Mike is a good guy; I just don’t think the situation is going to work, because he’s too nice for his own good.”

Mark Daigneault on Tom Thibodeau being around the Thunder recently: “He asked to come in. He’s sitting the year and traveling around… It takes a lot of humility for someone who’s had the success he’s had to put himself in that position. He’s always been very good to me.” pic.twitter.com/N4xJecyQGY

— Clemente Almanza (@CAlmanza1007) October 19, 2025

Mark Daigneault


On Tom Thibodeau’s humility:

“He was mainly with our coaching staff and front office. He asked to come in. He’s obviously sitting the year out and is traveling around. I give him a lot of credit. He was going to colleges in September. It takes a lot of humility for someone who’s had the success that he’s had and has done it as long as he has to put himself in that position. He’s always been very good to me. We’ve always had a nice cordial relationship, but that’s the most time I’ve ever spent with him, which was cool.”

"We come to New York, I sign 3-year deal…We're watching TV…GM calls…'Hey Mozzy, it wasn't my call…but the owner take over & make the trade. So tomorrow you go to Denver. 4 o'clock flight.' I was like 'What?'"

– Timofey Mozgov on Knicks trading him for Melo his rookie year pic.twitter.com/MBJT8ESTcU

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

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ng-to-be-tired-of-me-talking-about-basketball
 
This day in Knicks-tory: October 20th

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Historically, October 20th has been a very busy day for the New York Knicks. From their first ever NBA game to the Karl Anthony-Towns trade, the 20th holds several significant moments in Knicks-tory.

1960 – Although the Knicks played their first franchise game in 1946, that was still during the BAA era. On this date in 1960, New York played its first official NBA game against the Cincinnati Royals. Playing in the third version of Madison Square Garden, a young Oscar Robertson led the Royals into town to face Willie Naulls and Richie Guerin. The game also marked Naulls’ NBA debut, and he made the most of it, scoring 37 points and pulling down 20 rebounds. His impressive performance wasn’t enough, though, as the Knicks came up short to the Big O and his Royals 105-113.

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1972 – The Knicks were only five games into what would turn out to be their second championship season when they rolled into Cleveland to take on Austin Carr and the Cavaliers. Carr came out firing, dropping 22 points, while Rick Roberson battled inside for every rebound, finishing with 17 points and 17 boards. Still, the Knicks had too much poise and too much talent. Walt “Clyde” Frazier controlled the game the way only he could, smooth, confident, stylin, and profilin’, mixed in with a little bit of posting and toasting, as he led both teams in scoring with 33 points. All five of the Knicks starters scored in double digits to defeat the Cavs 92-89.

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2021 – The Knicks’ franchise record for points in a single game stands at 152, and they nearly touched that mark on this night in 2021 during a wild season-opening overtime battle against the Boston Celtics at Madison Square Garden.

Boston’s dynamic duo of Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown did everything they could to spoil opening night, combining for 66 of the Celtics’ 134 points. The Celtics’ dynamic duo wasn’t enough to overcome Julius Randle’s all-around brilliance, as he poured in 35 points to go with 8 rebounds and 9 assists. Evan Fournier added one of the best performances of his career, scoring 32 points and knocking down six threes from deep to keep the Garden rocking all night.

Six Knicks scored in double figures, showing off the kind of depth and resilience that fueled their early-season surge. Even though the Celtics had seven players hit double digits, it wasn’t enough to overcome the Knicks’ late-game composure. When the final buzzer sounded in overtime, the Knicks walked off with a thrilling 138 to 134 win.

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Did we miss any particular event from Knicks history which happened on this very date? If you think so, let us know in the comments section below!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-history/74420/this-day-in-knicks-tory-october-20th
 
REPORT: Knicks rule out Josh Hart and Mitchell Robinson vs. Cavaliers

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The most anticipated season in the last 25 years of New York Knicks basketball is already getting off the rails—on the eve of their opener.

Multiple outlets and beat/national reporters confirmed on Tuesday, after the Knicks concluded their last practice before opening day, that two key Knickerbockers will miss Wednesday’s opener against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden.

That’d be incumbent starting center Mitchell Robinson and super-sub dynamo Josh Hart.

Mitchell Robinson and Josh Hart are both listed as out for tomorrow’s home opener, a league source told The Post.

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) October 21, 2025
“Per league sources, New York will be without Mitchell Robinson (left ankle injury management) and Josh Hart (lumbar spasms) for Wednesday’s season-opening game against the Cavaliers and, possibly, beyond,” The Athletic’s James L. Edwards III reported.
“The New York Knicks ruled out Josh Hart (lumbar spasms) and Mitchell Robinson (left ankle injury management) Tuesday ahead of Wednesday night’s season opener against the Cleveland Cavaliers,” ESPN’s Tim Bontemps wrote, echoing the update. “In addition, All-Star big man Karl-Anthony Towns was listed as questionable with a right quad strain.”
Josh Hart has lumbar spasms, per league source, and is doing individual work on the court but team doesn’t want to rush his return.

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) October 21, 2025

The New York Post’s Stefan Bondy was first to break the news on X, writing: “Mitchell Robinson and Josh Hart are both listed as out for tomorrow’s home opener, a league source told The Post.”

A few minutes later, Bondy expanded on each situation.

“Josh Hart has lumbar spasms, per league source, and is doing individual work on the court, but the team doesn’t want to rush his return,” Bondy wrote about Hart’s back injury.
“Mitchell Robinson is listed as out with left ankle injury management, per league source, which is the same ankle that was surgically repaired almost two years ago,” Bondy commented on Robinson’s re-injured left ankle.
Mitchell Robinson is listed as out with left ankle injury management, per league source, which is the same ankle that was surgically repaired almost two years ago.

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) October 21, 2025

Hart injured his back in the preseason opener against the Philadelphia 76ers and hasn’t practiced with the team in two weeks.

Robinson’s situation, described by head coach Mike Brown as “workload management,” has raised eyebrows given his history of ankle problems.

Jonathan Macri of Knicks Film School didn’t hold back while addressing the reports of Robinson’s ankle issue.

“Mitchell Robinson re-injured his ankle,” Macri posted on X. “There is no other conceivable reason… The Knicks can dance around this all they want. An oft-injured player got hurt. Whether it’s a minor or major injury, SOMETHING happened.”

The Knicks can dance around this all they want. An oft-injured player got hurt. Whether it’s a minor or major injury, SOMETHING happened.

With both players sidelined, second-year center Ariel Hukporti is expected to start at the five alongside Karl-Anthony Towns at the four—that’s assuming KAT is good to go, however, as he’s also dealing with his own stuff and remains a game-time decision.

Mike Brown says that Josh Hart and Mitchell Robinson did not practice today: pic.twitter.com/uQCcrLgafK

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 21, 2025

Brown discussed his approach to dealing with Robinson’s and Hart’s injuries to start the season on the season-opener’s eve..

“With Mitch, we have to be smart, and that’s what’s part of load management,” Brown said after Tuesday’s practice. “Just because he may be able to play tonight, that doesn’t necessarily mean I’m gonna play him or I’m gonna practice him.

“[Mitch] missed a lot of games last year, and we just want to be cautious going forward with him, that’s about the extent of it right there.

“Josh is a little different than Mitch. You saw in Abu Dhabi when he went down, he didn’t get touched. So we’re trying to figure out his back, which is a tricky situation.

“So we have to be careful with it. We don’t want to rush him, but we’ll be patient and figure it out as we go along. Casey and those guys do a great job. We believe in them so we’ll be sticking to their plan.”

New York will host Cleveland at MSG on Tuesday, tip-off set for 7:00 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-josh-hart-and-mitchell-robinson-vs-cavaliers
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I know you guys want more, but it’s going to be like this all year’

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If you’re like me, you still can’t believe it.

The regular season that will see Larry O’B come back home is finally here.

Here’s what we’ve heard of late around and about the New York Knicks as we anxiously wait for tip-off later today.

"It starts on the daily. We can't skip any steps."

Mike Brown talks about how the Knicks can build during the season as they enter the year with championship aspirations: pic.twitter.com/4M6B2nsMIe

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 21, 2025

Mike Brown


On long-term development and staying patient:

“The good thing about it is the finals or the championship round doesn’t happen until June, so we’ve got a long time to get there. So it starts on the daily. We can’t skip any steps. Every time you’re on the floor together, every day off, you just want to keep taking steps because it’s gonna be a process knowing that you may take one or two steps backwards, but hopefully we can regroup and take three, four, five [steps] forward. And it’s not just about me doing that or me being the catalyst because I was hired. It’s about the entire group. We have to be connected as a group and believe in each other. And if we do that, and we truly understand that it’s a marathon and it’s one day, one game, one shootaround, one practice at a time, then the path will lead us where we need to go.”

On the preseason progress and building habits:

“First thing, the good part about it is, the Finals or the championship round doesn’t happen until June, so we’ve got a long time to get there. It starts on the first day. We can’t skip any steps. It starts with the first day in training camp, even before that, in the summertime. Going to training camp. Going to the preseason. Going to Abu Dhabi. Every time we’re on the floor together, every day off, we just want to keep taking steps because it’s going to be a process. Knowing that we may take one or two steps backward, but hopefully we can regroup and take three, four, five more forward. It’s not just about me doing that, or me being the catalyst because I was hired. It’s about the entire group. We have to be connected as a group and believe in each other. If we do that and we truly understand it’s a marathon and it’s one day, one game, one shootaround, one practice at a time, then the path will bring us to where we need to go.”

On managing Mitchell Robinson’s workload:

“With Mitch we have to be smart, and that’s what’s part of load management. Just because he may be able to play tonight, that doesn’t necessarily mean I’m gonna play him or I’m gonna practice him. It’s load management, which means that if we deemed it necessary, could he possibly go? Yeah, he could possibly go. But it’s a decision that myself, led by Casey [Smith], makes on a daily basis, and it’ll be like this the whole year.”

On managing Robinson’s workload:

“I’ve been in different situations where you sit a guy, you manage his workload and he does certain things, whether it’s sometimes shooting free throws, sometimes it’s watching, sometimes it’s walking through this, walking through that. I’ve been with a lot of guys that have done that throughout the course of my career, starting back in the early 2000s with the Spurs. We had a couple of older guys on the team, so to me it’s not odd.”

On media scrutiny and transparency on the Robinson situation:

“I know you guys want more, but it’s going to be like this all year.”

On Josh Hart’s recovery and health:

“[Mitch] missed a lot of games last year, and we just want to be cautious going forward with him, that’s about the extent of it right there. Josh is a little different than Mitch. You saw in Abu Dhabi when he went down, he didn’t get touched. So we’re trying to figure out his back, which is a tricky situation. So we have to be careful with it. We don’t want to rush him, but we’ll be patient and figure it out as we go along. Casey and those guys do a great job. We believe in them so we’ll be sticking to their plan.”

On dealing with adversity and accountability:

“It’s a great question ‘cause that’s the tricky part, and hopefully I can help them as best as possible. This was gonna be a process anyway. Now you factor it in with time being missed, and it’s gonna be a little bit longer because of the time being missed. … You’ve gotta find your way, and it’s gonna take a little bit more time than what it would take if you were there the whole time. Everybody’s human and guys are gonna get frustrated and when guys are frustrated, you usually hit some adversity, because they’re human. So they could go this way or that way, so early on, it’s gonna be — starting with me — all of our jobs to hold each other accountable while embracing the process. The process isn’t gonna happen overnight. It’s gonna take some time. So if a guy does go this way or that way, just trying to pull him back in and keep everybody together while we figure out what needs to happen on the floor on both ends.”

On team adaptability and identity:

“We’d like to establish or have an identity, but it’s not just strictly ‘Hey, we’re a defensive team’, or ‘We’re an offensive team.’ In my opinion, you have to be able to do a lot of things in order to win. You can’t just be a good defensive team, because if you look at the NBA champions of the past, everybody who has won a championship wasn’t [just] a top three defensive team. Everybody who’s won a championship wasn’t just a top three offensive team. So you have to have belief in what you think this team can do and grow from that.”

Brunson’s humility is probably his most endearing trait.

Other endearing traits include leading the league in time of possession, being a cone on defense and getting embarrassed by the Pacers two years in a row. pic.twitter.com/P9ZpWsJTQa

— 2+2=4 (The Knicks Prophet) (@2plus2equals4_) October 21, 2025

Jalen Brunson


On keeping perspective and staying grounded:

“I want us to take one day at a time and not jump forward, not speculate, not wish. Just continue to grind and just get better every single day and just control what we can control. It’s an opportunity to see where we are. Regardless of who it is. … Obviously, everything is new and we’re learning. We’re learning every single day. Like I said, see where we are. It’s the regular season now. It’s for good now. We’re going to go into the game and we’re obviously playing to win. We’re going to learn regardless and continue from there.”

"He gets on you, but in a respectful way. He's going to get on you as you should."

Mikal Bridges talks about what it's like to play for Mike Brown: pic.twitter.com/rCkJm41qYE

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 21, 2025

Mikal Bridges


On facing the Cavaliers and debuting Brown’s new system:

“Obviously we have a new coach and new staff and learning everything, so they have that advantage. But that still don’t mean nothing when the game starts and we have that competitive nature out there for all of us just competing trying to win. Yeah, we’re excited.”

On Cleveland’s established core:

“They’ve been together. Obviously we’ve been together for about a year, some guys a year and a half. But [Cleveland’s] coaching staff, I’m pretty sure they came into camp knowing exactly from Day 1 what they’ve been doing.”

On defending Donovan Mitchell:

“Just how skillful he is, everything’s so deliberate. I think even how he works [in practice] is how he plays in a game. I think that’s been a big growth out of his game. He could always score, even when he was in Utah … but as he’s grown into the player he is, he’s been able to score and play-make as well. So just knowing that: three-level scorer, about 5-foot-10 with a size 17 shoe that can jump 50 inches in the air, so he’s just unorthodox a little bit.”

On embracing the early challenge of facing the strongest Eastern Conference opponent on Day 1:

“I honestly think there’s no easy game. It’s the NBA and a lot of teams are really good and there’s teams that might not have enough wins that are really good teams. But a team like Cleveland who’s on top of the East, who wouldn’t want that challenge? That’s what you want. You want to see where you’re at Game 1. Obviously so many months to the end of the season, but it’s a good test to see a couple of the top teams that’ve been in the East what they look like to begin the season.”

On Mike Brown’s leadership:

“I think it’s tough to get 15 to 17 guys to all follow one voice, and especially nowadays where a lot of guys are getting paid a lot of money and they can tend to act like they don’t need a coach or anything like that. We can be prima donnas and divas a little bit, but for him to be able to get a whole group to follow him. He’s done a great job.”

On Brown’s communication and authority:

“He has that voice and it makes you not wanna mess up. It makes you wanna play as hard as you can, and he gets on you, but in a respectful way. He’s gonna get on you as he should, that’s how I look at it. I had some tough coaches growing up… some guys that’ll let you know what you’re doing where you fear of not doing the right thing. So I think he’s doing a great job and every time he talks and every time he’s explaining something, he does it to the highest level and for our understanding and making sure we know what we’re doing.”

On Tom Thibodeau visiting the Celtics practice:

“No issue at all.”

"I'm an energy guy, so that's a perfect match, me and New York."

Ariel Hukporti talks about feeding off the energy of Knicks fans: pic.twitter.com/XDqnExDyh6

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 21, 2025

Ariel Hukporti


On following Mike Brown’s direction:

“Whatever coach says stands. I’ll go with his word.”

On improving his finishing and decision-making:

“I feel like my floater, I’ve got great touch around the rim, trying to use it more this season. And just being more patient around the dunker’s spot and when I get the ball atop the key to make plays.”

On fitting in Brown’s up-tempo offense:

“I mean, I play fast, too, so that’s a perfect match right here. Nah, nah it’s a good team. Y’all see it on paper. It’s a great team. Everybody good. Everybody ready. What do I think about the depth of this team? Personally I think it’s one of the best teams in the league roster wise and on paper.”

On the Knicks’ improved team culture:

“Just the ball movement. I feel like we’re more together as a team, we’re doing more activities. I’m not even speaking on the court. I’m speaking off the court, as well. We just do more stuff off the court together just to build more team chemistry.”

"He's about 5'10" with a size 17 shoe – that's my boy, by the way – that can jump 50 inches in the air"

Mikal Bridges talks about what he's learned about defending Donovan Mitchell over the years: pic.twitter.com/xiFm9SLl0Y

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 21, 2025

Donovan Mitchell


On facing the Knicks and expectations:

“They’re Eastern Conference and championship contenders. They’re a team that if we get to where we want to get to, we’re going to have to go through them. They got the head of the snake in Jalen. They got great defenders, they got size at the rim. Great shooters. For us, it’s continuing to have respect for who they are and understand this is who we are. Come out there and hit first and be ready for a crazy environment at the Garden.”

Kenny Atkinson


On the excitement of opening night:

“What’s better than this? Game 1 against the Knicks in the Garden. When the schedule came out, we all circled this one.”

"That wasn't specifically why he was here. I think it's more about, he's been a friend for me for a long time."

Joe Mazzulla talks about former Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau's presence at Celtics practice: pic.twitter.com/JQuhneQv5D

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 21, 2025

Joe Mazzulla


On inviting Tom Thibodeau to Celtics practice:

“I think it’s more about, he’s been a friend for me for a long time. He coached here, he won a championship here. His presence is more about coming to learn the game and paying respect to a coach that has been here for a long time and has been in this organization and hung a banner here. Anything we can learn from him. It just so happened that he happened to be the coach that knocked us out of the playoffs the year before. There wasn’t that much there, from that standpoint.”

First thing on NBA on NBC: Melo pic.twitter.com/UwKLcGuJNe

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 21, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...t-more-but-its-going-to-be-like-this-all-year
 
Knicks 119, Cavs 111: Scenes from an OG party on opening night

gettyimages-2242693079.jpg


To kick off their 80th season in the Association, the New York Knicks (1-0) hosted the Cleveland Cavaliers (0-1). The game was billed as a battle between the two teams predicted to finish first and second in the Eastern Conference. It was also the first official game of Mike Brown’s career as head coach of the Knickerbockers. Would they disappoint? Not a chance. Final score, 119-111.

The team was without the services of starting center Mitchell Robinson (mystery) and Josh Hart (back spasms), and Karl-Anthony Towns is dealing with a right-quad strain that had him questionable before the game. For those of you who worried that the Knicks were too short-handed to beat the Cavs, your fears were for naught. Brown played 11 men in the game, and only two finished with negative plus/minuses.

Who among you picked OG Anunoby to lead the team in points and rebounds tonight? OG Anunoby’s season-high for rebounds last season was 10. Against the Cavs, he collected a 24-point, 14-rebound double-double, plus three steals, a block, shot 9-of-17 from the field and converted 4-of-9 from deep. Those 14 boards tied a career-high. It’s hard to believe that this might not be his best game of the season, and there are 79 more on the slate. He also played 38 minutes . . . some habits are hard to break.

Overall, five Knicks scored in double-figures: Anunoby, Brunson with 23, Karl-Anthony Towns with 19 (and 11 boards), Bridges with 16 (and three free throws!), and Miles McBride with 15. Landry Shamet came close, adding nine off the bench. The team took 40 three-pointers and made 35%, and they outrebounded Cleveland 48-32.

For the villains, Donovan Mitchell carried the team with 31 points but still finished -14. Evan Mobley posted 22 points and eight boards, and Sam Merrill added 19 points. They fell behind by 17 but clawed their way back, even having a two-point lead at the start of the fourth quarter, but New York proved just too deep. McBride, in particular, contributed massive timely buckets and you could make the case that he should share the game ball with OG.

Cleveland will be a better team with Darius Garland, De’Andre Hunter, and Max Strus back in uniform. But if tonight showed us anything, it’s that New York has the greater roster depth. If that doesn’t get you excited about the season, you’re a grump.

First Half​


Coach Brown wanted more three-pointers, and his team followed orders. Half of their first ten shot attempts came from the outfield. Here Jalen delivers from range to put the home team on the scoreboard.

salute cap 🫡

his first bucket is CASH pic.twitter.com/oDdH0mhOqy

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 22, 2025

Early on, Cleveland’s defense put sand in New York’s gears, causing an offensive foul, a steal, and multiple misfires on their way to an 8-0 run.

New York’s wingstop (Anunoby & Bridges) returned the favor with harassing perimeter defense, and Ariel Hukporti (starting for Mitchell Robinson) redeemed a blunder or two with tenacity in the lane and a thrilling block from behind of Jarrett Allen. After falling behind, the ‘Bockers answered with seven straight to go ahead 14-10 midway through the frame.

New man Guerschon Yabusele was first off the bench to relieve Karl-Anthony Towns (nursing a quad strain), and Trey Jemison III and Miles McBride joined him soon after.

Before he sat, KAT jammed this assist from the Incredible Huk.

BIG to BIG connection! pic.twitter.com/M4UQoOR0Zs

— Let’s Talk Knicks (LTK) (@LetsTalkKnicks_) October 22, 2025

With excellent distribution of the ball and points, the Knicks went up by as many as 12, shot 37% from deep, and finished the first 12 minutes up 33-22.

To start the second quarter, Tyler Kolek, Jordan Clarkson, and Yabu joined Anunoby and Towns. Kolek showed solid hands-up defense and swished his first shot of the season, a bomb from the top of the arc. With Allen and Mobley, the Cavs have a formidable frontcourt, yet New York doubled Cleveland’s rebound totals through most of the half. That’ll give a fan the giddy giggles.

Here’s Kolek with a delicious dish to OG for the jam.

Tyler Kolek with the BEAUTIFUL feed to OG Anunoby! pic.twitter.com/rbylNGe1DN

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 22, 2025

The home team’s lead touched 15 but faded fast. General sloppiness and a couple of Larry Nance baskets contributed to a 16-2 run that brought Cleveland within one. A triple from Deuce McBride stemmed the tide and kicked off a 21-7 run. By intermission, our heroes sat pretty, on the right side of a 65-50 score.

The Knicks controlled the first half through efficiency and physicality, shooting 47% to Cleveland’s 42% and dominating the boards 27–16. Driving the lane aggressively paid off at the line, with New York going 17-for-19 versus the Cavs’ 3-for-5. New York also led in fast-break points (7-2) and points in the paint (20–16), dictating tempo and rhythm to Coach Brown’s liking, no doubt. For the home team, Brunson, Bridges, and Anunoby had 12 apiece; for the Ohio Players, only Evan Mobley had reached double-digits (16 points, three boards).

Second Half​


The visitors burst from the locker room with energy, scoring 18 points in under five minutes and cutting their deficit to 11. Donovan Mitchell donned his Superman cape, scoring 21 points from all over the floor in the third quarter. He also assisted on two Sam Merrill bombs that were particularly deflating. Coach Kenny Atkinson gave Don a breather around the 5:30 mark, and New York’s Brown called a timeout soon after, with the differential reduced to seven.

Never fear. We have Huk!

the incredible HUK 😤 pic.twitter.com/RDNXlx0xrJ

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 23, 2025

With the Cavs behind by three, Mitchell checked in at 4:15. Nance dunked a Lonzo Ball lob and slivered the lead to one. Once again, Deuce stepped up to right the ship, hitting his third trey of the evening. The Knicks’ depth showed tonight, and their reserve shooters chipped in when it counted. They would have padded the lead with ease if not for Mitchell hitting again and again. With 1:30 on the clock, he put Cleveland up by one for the first time since the opening minutes.

Kolek answered with a fearless drive to the cup, looking vastly better than his summer league and preseason performances. Deuce kept a hand in Mitchell’s face, and New York had a chance to grow their lead, but misses by Anunoby and Clarkson, plus a loose-ball infraction by Towns, shot them in the foot. This one was knotted at 87 heading into the final frame.

With Brunson on the bench, Cleveland drew first blood in the fourth. New York answered with rim rattleras from KAT and Anunoby and a big-time bomb from McBride on their way to a 14-0 run. This summer, Deuce made some carefully worded comments about being excited to have a fresh start with a new coach (I’m paraphrasing). He looked reborn tonight!

2️⃣ in the right place at the right time 🫡

15 PTS | 4/6 3PM | 2 REB pic.twitter.com/DQkseSJfX1

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 23, 2025

Brunson, last season’s Clutch Player of the Year, subbed in around the seven-minute mark. Brown recognized that it was time for Captain Clutch to guide the troops to victory. Meanwhile, Mitchell left the court to get his hammy worked on by a Cleveland trainer—but returned a few minutes later, looking unaffected and helping his team climb within five.

An Anunoby triple gave the Knicks some relief, and his breakaway jam (thanks to a Brunson deflection) with 35 seconds left put our heroes up by ten. ‘Twas a beautiful bow on a beautiful night.

10/10 play. no notes. pic.twitter.com/epfrg9QtR1

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 23, 2025

Up Next​


Celtics come to town on Friday. See you then, Knicks fans.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-111-scenes-from-an-og-party-on-opening-night
 
Making sense of Mike Brown’s Opening Night rotation

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We’ve known for some time that things were going to look different rotation-wise this season. Going from a coach who’s known for tight rotations and an overreliance on starters more than anyone in Tom Thibodeau to Mike Brown means we should’ve been prepared for games where some unusual names play big minutes.

That was exemplified by the injuries to Josh Hart and Mitchell Robinson and could’ve been completely thrown into chaos if Karl-Anthony Towns decided not to play through an apparent Grade 2 quad strain. Still, even with KAT playing, we were shown a lot of things to consider going forward in the Knicks’ season-opening victory over the Cavaliers on Opening Night.

Starting Lineup​


Everyone and their mothers know that Robinson’s availability will be a question all season. Whether his current ailment is truly just injury management or something more sinister, it’ll be a big story all season to see who starts in his place, as Coach Brown clearly sees him as the fifth starter so far.

At least in the first game, it was Ariel Hukporti who got his second career start. It wasn’t the flashiest game for the second-year German big man, registering just two points, five rebounds, and two assists, but he didn’t look overwhelmed and arguably outplayed Jarrett Allen.

It’s also interesting to see that he only played 18 minutes, nine of them with the starters. The starting lineup had a plus-1.8 net rating on Wednesday, excelling on offense (133.3 ORtg) but suffering on defense.

The team’s four locked-in starters played 19 total minutes together, with Deuce McBride getting a look for seven minutes. More on how that looked in a bit.

An 11-Man Rotation?!​


11 players played for the Knicks in a close, nationally televised game against an NBA Finals contender. With two key injuries. I get the sense that Thibs fainted wherever he is seeing Tyler Kolek and Trey Jemison on the court.

(To be fair to Thibs, I almost did too.)

It was fascinating to see Kolek play extended minutes last night. I assumed the Knicks wanted to avoid having Brunson and Clarkson share the floor at all costs (they played just three minutes together), so I assumed when the first quarter ended that Clarkson would be out there as JB took his first rest. I was right, although I expected McBride to stay out there instead of Kolek.

To his credit, I thought Kolek looked good. He looked poised on offense and did what he usually does, making smart passes and not turning the ball over. He played with confidence and didn’t get too overwhelmed defensively, although his defensive limitations saw him occasionally get picked on. If he plays like that going forward, that’s a player that could conceivably give you some bench run and makes the Knicks a lot deeper than we thought.

My favorite Kolek play was breaking this 3-2 zone

You want to attack corners, and flash middle. Knicks do both. Kolek gets the pass to the corner and it becomes easy pic.twitter.com/CTVBbBvGl6

— Shax (@ShaxNBA) October 23, 2025

Landry Shamet was likely the biggest benefactor of Hart’s injury. We know from last season that he can provide a spark with his perimeter shooting and defense, and he did so in 14 minutes. I’m not sure if there’s a big role for him when the team is whole, but he’s the depth you like to have.

Kolek and Shamet both got 14 minutes, which were interestingly more than what both Clarkson (13) and Guerschon Yabusele (12) received last night.

Clarkson had a typical Clarkson game of bizarre shot selection, but he had some good moments and showed off his underrated playmaking. Yabusele still has not looked fully comfortable in a Knicks uniform, but had some good defensive sequences. I wouldn’t read too much into his lack of minutes yet, as we remember what Donte DiVincenzo’s role was at the beginning of his lone season in the orange and blue.

I was curious what the Knicks thought of Trey Jemison entering the season. If they planned to deploy a double big lineup all season, they would need a fourth player they trusted to handle bench minutes in case of injury. To Brown’s credit, not only did he give Jemison eight minutes of work to manage KAT’s workload amidst early foul trouble, but he also experimented with occasionally playing small.

The only players on guaranteed contracts who were healthy and didn’t play were Pačome Dadiet and Mo Diawara. That’s not terribly surprising, but it’s interesting to see that Brown didn’t turn to them even when going deep into the bench.

Lineup Versatility​


Deuce + starters: Seven minutes isn’t a ton for the Brunson-McBride-Bridges-Anunoby-Towns lineup, but it is significant based on where they were last season. That lineup, most considered the Knicks’ best five-out lineup, played a grand total of 41 minutes last season over 22 games. Under Brown, this could be the Knicks’ closing lineup most nights, and maybe they should, the way they performed last night, posting a superb plus-35.3 net rating.

Double big w/o Mitch: Towns and Hukporti played ten minutes together, and it wasn’t good, posting a miserable minus-22.1 net rating. That was the worst two-man lineup (min. 6 min) the Knicks played last night. Towns never played with Jemison, and Jemison never played with Hukporti.

Small ball: The Knicks ran a few interesting lineups, including one that featured Brunson-McBride-Shamet-Bridges (it didn’t do well). Anunoby even got some run as a small-ball five with those four for two minutes, something never experimented with last season.

Miscellaneous notes: The best performing quintet last night was from the early fourth quarter run with Kolek-McBride-Clarkson-Anunoby-Towns. This lineup is very worrisome defensively on paper, but they were exceptional. In 11 minutes last night, a Kolek-Clarkson tandem had a plus-32.1 net rating, turbocharging the bench offense. Those two, especially when paired with Anunoby, were magnificent.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...lek-shamet-clarkson-yabusele-jemison-hukporti
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I don’t wanna disappoint the fans’

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Win to start the season? Check!

Beat the supposed East’s Best? Double check!!

Humongous dose of quotes today? Triple check!!!

.@FredKatz "Why was there a load management plan with Mitch playing 18 minutes 1st half preseason opener…If there's no [new] injury…why was the plan he could play preseason…but not be ready regular season?"

Mike Brown "…No definition of load management…You kinda go along…" pic.twitter.com/T9Pj97M56j

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

Mike Brown​


On building a two-way Knicks team:

“Do we think we can be a great defensive team? Yes. Do I think we can be a great offensive team? Yes. And we have staples on each side of the ball. There are things we believe in offensively that will help shape our identity just like there are things we believe in defensively that will help shape our identity on that side as well.”

On establishing an identity:

“We’d like to establish or have an identity, but it’s not just strictly, ‘Hey, we’re a defensive team,’ or, ‘Hey, we’re an offensive team.’ In my opinion, you have to do a lot of things in order to win. You can’t just be a good defensive team because if you look at the NBA champions in the past, everyone that’s won a championship wasn’t a Top-3 defensive team. Everyone that’s won a championship wasn’t just a Top-3 offensive team. So you have to have belief in what you think this team can do and grow from that.”

On trusting players:

“They’ve earned that right for me to have that trust. I don’t have all the answers. I’ll be the first to admit it. Imma be wrong sometimes and just like when I’m wrong, hopefully somebody holds me accountable and I’ll learn and grow from my mistake. But because they are who they are: They’re competitive, they’re a veteran team, they’ve won at a pretty high level before. Sometimes they’ll teach me something, or they’ll teach us something and we’ve gotta believe in them, just like we’re asking them to believe in us. It’s a two-way street.”

On injuries and roster depth:

“As a head coach you want all your guys all the time. You want to be greedy in that regard. Also it’s a part of the game, that’s why you have in our case, I think 17 guys right now, 18 guys. And we, starting with me, I’m a big next man up, next player up. It doesn’t matter how many people are out. You’re hoping it’s not a ton, but that’s what all these guys get paid to do. They get paid to be ready to play whenever their number is called. They got to go out and perform and not do anything outside the box but perform at the highest level, starting with having that competitive spirit. And we still expect to win no matter who’s in uniform. That’s our goal.”

On Mitchell Robinson’s load management:

“There may be a stretch of five games where we may sit him. There may be a stretch of two preseason games where we may sit him. There’s no definition of what load management is. You just go along or myself and the medical team and the front office will go along as we see fit and we’ll decide if we want to sit him during practice or we want to sit him in a game. It’s as simple as that.”

On injuries and medical decisions:

“To be honest I don’t think about that stuff. I allow our medical team to handle it and I’ll take the lead after they give me word because that’s what their job is, and for me to get into that, I’m not an expert at it.”

On standards and accountability:

“I want them to continue to believe no matter what happens, as long as we’re doing those things, because it’s our standard. I want them to continue to believe in the process and each other as we go along, and if somebody goes a little too far left or a little too far right, including me, we expect everybody to hold each other accountable. That’s our standard. That’s what I want to see, and if we do that while we’re learning with the understanding that this is gonna be a process, then I’m OK with it.”

On team expectations:

“Our expectations are extremely high. We’re not going to get ahead of ourselves. Whether we won or lost, it’s one game. We won the game. We had some good moments. But we don’t feel like we’re anywhere near what we’re capable of, and that’s what makes it exciting.”

On NBA Finals-or-bust expectations:

“We’re good with that. We embrace that.”

On depth and combinations:

“I truly believe this is a deep team. Give Leon Rose and his group a lot of credit. It’s my job to keep trying to find combinations out on the floor that work. Just like they’ve got a lot of room to grow, I’ve got a lot of room to grow, too. I’m still learning. The good part about is there are a lot of different ways I can go with it and I can learn on the fly because we have guys that can play.”

On first impressions after the season opener:

“We feel like, as the season goes along, we’re going to get better. We won the game and we had some good moments, but we don’t feel like we’re anywhere near what we’re capable of. And that’s what makes it exciting. Everybody has expectations. I don’t know if their expectations are higher than anybody in our locker room. So we’re good with that. We embrace that.”

On OG Anunoby’s performance:

“OG was a monster. He was our defensive player of the game. I think he had six or seven deflections. He guarded a lot of different people, so he saw a lot of different types of players tonight. He did a heck of a job.”

On home-court energy:

“Knowing this is our home court every night is quite a feeling. They hit us in the mouth. But we did a lot better job as the game went along, especially the fourth quarter.”

On early impressions of the team:

“I said it before, I think the group is deep. And they have all the attributes that I talked about earlier that are standard. Because of that, it doesn’t matter who is in front of us, we’re going to have an opportunity to win the game. If we play within ourselves, and that’s what we did.”

On rebounding performance:

“We needed every single one of those rebounds those guys got.”

Jalen Brunson​

"It's gonna be a long journey. But honestly for the most part we're excited about every day…It's getting better"

–– Jalen Brunson (23 points) after Knicks beat Cavs Opening Night 119-111 pic.twitter.com/eA76GeV36U

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

On Deuce McBride’s game:

“I think the best thing about him is, when he wasn’t playing that much, he was still in the gym every day, he was doing everything he had to do.”

On whether or not he got a hug from Spike Lee before his first game, like Mike Brown did:

“I did not get that, but Spike got my mom a nice one of those Brunson puff jackets, so we’re even.”

"It's electric all the time. Fans bring it every day. Regardless if it's Opening Night or game 30 or game 60, 70. Shoutout to the fans showing up, showing out. Glad we gave them something to cheer about"

– Karl-Anthony Towns on Opening Night at MSG pic.twitter.com/NL70rJtw4z

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 23, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On preparing for the season:

“Just getting right for the season. That’s really all I’m thinking.”

On playing through injury:

“Oh yeah. I’ve been banged up and haven’t really got a chance to practice or play those last two preseason games, but I don’t wanna disappoint the fans. Dealing with a Grade 2 quad strain is not something easy to deal with. But we made it happen tonight. I’m glad the fans respected the effort I put in to play tonight and my teammates really did, too. So shoutouts to them supporting me and understanding the situation I was in.”

On the quad injury:

“It was hurting. For sure.”

On a difficult day to start the season:

“Oh I was hurting for sure. It’s been a day for me living in it, and for y’all trying to report it, so it’s been one hell of a day. But I’m glad at the end, God’s good. We got a win, New York’s happy, the fans are happy. Things are good.”

On team rotation and trust:

“Just allowing ourselves to change the energy of the game at any time. We’ve got a lot of guys in here who are pros and giving them a chance to affect the game and impact winning is a great testament to, one, the trust that us teammates have in each other here in this locker room, and two, the coaching staff trusting the players, so shout out to them.”

"I feel like we have a lot of talent. I like our bench that comes in better than a lot of other benches."

Mikal Bridges talks about the value of the Knicks having a deep bench: pic.twitter.com/RB6E9slE5G

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 23, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On team chemistry:

“Playing 100 games with the playoffs and being in some tough battles, you learn a lot about each other, and knowing how each other plays in the toughest moments, so it really helps. I know the things KAT likes to do, I know the things OG likes to do, I know the things Lil Tyler likes to do, Landry, Josh, Mitch — I could go on and on, especially in Year 2. It’s gonna take time with the new guys, but having a year under the belt is really helpful.”

On Jalen Brunson’s versatility:

“(Brunson) can play anywhere on the court. Even with his size, he can post up guys, too. He can do just about anything but probably not roll. Everyone on our team is talented and can do a lot of things. I think all of us can dribble-drive and make the right read.”

On OG Anunoby:

“Playing with OG and knowing [he’s guarding the] ball-side corner, that he might take the ball from somebody, it’s crazy. He has that talent.”

"The game will tell you what to do. Each game will be different, but as we get more and more comfortable, it'll get better and better."

OG Anunoby talks about getting better and more comfortable in Mike Brown's offense: pic.twitter.com/R6YfaIizyj

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 23, 2025

OG Anunoby​


On his performance:

“I just try to play hard. Do everything to help the team win.”

On the team’s depth:

“We have a deep team. Everyone who came in is capable of making an impact. That showed tonight.”

On adjusting offensively:

“The game will tell you what to do. Each game will be different, but as we get more and more comfortable, it’ll get better and better.”

On playing together:

“Always play together. That’s the key to what we do. Always play together.”

"Playing in New York, I've been here my whole career. It's special every time I walk on to the floor."

– Deuce McBride pic.twitter.com/qNlaHmDl05

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 23, 2025

Miles McBride​


On defensive pressure:

“We really want to get out into the open court and speed teams up. Us starting at 94 feet forces teams to get into their offense a lot slower, speeds guys up. We have a lot of length and guys who can defend, so we want to play to our advantage.”

When Vogue learned that the insanely stylish NBA player Jordan Clarkson was heading to the New York Knicks, we knew there was only one way to welcome him: with a high-fashion photo shoot, of course. https://t.co/Zz5DTTG4D1

— Vogue Runway (@VogueRunway) October 20, 2025

Jordan Clarkson​


On his style:

“I’ve always been into fashion, and my style sense has always been ‘no boundaries.’”

On joining the Knicks:

“I was super-shocked, but also ecstatic and excited. LA gave me the chance to play in one of the league’s biggest markets; in Cleveland I got to be teammates with LeBron James. Then going to Utah, it was a small market, but I was able to make noise and win games and help that organization really stand out.”

On his Knicks teammates:

“I’m cool with Josh, I’m cool with Jalen, KMac is also from San Antonio…. At the same time, I’m the oldest dude on the team.”

On New York:

“Seeing diverse cultures and all the people that are here in the city, it’s kind of amazing. It’s not kind of amazing, it is amazing. It’s electric.”

On food and home:

“Once I find some good chicken adobo and some lumpia, I’ll be straight.”

On tattoos and storytelling:

“I don’t really talk much, so I feel like when people see my tattoos, they’re reading my story on my body.”

On his daughter Cali:

“She’s my twin, but she is way less shy than me. Once I get comfortable with you, you’ll see the real me and I’m an open book. But in the beginning, I’m super-shy; I won’t say anything at all. She’s all, ‘Hi! What’s up? My name is Cali.’ She can start a conversation before I can. She loves to come to the games with me and be right next to me on the way in, and get photographed. You’ll continue to see us more.”

On his photoshoot:

“Today was amazing. Got to see a little bit of Brooklyn; good vibes.”

"They were the more aggressive team…Kind of dominated us in every area…I felt like they thoroughly outplayed us…Credit to them, they were the better team tonight…"

–– Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson on losing to the Knicks Opening Night 119-111 pic.twitter.com/udICvhyw24

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

Kenny Atkinson​


On selling a system:

“We’re the ultimate salesmen. That’s what NBA coaches do. If you’re going to get by, you have to sell it. I know the first couple of days I walked in and I was saying ‘do this and this differently on offense,’ there were a lot of raised eyebrows and questions. And it was like we’re going to be cutting all the time now. We’re going to the offensive boards every time? We’re all attacking the boards? That was a great mind shift. This works, when you have great leadership. It makes it so much easier. When your best players buy in, it trickles down and makes it so much easier.”

On the Knicks’ ceiling:

“Conference finalists. I mean, that’s what they were last year. That’s their history. The Cavs? We have a lot to prove. (We’re) 11–15 over the last three years in the playoffs. The Knicks have gotten to the conference finals. They’ve done it. We’ve got to get out of the second round first before we start talking all these expectations. We have a lot to prove.”

Jamal Crawford picks his 2025-26 6MOTY:

“I think now that Payton Pritchard’s starting, I like Jordan Clarkson in New York… I think he’ll be like a sixth starter.” 👀

via @NBATV pic.twitter.com/ijCLYx2Eop

— NBA Retweet (@RTNBA) October 21, 2025

Jamal Crawford​


On his Sixth Man of the Year prediction:

“I like Jordan Clarkson in New York. The formula is that you can be successful off the bench or in any role, but for an award, you need team success. I think the Knicks are primed to make a run in the East, with the injuries in Boston and Indiana. New York have a new coach and I think he’s going to utilize the bench a lot. I think Jordan Clarkson will have the green light to do what he does. I think he’ll be like a sixth starter. He’ll have the numbers and the wins, and he’s won it before. When you do well in that market, everything is amplified, so I’ve got Jordan Clarkson winning this year.”

Tom Thibodeau (via Source)​


On his firing:

“In their world, the players were 51–0 and Tom was 0–31… He also had a sense of betrayal. When you find out that people you helped either weren’t with you in the end or didn’t fight for you like you fought for them, that stings.”

Connecting some dots pic.twitter.com/eKkDFkTNh1

— Céad Míle Fáilte (@ColeyMick) October 23, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...cks-bulletin-i-dont-wanna-disappoint-the-fans
 
Knicks 105, Celtics 95: New York fends off late rally to stay perfect

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Anytime the New York Knicks (2-0) beat the Boston Celtics (0-2) is a holiday at our house. Tonight at MSG, our heroes creamed them in the second quarter by 28 points, and that was enough to offset a shaky second half. Final score, Knicks 105, Celtics 95.

Despite the team shooting 38% tonight, all the Knicks starters reached double-figures. Jalen Brunson topped the scoresheet (31 points, five assists, 10-of-20 FG); Karl-Anthony Towns recorded a 26-13 double-double; and, in reserve, Josh Hart overcame his back spasms to grab 14 boards in 19 minutes (redeeming a 1-of-8 shooting night). Deuce McBride started the two-guard but struggled with the shooting part of the assignment. And Tyler Kolek looked good again, until Boston tightened the screws and discombobulated him.

Without Mitchell Robinson again, the Knicks were thin at center. Ariel Hukporti logged a DNP, however (no reason given).

For the Celtics, Brown added a few late scores to reach 23 points but was a -14. Sam Hauser had the same plus-minus and 18 points (6-of-10 3pt). New Celtic Anfernee Simons looked as mediocre as he did in Portland, collecting 10 points (to be fair, he had three steals). In his first NBA game, Hugo González was the only Celtic with a net-positive (+7) and played well despite a quiet box score (six points, four boards, two steals).

First Half


Ugliness abounded to start the game. Boston sprang forth with six straight points—then committed three turnovers in the first three minutes. For the Knicks, Miles McBride started at shooting guard alongside Brunson, Bridges, Anunoby, and Towns. Deuce couldn’t buy a basket but dished their first two dimes.

Streakiness continued. New York went on a 7–0 burst, then whiffed eight times, allowing the Celts to score eight straight. To level the score, Towns buried consecutive threes midway through the quarter. Here’s the first:

Karl-Anthony Towns is COOKING from deep early 🔥

KAT's got 9 of the Knicks' 13 points 😤pic.twitter.com/9QHXDZfMY6

— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) October 25, 2025

Landry Shamet left the pine first, and Josh Hart followed around the five-minute mark. Those were Hart’s first minutes of the season, and he gobbled up six boards in a hurry. The back looks fine so far.

Despite making five of their first 22 shots, New York kept within two points by the two-minute mark due to Boston missing almost everything from deep. The visitors closed the quarter strong, however, and finished it ahead, 30-22.

To begin the second, Tyler Kolek and Jordan Clarkson joined Bridges, Anunoby, and KAT, and that assortment promptly flipped the score with 11 straight. Kolek played smart defense, made great passes, drove the paint, and took multiple charges (only one was called). The team was +9 in his second quarter minutes. Brogdon who?

ty gettin to the rack for an easy lay 💨 pic.twitter.com/a4DcSyu057

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 25, 2025

Brunson relieved Kolek and, soon after, a Clarkson trey capped a 14-0 Knicks run. From there, New York outscored Beanton 30-8 to close the half with Brown fielding last season’s starting five. Concluding a 42-14 second frame, they entered intermission 64-44. Up by

Both teams shot 40% from the field, but New York’s edge came from dominating the glass (29–20), including 12 offensive rebounds that fueled second-chance points. The Knicks hit more threes (10–7) and were nearly perfect from the line (14-of-15). Their defense was sharp, forcing 10 Boston turnovers that led to 18 points while committing only four of their own. New York’s transition game thrived with a 16–0 (!) fast-break advantage. Boston’s 15 fouls and sloppy ball handling let the Knicks control the tempo and the scoreboard.

For New York, KAT led the scoresheet with 16 points; for Boston, Sam Hauser logged nine first-half points, and nobody had broken double-digits yet.

Second Half


With the Knicks starters back, the Celts tacked eight unanswered on the board. After blanking on six straight from deep, Deuce finally found the bottom of the net to stop Boston’s run, and then more longballs from Brunson and Bridges helped to restore New York’s advantage. By midway through the frame, they were up by 24. Like it? Love it!

the guys are liking that spot 👀

17 PTS | 3 REB | 3 AST for 1️⃣1️⃣ pic.twitter.com/xxkgjZUz8i

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 25, 2025

New York continued to crash the offensive glass, creating second and third opportunities and keeping Brown’s squad off balance. They managed just 18 points in the quarter but held Boston to 21, maintaining control with an 82–65 lead at the break.

Boston opened the fourth with a quick five-point burst, threatening a comeback as New York’s offense wavered. Towns, however, refused to let the game slip away. In one sequence, he fought for three offensive rebounds in traffic, sank two free throws, and then followed that with a deep jumper. The Celtics shaved the deficit to 12, helped by rookie Hugo González, who provided necessary energy in his season debut. Derrick White, just 2-of-13 from the field, hit a tough three to trim it to 10.

Adding to New York’s growing concerns, Anunoby left the game with about five minutes remaining after suffering an apparent leg injury that prevented him from putting weight on one side. Then, New York committed their 20th turnover by not being able to inbound the ball, and their 10-point lead was starting to look highly vulnerable. With about a minute left, White made a 26-footer to bring the differential to nine. Hart missed at the other end, but Jaylen Brown passed the next possession to the front row, and that signaled the end of the night.

that's 30 points for our captain 🫡 pic.twitter.com/gwWJPdwanZ

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 25, 2025

Up Next


New York will travel to Miami to face the Heat on Sunday. Safe travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...new-york-fends-off-late-rally-to-stay-perfect
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘Tonight should be a fun one’

gettyimages-2243124921.jpg


The Knicks hosted the Celtics and handed them a solid beating.

What if New York sent old friend Thibs to go and mess with the C’s? Questions, questions!

Here’s a bunch of quotes from your Knickerbockers following an immaculate start to the season.

Mike Brown’s Knicks award a Defensive Player of the Game each night.

Timbs and a hardhat take the place of a turnover chain/etc. pic.twitter.com/bzur5OsPa2

— Kris Pursiainen (@krispursiainen) October 25, 2025

Mike Brown​


On Boston’s roster and coaching staff:

“They’re still a really good team. They’ve got guys who’ve experienced winning a championship, a coach who knows how to get it done. They’ve played without key pieces before. They’re going to play hard, they’re gonna share the ball, they’re gonna shoot a lot of threes. It’s still a really good team that’s extremely well-coached.”

On applying defensive pressure and team energy:

“You just want your opponent to know, ‘Hey, I’m going to be here all night. You’re going to have to work a little bit harder for what you’re trying to do than what you’d hope for.’ Sometimes you do it to change the tempo, to speed the game up. If you’re going to be out there four or six minutes, empty your gas tank. Then come sit, catch your breath, and go back out there when your number’s called.”

On rebounding and creating possessions:

“It’s happening because teams are having success with it. They understand this game is about possessions — everyone is so talented offensively, you’ve just got to find ways to create more. Plus the spacing now — everybody’s further out. When the shot goes up, there’s more room to crash.”

On Josh Hart’s debut:

“Josh, man, monster, monster, monster. … He guarded everybody. Not only did he guard everybody, he had six offensive rebounds, eight defensive. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen this before — 14 rebounds in 19 minutes — just a phenomenal, phenomenal game doing the dirty stuff by Josh.”

On Hart’s impact after returning from injury:

“It was great. For him to have the game that he had in that short amount of time was phenomenal to watch. And again, it adds to our team … I was excited to see Josh out there.”

On the Knicks’ lineup versatility:

“Everybody on the floor shoots it at a pretty high level and with range. Everybody on the floor can go make a play for themselves and their teammates. They all have to be guarded. And then defensively a lot of interchangeable parts, guys that are used to guarding the ball. They are quick, and all that. It gives your opponent a different look than a traditional big lineup.”

On starting Miles McBride against Boston:

“I wasn’t sure how fair it would be for Ariel and for KAT to guard one of those guards to start the game. We feel like we’re extremely versatile. We [can] play a lot of different ways.”

On deciding starting lineups and matchups:

“If I feel that we need to match up, I may go with a specific lineup. If I feel that we don’t, I may go the other way. Again, all our guys should be ready to play, whether it’s the start of the game or finishing the game or playing in the middle of the game. Starting is nice, but at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter to me. To those guys in the locker room, maybe it does, I don’t know. But I have a lot of confidence in this entire roster, so we can start a lot of different ways.”

On the Knicks’ roster depth:

“I have a lot of confidence in this entire roster, so we can start a lot of different ways.”

On defensive dominance and transition play:

“Defensively, we can be a monster of a defensive team as a group. I think our guys know it. And when we get the ball off the glass or we create a turnover with our activity — we just have so many weapons and so many guys that can push the pace. We want to be able to attack before that defense is set. And we showed flashes of it tonight.”

On rebounding and offensive rhythm:

“The effort on the glass is helping us generate wins while we’re still trying to — at times — find out the right way to play offensively.”

On the team’s progress:

“I know [the Celtics] feel they can play better. We certainly feel like we can play better. We’ve just got to keep trying to string it together for 48 minutes the right way.”

On offensive rebounds and ongoing development:

“We haven’t shot the ball well quite yet… but the 21 offensive rebounds. The effort on the glass is helping us generate wins while we’re still trying, at times, find out the right way to play offensively. We’re getting there and we’re learning every day.”

Josh Hart was asked about his 14 rebounds in 19 minutes tonight:

"I knew the offense was going to be a little shaky" 🤣 pic.twitter.com/hcOQdubIoJ

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 25, 2025

Josh Hart​


On returning from his back injury:

“You don’t really know how often you use your back until you hurt your back. Last week I was feeling good, kind of hitting all my checkmarks, and then I tried to go through doing live contact stuff and it was just not there. It’s not ready yet. It’s frustrating ’cause I wanna play. I wanna compete. But I gotta be smart with it.”

On how the injury happened:

“Nah, I think it was just the rebound into the turn, and I guess my back just didn’t like that one too much. I wish I could say it was this or that, but I don’t know. It was a move that — it wasn’t even a move. It was a movement I’ve done all the time.”

On the recovery timeline and missing the season opener:

“[It’s] frustrating. I wanted to be back Wednesday for the season opener against the Cleveland Cavaliers, that was the plan, but my body didn’t respond how I wanted it to. We’re here today. We’re gonna try to give it a go and see how I feel.”

On monitoring his back going forward:

“It’s one of those things where I’m progressively getting better and starting to take contact and so yeah, here I am. It’s tough because you don’t really know how it’ll respond until you put it to the test. I tried to put it to the test a little bit last week and it just wasn’t there. So now we’re here. During the season, it’s always tough to really go through a lot of testing cause you’re not doing too much crazy live practices. This will be a good test for it.”

On playing with a splint:

“The splint’s my best friend. My finger’s still messed up. It’s still chopped. It kinda just is what it is at this point. Down the line, hopefully this offseason I’ll get it fixed, but until then we’re just gonna rock with it.”

On adapting to Mike Brown’s system:

“I’m pretty good with it. Obviously, Mike’s great with making sure guys are inclusive even though we’re hurt, and a lot of the stuff — the meat and potatoes — was what I was already running through. A couple new integrations of some of the stuff, but I’m confident in it. I think it’s gonna be very beneficial for a lot of the guys, and I look forward to playing that fast pace.”

On his first game back:

“I knew the offense was gonna be a little shaky [in the] first game back, so I had to do something to help the game. But felt good to get out there, get up and down. Happy we got the win and [we gotta] keep building off of it.”

Jalen Brunson says his mentality has not changed "at all" heading into this season:

"Playing basketball schematically has changed a little bit, but my mentality will never. If that changes it's time to think otherwise pic.twitter.com/1ZFibzty6q

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 25, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On defensive execution:

“It starts with defense. When we’re clicking on defense and getting stops, we’re able to do that. We can’t have fast break points if we’re not getting stops; we just have to continue to do that.”

On his mentality under Brown’s leadership:

“Playing basketball schematically has changed a little bit, but my mentality will never. If that changes it’s time to think otherwise.”

On the bench impact in Friday’s win:

“It shows we came back ready to play. We didn’t finish the first quarter strong, and then our bench really sparked us. To come back in there and contribute to that, it was a really good feeling.”

"Just different ways to impact the game. For me, I want to impact winning, whatever it costs"

Karl-Anthony Towns on the difference in playing center vs. power forward: pic.twitter.com/2SsxR3sXjc

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 25, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On adjustments against Boston:

“I just got a lot of experience playing against [the Celtics] in the playoffs. I have a lot of experience playing against them specifically, so just utilizing that experience and then different things that were successful for me in the series and in the regular season last year, just trying to see if it’ll work again [Friday].”

On defensive resilience after a sloppy stretch:

“I thought we did a great job of recovering from the first quarter, playing great defense. Initiated our offense, we did a great job of that. Second half, we got a little sloppy with the ball, our defense kept it together and kept us in the lead and gave us enough room for error to come out with the win.”

Asked Jaylen Brown if he has any extra motivation being back at Madison Square Garden, where the Celtics’ season ended:

“Absolutely. Tonight should be a fun one.” pic.twitter.com/c2guO8zPaY

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) October 24, 2025

Jaylen Brown​


On returning to Madison Square Garden:

“Absolutely. Tonight should be a fun one.”

Jaylen Brown fake hairline rubbed off onto OG Anunoby jersey 😬

(h/t @motts_apple)pic.twitter.com/LNq6yql4zQ

— Fullcourtpass (@Fullcourtpass) October 25, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/74649/knicks-bulletin-tonight-should-be-a-fun-one
 
Game Preview: Knicks at Heat, October 26, 2025

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The Knicks (2-0) hit the road for the first time in 2025-26, heading down to South Beach to start a three-game road trip against the Miami Heat (1-1) in a rekindling of a rivalry that, while peaking in the 1990s, still has animosity to this day.

The Heat lost in a close, high-scoring battle to open the season on Wednesday against the Orlando Magic, but rebounded to beat the breaks off the Memphis Grizzlies 146-114 on Friday. Through two games, the Heat are averaging 133.5 points a night on 51.3% from the field and 41.3% from three! They have also forced 35 turnovers in two games and held their opponents to shooting 43.2% from the field and 33.3% from deep.

It’ll be interesting to see how the Knicks, who put together two strong defensive performances against the Cleveland Cavaliers and Boston Celtics to open the season, will look to stop a surprisingly stout Heat offense. Winning the possession battle has been key in the early going, but the Heat are one of three teams averaging more rebounds than the Knicks.

What you’d love to see from this game is a more complete offensive performance. The Knicks are 29th in the league in FG% in the early going, shooting a miserable 40.7% from the field. This is likely just a small sample size playing tricks on us all, but the team needs to shape up. While Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns have been doing their things, the team needs someone else to step up, as aside from OG Anunoby’s strong effort against Cleveland, there’s been no other Knick to score more than 15 in a game.

Projected Starters


Davion Mitchell is a dynamo defensively who will almost certainly be assigned the role of Brunson stopper tonight. Ja Morant was horrendous on Friday against the Heat, going 4-for-16 with Mitchell mostly on his hip. He had a magnificent 16-12-6 outing against Orlando, but only scored two points against Memphis. He’s never been known as an elite shooter, but he did nail 44.7% of his threes in 30 games with the Heat last year and was electric in the Play-In Tournament.

Davion Mitchell has picked up right where he left off last season—playing the best hoops of his career for Miami.

Pick-n-roll playmaking, floater game, pace pushing, spot up shooting, defensive ball pressure. Looking like a real gem. pic.twitter.com/hqAyfP1yWP

— NBA University (@NBA_University) October 23, 2025

We all know who Norman Powell is. He’s spent his career as the definition of a microwave scorer, averaging 17.6 points a game since 2019-20. He was finally a full-time starter for the Clippers last year and had a strong case to make his first all-star team, averaging 21.8 points on 48.4/41.8/80.4 shooting splits. Since arriving in Miami in July via trade, he’s done more of the same, being the Heat’s lead guard with Tyler Herro on the shelf. I’d guess he’ll have Mikal Bridges hounding him all night.

Andrew Wiggins was the main piece the Heat acquired in last year’s Jimmy Butler blockbuster, and the former No. 1 overall pick has been solid, averaging 19.0 points and 4.2 rebounds on solid efficiency after the trade last year. Through two games, the Canadian wing has only attempted 20 shots and is 1-for-6 from three, but he’s been a good three-point shooter for the last few years.

Bam Adebayo is the feature name on this Heat squad with his three All-Star games, five All-Defense teams, and his superstar wife, who’s challenging to be the WNBA’s GOAT. Last year, he started shooting more threes and made them at a 35.7% clip. As he looks to Brook Lopez-ify his game, he’s nailed five threes in 13 attempts from behind the arc already while averaging 19.5 points and 8.5 rebounds. He’s a good bet for 20 every night, especially with Herro out.

Yves Missi has been very impressive in his first year-plus in the NBA. The former No. 15 pick showed flashes as a rookie, averaging 9.3 points and 7.4 rebounds in 64 games (36 starts). He can shoot the three, but the seven-footer is a beast under the basket if you don’t have, say, Mitchell Robinson under there. He had a 12-8-6 performance against the Knicks in March and can make a big leap this year.

Prediction


This will depend a lot on the status of the injured Knicks. It looks like Josh Hart will go, but both Deuce McBride (personal reasons) and Karl-Anthony Towns (quad) are questionable. There’s still no Mitchell Robinson, and with the double big lineups that the Heat run, you wonder if Ariel Hukporti will start tonight regardless of the personnel available.

The Heat have a sneaky amount of firepower, and it’ll be key not to let guys like Nikola Jovic, Simone Fontecchio, and Jaime Jaquez Jr. beat you off the bench. Still, after beating two teams that should finish higher than the Heat in the standings, I’m going to trust that the Knicks will improve to 3-0 for the first time since 2012-13.

Knicks by 6.

Injury Report


Knicks:

OUT – Mitchell Robinson (ankle)

Questionable – Deuce McBride (personal reasons), Karl-Anthony Towns (quad)

Probable – Josh Hart (back)

Heat:

OUT – Terry Rozier (gambling), Tyler Herro (ankle), Kasparas Jakucionis (groin)

Game Details


Date: Sunday, October 26, 2025

Time: 6:00 PM ET

Place: Kaseya Center, Miami, FL

TV: MSG

Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...6/game-preview-knicks-at-heat-october-26-2025
 
Heat 115, Knicks 107: Knicks’ shooting goes cold in Miami

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Two score years ago today, Patrick Ewing played his first game as a Knick, logging 18 points and six rebounds in a loss to the Sixers at the Garden. Forty years later, they lost, too. So much for a perfect season: Heat 115, Knicks 107.

The New York Knicks (2-1) were at Kaseya Center to face the Heat (2-1) in their home opener. With 14 ties and 13 lead changes tonight, the Knicks had numerous chances to take control in the second half, but shoddy shooting cooked them. Overall, they attempted 54 threes, tying a franchise record, and converted only 15 of them. Even though they took 15 more shots than the Heat, the Flamingos made 46% from the field and 35% from deep and that was enough for the victory.

The Knicks bench shot 1-of-18 from deep in an ugly effort. More about that below. Spoilers: Guerschon Yabusele continues to look like an unhelpful slab of meatloaf, Jordan Clarkson is an early frontrunner for player we’d rather not see again, and Landry Shamet wore his basketball uniform like a halloween costume in his 19 minutes.

On a positive note, Jalen Brunson led the Knicks with 37 points in 35 minutes, shooting 14-of-26 from the floor (he finished a +6). Coach Mike Brown held out Jalen to start the fourth quarter, and it was a questionable decision in hindsight given that Captain Clutch was the only reliable scorer and the Heat were ready to rip the lid off. (And they did.) When Brunson finally did check in, the home team was ahead by double-digits and were unwilling to budge.

Mikal Bridges added 20 points on 70% from the floor, and Karl-Anthony Towns had a 15-point, 18-board double-double. KAT’s foul trouble and Hukporti’s struggles put the Knicks in trouble against Bam Adebayo (19 points, 13 boards) and the Heat’s front court. Norm Powell added 29 for the victors.

First Half​


On Friday, Coach Brown went small to match Boston’s speed and size, leaving sophomore center Ariel Hukporti glued to the pine. Tonight, with Miami rolling out the Bam Adebayo and Kel’el Ware twin-tower look, Brown adjusted again and started Hukporti next to KAT. A coach who adapts his lineup to the matchup? Pinch me.

Huk looked jittery early, and he wasn’t the only one. Both teams pushed the pace, resulting in sloppy passes and gassed faces. With New York trailing 13–11 after four-ish minutes, a sweaty Huk checked out and did not return in the half. Josh Hart was first off the bench, immediately resuming his role as the Hungry Hungry Hippo of Rebounds.

The Knicks continued their winning formula from the first two games with active defense and relentless rebounding. Towns owned the paint with five rebounds and two blocks in the first quarter, while OG Anunoby buried a pair of threes on his way to 10 points in 10 minutes.

Look at KAT’s hustle.

The Knicks culture is ROCK SOLID

This is a play that KAT could have jogged back this early in the season and nobody would have thought twice

Instead, he gave CHAMPIONSHIP EFFORT and this was the result

pic.twitter.com/TE0KMm0vUs

— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) October 26, 2025

Brown’s mandate for longballs held as well, with 13 of New York’s 21 attempts coming from deep. Meanwhile, Miami’s early-season scoring leader Norman Powell (21.5 ppg) traded buckets with Brunson. The former finished the frame with 13, the latter with 11. The Knicks took a 27–24 lead into the second.

Sticking with his formula, Brown sent Tyler Kolek out as floor general to start the second quarter. The Knicks kept heaving from downtown, but with little success: they’d made 19% (4-of-21) by midway through the quarter. Note that Deuce McBride was absent tonight (personal reasons) and would have at least canned a couple. The bench crew—Hart, Clarkson, Yabusele, Shamet, and Kolek—converted just 1-of-10 in the half. Here’s the one:

The Knicks really have something going with Tyler Kolek pic.twitter.com/KfhIkfqKVr

— KNICKS BEAST (@KnicksBeast) October 26, 2025

While they missed ’em, the Flaming Neons made them (49% FG, 39% 3PT); and they beat the ‘Bockers on fast-break points, 16-3. Fortunately, tough defense bailed out the bad first-half shooting, with New York stealing the ball five times and pressuring Miami into 10 turnovers. And New York outrebounded the home team, 26-20.

By intermission, our heroes were down 57-54. Brunson led the score sheet so far with 15 points on 50% shooting and KAT already had 10 boards. For Miami, Powell had 15 and Adebayo was flirting with a double-double.

Pick your adjective for this:

Brunson is absolutely filthy pic.twitter.com/AYmk6d9jd0

— KnicksNation (@KnicksNation) October 26, 2025

Second Half​


The Knicks starters returned to start the second half. Brunson was on fire, scoring from all levels and dropping 12 points in the third period, while Anunoby added more from deep and Bridges added a catch-and-shoot trey. The Knicks’ defense forced more turnovers and KAT controlled the boards, but Miami stayed close behind Powell and a Kel’el Ware triple.

Here’s a sweet Hart-to-Bridges sequence:

smooth like butter 🧈

16 PTS | 3 REB | 2 AST pic.twitter.com/WsAdaDbt4o

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 26, 2025

Both teams cooled midway through the frame. With Mitchell Robinson absent (again, always) and Hukporti playing inconsistently, we were nervous when KAT picked up his fourth foul early in the third. New York briefly took a small lead, but with Towns and Brunson on the bench late in the quarter, the wheels came off. They missed from all over, included point-blank range, and fell behind 88-81 at the break.

As in the last game, Coach Brown started the fourth quarter with Brunson on the bench. It was a gamble, given the Knicks need for points and Jalen’s hot hand. In under two minutes, Miami lurched ahead by a dozen, thanks to Jaime Jaquez Jr.’s drives and Simone Fontecchio’s deep shooting. Towns, Anunoby, Bridges, Shamet, and Clarkson tried to and failed to find the net.

The Miami Heat are getting up and down the court but I will once again say Simone Fontecchio. pic.twitter.com/Nzrk4ajlU4

— Steve Jones (@stevejones20) October 27, 2025

At the nine-minute mark, Captain Clutch subbed in for Anunoby. At the 7:30 mark, Miami reached 100 points and a 14 point lead while the Knicks dented the rim on shot after shot. Brown was clearly searching for shooting, but Clarkson and Shamet weren’t it—by halfway through the quarter, they had combined for 2-of-14 from the field and 0-of-8 from deep. Mike tried an assortment of Jalen, Clarkson, Bridges, Yabusele, and Towns—same result. Powell swished from 26 feet, and the hole was 18 points.

Pissed, Bruson led a 14-3 run. When Hart scored a layup in traffic, New York trailed by eight with three on the clock. They fell asleep on the next play, allowing Bam to dunk a bunny. And yet! Towns hit from deep at the two-minute mark: 110-103. When Miami chased down a loose ball and called timeout, there was still daylight for our ‘Bockers.

Jalen picked Adebayo’s pocked and ran it back for two. Andrew Wiggins hit a dagger three in Josh’s face. New York had two chances up the floor, but committed two offensive fouls (KAT and Hart), and eight-points was too much to overcome in the final thirty seconds. Ball game.

Up Next​


Our heroes travel to Milwaukee to face the deer on Tuesday. Safe Travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...knicks-107-knicks-shooting-goes-cold-in-miami
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I think it’s more the legs than the finger’

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Even the greatest teams in NBA history lost a few games before making a postseason run toward the title, you know what I’m saying?

The Knickerbockers will keep their road trip going with a matchup against wannabe Knick Giannis tomorrow, and that’s all we care about now.

Here are some quotes based on comments from Coach Brown and a few other New Yorkers in the past few hours.

Cold & flu season always comes early to the NBA. Watch the injury report pic.twitter.com/DbwHhGZRiD

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 27, 2025

Mike Brown​


On the team’s progress:

“We’re getting there. I thought we made improvement from our last game with our reads, although it didn’t show because we didn’t shoot the ball as well as we wanted to. We gave up too many transition baskets, and we sent them to the free throw line, but our reads are getting a little better. I still had to kind of direct them and steer them with different stuff to try to mix it up, but we did get a little better, which is exciting, and there are some positives we can show offensively from tonight’s game.”

On three-point shooting approach:

“If you’re open, you’ve gotta shoot it, because I don’t know if we’re gonna get a better shot. I truly believe we’ll knock those downs. I can’t tell you if all 54 shots were good threes, but I know we had the right people taking them. So if you’re open, let it fly, and we’ll live with it.”

On the type of threes he wants:

“You saw the last eight minutes: you touch the paint, you spray it. You don’t go too deep. If you’ve got a guy closing out on you, snap-drive it, keep the dominos falling. Let somebody else come help, now you spray it. We didn’t get that rhythm until late, which is fine. We’ll figure it out. It’s why I’m okay with that. That’s still a learning curve.”

On transition defense and fouling:

“But what I’m not okay with, and it all kind of ties together, is us fouling and us giving up 45 transition baskets. It doesn’t matter how you play offensively, especially when you’re still trying to find your way, you can’t gift points to your opponent like that. That’s tough to overcome versus a good team on their home floor.”

On the team’s defensive standard:

“We’re really big on the possession game. This is the first time we lost it maybe all year. We lost the possession game to the Heat. Obviously they’re a good team and we’re playing on their home floor. To lose the possession game can cost you and it cost us tonight. We know we’re better than that and we will correct that. On top of the 45 transition points we gave up 31 free throws. We talked about both of those things at halftime and then in the third quarter we came out and we gave up 15 free throws just in the third quarter alone. That’s where the game was won or lost. Could we have played better offensively? Yes. But it’s going to be hard to win versus a good team on their home floor if you give up that many fast break points or transition baskets and we send them to the lane 31 times.”

On overall defensive effort:

“It’ll be hard to win all year on someone else’s floor when we play that kind of transition defense.”

"We have good shooters. We're pushing the pace…gotta make sure we're set & ready. We knew this was gonna be a tough one, our 1st game having some adversity, we'll continue to build"

–– Josh Hart on Knicks taking team-record 54 threes (making 15) in 1st loss of season to Heat pic.twitter.com/3QYMK1jxmp

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 27, 2025

Josh Hart​


On his slow shooting start:

“I think most of my shots have been short. I’m just getting my legs under me, getting a rhythm.”

On whether his finger is affecting his shot:

“I think it’s more legs than the finger. The finger is what it is. But when I get my legs under me, a lot of those shorter shots won’t be short.”

On conditioning and playing extended minutes:

“I think honestly just for me it’s more so trying to get my wind. Today was a tough one in terms of energy and stuff like that, and obviously being down Deuce hurt us. That’s a guy that can knock down shots, pick the ball up, push the pace. So on a day like this where I don’t have it and I’m still trying to get my legs in, someone like that is perfect for me to be like, ‘You know what? Go get me. Deuce, you get in.’ It’s learning and growing for me, but more so trying to get my legs under me. There were a lot of possessions where mentally I’m like, I’ve gotta get out there — and then I was a step slow.”

On team defense and fatigue:

“It was a step slow, physically and mentally. Obviously there was some where we kind of put our hands in and reached and that’s more of a mental thing, making sure you’re in those gaps and getting your hands out so I think some of that was more mental than physical, and when you add fatigue, sometimes you resort to your habits. So it’s a new group, a new coach and we haven’t formed those habits yet. But it’s Game 3 and we’re still learning and getting better.”

On the team’s woes in Miami:

“We knew we would face some adversity in this game. But we’ll grow from this.”

On the Knicks’ offensive identity:

“I don’t think it’s too much of an adjustment because we have good shooters. We’re pushing the pace and getting shots up, but we’ve got to make sure we’re set, ready, and crashing the glass. This was kind of our first game of having some adversity, so we’ll continue to build.”

On transition defense and missed shots:

“There’s gonna be games like that where you get good looks and they don’t fall, and you’ve gotta figure it out defensively. We gave them a lot of fast-break points, and obviously missed shots and bad possessions contributed to that. It’s Game 3. We’re learning. There will be growing pains, but we’ll be alright.”

.@JCMacriNBA joins @ChelseaSherrod to discuss what he saw from Karl-Anthony Towns in the Knicks' loss to the Heat and the struggles of the Knicks' bench in Miami:

➡️ @Honda pic.twitter.com/XPdCwu88sy

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 27, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On trusting coach Mike Brown’s decisions:

“[Mike is] going to make the right call for our team. He puts the time in at the gym all the time. It’s not a secret to y’all how I like to play a lot of minutes, so it doesn’t matter. If that requires one day you play 30, one day you play 45, I’ll do whatever it takes.”

On transition defense and team growth:

“Things happen. It’s a long season, and we’re still searching for that consistency. But I think the effort is there. We’re figuring it out. We have a new coach, a new system on both sides of the basketball. This team keeps working and getting that one percent better. Today was a game where you want to learn an inexpensive, expensive lesson — one where you win the game but still understand you didn’t play your best. But things like this happen, and it’ll make us a better team for the next one.”

On three-point shooting struggles:

“It’s a double-edged sword. You’re happy you’re getting good looks, but at the same time you’re frustrated as hell that you’re not making them. We haven’t shot well to start the season, but our offense is a big firepower of ours and it’ll come together. So keep shooting, stay confident. We’ll have days like this if we’re going to shoot the three ball as many times as we did today. You live and die by it. Today, we died by it.”

On offensive frustration and confidence:

“Of course you’re happy you’re getting good looks, but at the same time you’re frustrated as hell that you’re not making them. We haven’t shot well at the start of this season. But I think at the end of the day, we’ve shown that our offense is a big firepower of ours and will come together.”

Jalen Brunson in the Knicks 115-107 loss to the Heat:

37 PTS
7 AST
14-26 FG
5-11 3FG pic.twitter.com/7ZQ0f5wfmr

— Knicks Fan TV 🏀🎥📺🏁 (@KnicksFanTv) October 27, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On team shooting and confidence:

“We’re getting good looks. The ball’s in the paint, we’re making plays. I have faith in us that we’ll knock them down.”

On transition defense and discipline:

“We were definitely a step slow in transition defense. Just not being disciplined on their drives, fouling. Not a good night for us defensively. That shouldn’t happen this early. But at the same time, it is early and we have to understand we’re getting back in the flow of things so we need to be ready to go when the ball is jumped up. Very correctable mistakes.”

Walt Frazier:

“Pat Riley and me entered the league the same year, he tried to guard me, and that’s how he ended up as a coach.” 💀💀💀

(h/t @IQfor3)

pic.twitter.com/UvISNFqQv0

— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) October 26, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...tin-i-think-its-more-the-legs-than-the-finger
 
This day in Knicks-tory: October 26th

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Can’t Live Without Ew!

1985
– Time to age us all! Happy 40th debut day to the greatest Knick of All-Time, the legendary Hall of Fame CENTER AT 7’0 FROM GEORGETOWN, NUMBER 33, PAAAAAA-TRICK EWING.

The Knicks either won or were ahem “gifted” the first-ever No. 1 lottery pick, which, unsurprisingly, was used on “The Hoya Destroya,” Patrick Ewing. While he never captured a championship with the team, Ewing became the face of the franchise.

gettyimages-1133678.jpg

Forty years ago tonight, Patrick Ewing made his NBA regular season debut at Madison Square Garden against Moses Malone and the Philadelphia 76ers. Right from the start, he made his presence felt throughout the Garden and all of New York with a thunderous put-back slam off a Darrell Walker miss for his first two career points.

Ewing played all but 4 minutes that night, finishing with 18 points, 6 rebounds, and 3 blocks. Although the Knicks would go on to lose 99-89, but Ewing’s debut was the start of a 17-year career that would see him win Rookie of the Year, earn a 1992 Olympic Gold Medal, make 11 All-Star teams, be named one of the NBA’s 50 and 75 greatest players, and become one of only eight Knicks players to have his number retired and hanging from the rafters.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-history/74723/this-day-in-knicks-tory-october-26th
 
New offensive identity providing growing pains for Knicks

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When Mike Brown accepted the job as the Knicks’ head coach, it was evident from the jump that the Knicks were looking to maximize their offense and go all-in on overwhelming teams on that end of the floor.

One thing that most fans would agree on entering the season is that the Knicks had too much shooting talent to be in the bottom five in 3-point volume. In the modern NBA, where teams like the Celtics and Cavaliers look to bludgeon you with a high volume of threes and make it hard to keep up, it’s just not tenable to be towards the bottom in attempts unless you were extremely dominant in the paint and defensively.

This season will prove to be the ultimate battle between coaching philosophy and roster construction. While Brown is very likely to lose the battle in regards to making the Knicks play fast (despite the games feeling dizzying at times, they remain 21st in pace), he’s determined to make the Knicks one of the league’s most prolific shooting teams.

Already through three games, the Knicks lead the NBA in three-point attempts, but have shot a disappointing mark of 33.1% on them. Further, the team is dead last in FG% at 40% on the dot. Despite a focus on pace, space, and putting up threes, the Knicks have had a flat-out bad offense through three games, aided only by their aptitude on the boards, being top-five in offensive and total rebounding even with Mitchell Robinson sidelined.

Looking closer, the Knicks only have two players (Bridges, McBride) shooting above their career averages behind the arc. Karl-Anthony Towns is at 38.9%, which is good but sub-standard. Both Brunson and Anunoby are below their norms, and let’s not even talk about the bench. The quintet of Kolek, Yabusele, Hart, Clarkson, and Shamet are a ghastly 8-for-39 through three games (20.5%).

It’s concerning, but despite how it looks on the surface, Mike Brown’s plan to supercharge the Knicks’ offense is working; it just hasn’t clicked yet.

The biggest goals of this new pace-and-space offense should be generating more catch-and-shoot looks for both Brunson and Towns, who are great shooters but whose on-ball frequency prevented them from getting the best looks. So far, it’s worked.

Brunson went 5-for-11 from deep against the Heat, an improvement from a rough start, but his shot diet from behind the arc is noticeable. Last year, 30.9% of Brunson’s threes were catch-and-shoot. So far this year, that share is up to 44.4%. It’s not just percentage-wise, as his volume has increased (1.9/game to 4.0/game). It’s not just a small sample size; it’s a feature.

The Knicks, as a whole, are prioritizing generating open looks in the flow of the offense. While, at times, it feels like they’re forcing shots up (see: Jordan Clarkson), they’re taking shots in rhythm, they’re just not falling. Take a look at some of these open misses in the Heat game:

View Link

Landry Shamet is a good movement shooter, and although the three is taken very early in the shot clock, it’s a good look in rhythm.

View Link

The pick-and-pop between Brunson and Towns will be deadly all season, but when KAT is missing shots en masse like he did on Sunday, it’ll look ugly. Any time Towns has his feet set with space within 35 feet, it’s a good shot. He missed a number of those.

View Link

Bridges nailed a number of these corner threes on Sunday as one of the team’s two efficient shooters, but he isn’t perfect. Still, with the team shooting a horrendous percentage all night, you’d love to see these go in.

There are some questionable shots being taken, though. While some of these pull-up threes by Kolek or semi-contested looks from Anunoby look odd, they are shots that teams like the Celtics are able to make night in and night out.

This is where we run into a conundrum that could disrupt this identity.

The Knicks have a lot of guys who can shoot. In the team’s top 11 players when healthy, only Josh Hart and (of course) Mitchell Robinson are not threats from the perimeter. Everyone else is more than capable of knocking down shots, but the argument becomes if they can handle the volume.

Deuce McBride and Landry Shamet are two of the purest shooters on the roster, but they’re not at the level of a Sam Merrill, Derrick White, or Payton Pritchard. Anunoby is a good shooter, but is he capable of maintaining efficiency with the sheer volume he figures to have this year?

OG Anunoby 3pt Frequency by Season:

19-20: 38% (45%tile)
20-21: 47% (63)
21-22: 43% (38)
22-23: 39% (34)
23-24: 48% (51 – Raptors) / 39% (42 – Knicks)
24-25: 41% (42)
25-26: 68% (90)

I am a firm believer that frequency of shots can be informative early in a season because it…

— DJ Zullo (@DJAceNBA) October 27, 2025

Those are going to be the questions going forward for the Knicks. They tied a franchise record with 54 3PA on Sunday and figure to challenge that mark all season. It’s abundantly clear that they’re going to heavily rely on the 3-ball, but the question is going to be if the lack of volume last year was because of the coaching or the personnel.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-three-pointers-brunson-towns-anunoby-bridges
 
Bucks 121, Knicks 111: First half eruption, second half deflation

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Tonight against the Milwaukee Bucks (2-2), the New York Knicks (2-2) closed the first half on a 33–18 run behind steady shooting, glass dominance, and excellent ball protection. They held a commanding 71–59 lead at the break. Smooth sailing? Not so fast. After intermission, Giannis Antetokounmpo led the charge as the Deer clobbered the visitors 35-20 in the third quarter. The Knicks’ offense, so pretty in the second quarter, was downright offensive in the second half. Limited to another 20 in the final frame, our heroes fell, 121-11.

Giannis deserves his flowers. He finished with 37 points, eight boards, seven assists, two blocks, and a steal. Keeping him company on the scoresheet, Ryan Rollins posted a career-high 25 points, and Gary Trent, Jr. added 11.

For the Knicks, Jalen Brunson was electric with 36 points, making 14-of-25 shots. Mikal Bridges added 24 points, 10 boards, and six assists on 8-of-16. Landry Shamet contributed 16 points, making 4-of-9 from deep, and started with the Knicks short-handed. After that . . . not the highlights are few. OG Anunoby made just three shots for nine points. Karl-Anthony Towns had a particularly rough evening, finishing with 12 boards and eight points, and shooting 2-of-12 from the floor. Towns collected five fouls tonight, at least four of which felt like unforced errors, and he looked completely lost in the second half.

On the second unit, Jordan Clarkson and Tyler Kolek combined for 15 points and 6-of-12 from the floor. Befitting of the Halloween season, Hukporti was a ghost. And Josh Hart as a -18, with three points, four boards and assists, and two steals in his 26 minutes.

Deuce McBride and Mitchell Robinson, hurry back soon.

NBA on NBC did Sunday Night Football-style player intros for Knicks-Bucks. pic.twitter.com/qEtKo6oFU2

— Front Office Sports (@FOS) October 29, 2025

First Half​


Miles McBride, Guerschon Yabusele, and Mitchell Robinson sat out, so Coach Brown opened with a starting of lineup Jalen Brunson, Landry Shamet, Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby, and Karl-Anthony Towns.

After falling behind early, Brunson sparked a 15–2 run, while Towns and Bridges swatted back the Bucks. Giannis and Turner struggled to convert during that stretch, but in a flash, Giannis and Gary Trent, Jr. combined for eight points to even things out.

The offense is so smooth when the ball moves like this pic.twitter.com/S9GzBkASi3

— KNICKS BEAST (@KnicksBeast) October 29, 2025

The rest of the quarter was tit for tat. Brunson carried the Knicks’ offense, while Bobby Portis, Ryan Rollins, and Kyle Kuzma all chipped in for the home team. New York owned the paint and protected the ball, but Milwaukee’s perimeter shooting and transition proved a worthy counter. Our heroes entered the break, up 27–26.

OG and-1 💪 pic.twitter.com/blECRpURcv

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 29, 2025

The Brew Crew opened the quarter with more from Portis and Rollins, aided by a couple of early Knicks turnovers. But rumors of New York’s were wildly exaggerated. Following a quick timeout, the ‘Bockers responded with better ball movement. Shamet and Bridges laced threes, KAT powered the interior, and Tyler Kolek dished two dimes and timely triple. After trailing by as many as ten, New York stormed back with a 16–4 run.

Jordan Clarkson provided a spark off the bench, with seven points in seven minutes.

Milwaukee stayed afloat thanks to Antetokounmpo’s rim work and a timely three from Myles Turner, but the Bucks struggled to generate momentum and committed costly turnovers. New York finished the half on a 33–18 run, thanks to pace, shot quality, and squeaky clean execution. New York scored 70 or more first-half points 10 times last season. Tonight, they collected 71 and limited the Bucks to 59.

Keys to success so far? Shooting 56% from the field, controlling the glass, and committing only three turnovers compared to eight for the Deer. Brunson topped the scoresheet with 23 points on 9-of-14 shooting, and Bridges flirted with a double-double, posting 12 points and eight boards. Giannis scored 14 for the hosts, and Rollins posted 13 in 11 minutes.

23 FIRST HALF POINTS FOR THE BRUNSON BURNER 🔥

Knicks lead at the break in Milwaukee! pic.twitter.com/wnrktQpgDz

— NBA (@NBA) October 29, 2025

Second Half​


New York’s offense stalled after intermission, missing six of their first seven shots while Milwaukee surged back into the game. Giannis repeatedly punished the rim and Green caught fire from deep, erasing all our nice memories of the first half. Shamet briefly steadied things with a pair of threes, but the Bucks kept pressing and, with a 23–10 run, eventually claimed their first lead since early in the game.

AJ Green is heating up in the 3rd 🔥pic.twitter.com/EAfAt7tDJj

— Bucks Nation (@BucksNationCP) October 29, 2025

Captain Clutch kept counter-punching. Jalen touched 30 points with three-ish minutes remaining. He checked out, Towns checked in—and promptly collected another silly foul. Meanwhile, Giannis treated the Fiserv faithful to his freight train impression, ramming 12 third-quarter points down the Knicks’ throat. Their frontcourt lacked the muscle to resist him, and Hukporti provided little support, getting a quick hook after just a few minutes. (Robinson and Yabusele were out, remember.) With three seconds left, KAT committed his fourth foul. Luckily, Clarkson swished an unconteseted bomb late in the quarter to keep it close. Bucks up, 94-91.

Sticking to his usual plan, Coach Brown kept Brunson out to start the fourth. An assortment of Kolek, Clarkson, Bridges, Hart, and Towns kept the pace long enough for Jalen to return at the eight-minute mark. Things were tilting back in our favor, with Bridge picking Kuzma’s pocket, scoring on a layup, and sinking a freebie. The lead was theirs again!

mikal said GIMME THAT ➕1️⃣‼️ pic.twitter.com/rWlRst2qNN

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) October 29, 2025

Egads. Brunson injured his groin and fell to the floor, allowing Giannis to scoop up the ball for a breakaway. After a timeout, Jalen returned but airballed from deep, suggesting his trunk wasn’t right. The great ball movement of the second quarter went missing the second half.

At four minutes, Towns got whistled for a charge, his fifth foul. The Bucks scored eight unanswered points to take a six-point lead. The gladiators went to work: Jalen scored on a difficult drive; Giannis scored on a 13-footer. New York’s offense buffered, and Rollins hit a bucket to tie his career-high.

giannis with the incredible finish, he somehow stacked multiple travels into one move pic.twitter.com/e2SDzzmdSJ

— Fastbreak Breakfast (@fastbreakbreak) October 29, 2025

A Gary Trent triple put the Bucks up by 10 with a minute left. Brunson and Giannis traded another set of buckets. A white flag raised from the visitor’s bench. Ball game.

Up Next​


The Knicks roll into Chicago to face the Bulls on Halloween. Safe travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...111-first-half-eruption-second-half-deflation
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I’m fine’

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The Knicks started the season as strongly as they have fallen of late, going from an immaculate 2-0 record to an even 2-2 balance through four outings.

New York will keep waiting to welcome back their heroes as the Knicks will play another road game on Friday, facing the Bulls on Halloween night before hosting them on Sunday.

Here’s a lot of what was said before and after Tuesday’s affair.

"Our offensive stagnancy hurt our defense. The ball wasn't moving. Everybody was just standing and watching"

– Mike Brown pic.twitter.com/3OrudOHlge

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 29, 2025

Mike Brown​


On the Knicks’ struggles against the Bucks:

We’re still trying to find our way a little bit. Maybe we need to get hit in the mouth a few times to really respect it and understand it.

On Karl-Anthony Towns’ first half against Milwaukee:

It started with Karl-Anthony Towns. As soon as he drew a second guy, boom he got off of it. That guy either shot it or snap drove or passed it. Made a lot of quick decisions in the first half. Touched the paint a lot. Sprayed the ball a lot. We had 15 sprays in the first half. Just offensively it was great.

On what went wrong in the second half vs. Bucks:

I talked to our guys, I thought the second half, the ball came to a standstill. I think you guys all felt it in the second half. The ball didn’t move. Whoever had it was like, ok, let me try to get my own, or gimme the ball, gimme the ball, gimme the ball. So our pace went out the window in the full court and the front court. Our spacing went out the window because we just wanted the ball. Quick decisions went out the window because when we had the ball, it was ok, lemme see what I can do. We didn’t get the ball reversed because we held onto it quite a bit.

On the consequence of stagnant offense:

When those things happen, basketball guys are gonna tell you something. They’re gonna get you frustrated, the other team’s gonna set their defense, the other team is gonna get out and run off of your misses, and there’s not gonna be any energy within your group because everybody is just standing and watching, standing and watching.

On playing improvement despite loss:

We’re getting there. I thought we made improvement from our last game with our reads, although it didn’t show because we didn’t shoot the ball as well as we wanted to. We gave up too many transition baskets and we sent them to the free-throw line, but our reads are getting a little better. I still had to kind of direct them and steer them with different stuff to try to mix it up, but we did get a little better, which is exciting, and there are some positives we can show offensively from tonight’s game.

On Antetokounmpo’s dominance:

Yeah, oh man, he’s a monster.

On Antetokounmpo’s skillset:

Oh man, he’s a monster. He just causes everybody to pay attention to him all the time. And you can’t just do it with one guy. With as talented as players are, it’s literally five guys who have to guard the basketball. That holds true more with him than anybody else just because he’s so long, smart and strong. He can finish in traffic. So you’ve got to show him bodies early.

On using Landry Shamet in the lineup:

Landry’s been really good defensively, plays with pace, sticks his nose in, will try to rebound, and when he gets a rhythm. If you leave him open, he’s gonna knock down shots.

On lineup flexibility:

If I feel that we need to match up, I may go with a specific lineup. If I feel that we don’t, I may go the other way. Again, all our guys should be ready to play, whether it’s the start of the game or finishing the game or playing in the middle of the game. Starting is nice, but at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter to me. To those guys in the locker room, maybe it does, I don’t know. But I have a lot of confidence in this entire roster, so we can start a lot of different ways.

On defensive awards setup:

We just thought that the hard hat, the vest and the Timbs — you think about New York. That’s what New York is.

On team consistency:

If we do, we have a chance to be a really good team. If we don’t, we can get beat by anybody.

Karl-Anthony Towns was asked about adjusting to the offense:

"I gotta do whatever is needed to win. I pressed a little bit too much today [in the second half]. I didn't do what we needed to do to win tonight. That's on me and I take full responsibility for that" pic.twitter.com/U5dm39MYtw

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 29, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On embracing a new role under Mike Brown and improving at it:

“I got a new role. I’ve got to embrace that and I didn’t do that for 48 minutes tonight. And it hurts. It’s going to be a tough car ride [to Chicago for the next game Friday]. It’s going to be a tough two days to live with that.”

On taking responsibility for the loss to Milwaukee:

“I’ve got do whatever is needed to win. First half, I played how he needed me to play. The game switched up and I tried to get going just in case they needed me. And I just didn’t make a shot. So I pressed a little bit too much today. I have more experience than to do that. I didn’t do what we needed to do to win tonight and that’s on me. I take full responsibility.”

On the Knicks’ heavy three-point strategy:

“We’ll have days like this if we’re going to shoot the three-ball as many times as we did. You live and die by the three. So today we died by it. But shout-out to the testament of our fight. We were still in the game and had a chance to win it. So that’s a positive.”

Jalen Brunson said he "didn't do a good job" of making sure teammates weren't feeding off each other, particularly with Karl-Anthony Towns

"It's part of the reason why we lost. I gotta be a better leader and be better in that part of my game" pic.twitter.com/8am80RB88I

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 29, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On his health after Tuesday’s injury scare:

“I’m fine.”

On supporting his teammates, mostly KAT, during tough stretches:

“I talk to [Towns], we talk and it’s a process for all of us. There are gonna be times when things aren’t going one of our ways and it’s on us as teammates to have his back. But at some point, all of us go through a lull in the season. I don’t even want to call it a lull. It’s just we’re still learning and everything is brand new for us. We’re not gonna use that excuse for a long time. But these first couple weeks, it’s still fresh for us.”

On early-season chemistry and growing pains:

“We’re still learning and everything is brand new to us. We’re not going to use that excuse for a long time, but first couple of weeks … it’s still fresh for us.”

Mikal Bridges​


On the Bucks’ roster and Giannis Antetokounmpo:

“I think they still got a lot of talent around him. Obviously, Giannis, he’s the head of the snake but I think I like their additions and guys that have been there for some years. They’re still a really good team and they look good.”

On defending Giannis and team coordination:

“Giannis [has the] ability to get to the rim and the free throw line, so just be aggressive and help the guy on ball, stuff we’ve been preaching the whole season. But obviously Giannis is a different breed. But yeah just helping one another and being solid, not putting guys on the line and let the defense get set and letting guys get rhythm.”

On Giannis as the Bucks’ focal point:

“Get [the ball] into your best player’s hands and let him do his thing. You know Giannis. He keeps growing his game, knowing when to make the right read, knowing when to get to the rim. For them, I think it’s smart.”

On his trade to New York costing the Knicks all future assets and preventing a Giannis trade last summer:

“I don’t know. Nothing we can do. Ain’t nothing we can control about it. So just go out, it’s whatever. Just do whatever I was doing.”

OG Anunoby​


On guarding Giannis Antetokounmpo:

“He has the ball more than he’s had the last couple years. So just adjusting and being ready for different play types — him handling, screening, being aware at all times.”

On defensive plan:

“I can’t say. I just try to make it difficult for him. He’s a great player.”

Josh Hart​


On the team’s pace and shooting volume:

“I don’t think it’s too much of an adjustment because we have good shooters. We’re pushing the pace and doing those kinds of things, so we’ve got to make sure we’re set and ready and we’re crashing and doing those kinds of things. We knew this was going to be a tough one. This was kind of our first game of having some adversity. So we’ll continue to build.”

"In the 1st half he had his way. In the 2nd half he didn't. We made everything very physical. They were by far the more physical team in the 1st half. We were by far the more physical team in the 2nd. Tale of 2 halves"

– Doc Rivers on Jalen Brunson (+5 first half, -16 2nd half) pic.twitter.com/Mcjue5P1gV

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

Doc Rivers​


On offseason rumors about Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Knicks:

“No, I think you guys [in New York] had a lot of drama. We had none. That’s actual factual.”

On being asked again about rumors:

“I’ve already said that. I’m not gonna keep repeating it. You want me to say it again for you? I’ve said it 100 times. And we mean that.”

On the Knicks coaching change:

“I was surprised by that, but it’s the NBA, so as a coach you learn to get over it quickly and just keep moving. That’s just what you do. We have a lot of excellent coaches in the league. Thibs was one of them and Mike’s another one. So they have another excellent coach and that’s just the way it is.”

On the Knicks’ offensive pace and shooting style:

“Well they’re trying to play faster, and I don’t know if they necessarily are playing faster, but they’re trying to get up more 3s and they are doing that. And so we want to try to get them off that line.”

On Jericho Sims’ role:

“He’s been great. He may play tonight. He’s a phenomenal defensive player, one of our guys who can switch one through five. He’ll guard anybody, rebounds the ball, runs the floor, so he’s another young kid that’s gonna keep getting better for us.”

On the Bucks’ athleticism:

“I just think we’re more athletic. I think we can guard better, we can switch in different spots.”

Q @SbondyNBA "ESPN report…that if you were traded you'd prefer the Knicks?"

Giannis "Who said that?"

Q "ESPN"

GA "I don't read that"

Q "Is that true?"

GA (shakes head) "I don't remember that. Right now I'm here representing my team. That's it. We beat the Knicks…" pic.twitter.com/lFlRUtzwOj

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

Giannis Antetokounmpo​


On the challenge against the Knicks:

“This is my city. I love when it’s tough. I thrive when it’s tough. When you make it tough, I thrive.”

On setting expectations for the Bucks:

“You’re going to give maximum effort because that’s who we are as a team. I said this is how we’re going to be dangerous. Because we have a lot of guys — we don’t have three or four All-Stars or two or three, like in the past — we have seven or eight that can have double-digit games and can defend and also make plays offensively. This is who we are, and this is how we built this team.”

On staying focused despite roster issues:

“You can still put it in the back of your mind that [we didn’t have all our players available] and we were still close in the game. But that’s not who we’re going to be this year. Maybe the last year, the last two years, we could say [that we had injured players], and maybe if they were playing, we would win. No, we’re done with that. It doesn’t matter. Good teams don’t lose two in a row.”

On the Cavaliers, Knicks, and good teams in the East:

“Obviously the Cavs had the best record last year. If you put it down, they’re one of the best teams in the East. In order for you to be one of the good teams and break through and do what you’re supposed to do, you have to beat teams like that. Obviously we think the Cavs, and probably the Knicks, are one of the best teams in the East. But time will tell. Nothing is proven. Nothing is given. They have to prove themselves.”

On the Buck’s identity and effort:

“I think the team responded in the best way, so I’m happy.”

On dealing with defenses at age 30:

“I got the answers to the test. I’m 30 years old now, and I’m confident and very comfortable with whatever they throw at me.”

On getting into Tuesday’s game locked in after being swept last year:

“They swept us last year. They were way better than us last year. We didn’t make it tough for them. It was very easy, in my opinion. As the leader of this team, I remember. I don’t forget things. I try to from early shootaround set the tone for the team and try to remind them last year they swept us, same with the Cavs.”

On the Knicks trade rumors:

“I don’t remember that. Right now, I’m here representing my team. And that’s it. We beat the Knicks. That’s all. Doesn’t really matter … I didn’t read that article. I try to stay away from all the rumors and, what you call it, speculation, trades and all this. It doesn’t concern me one bit. I try to involve myself [in my play] and I try to win games.”

On being committed to Milwaukee:

“I believe in this team. I believe in my teammates. I’m here to lead this team to whatever we can go. … The moment that I step in on this [FiServ Forum] court, in this facility, I wear this jersey. The rest does not matter. I’m locked into whatever I have in front of me. Now if in six, seven months I change my mind, that’s human, too. You’re allowed to make any decision you want. But I’m locked in. I’m locked into this team.”

Carmelo: "I understood the mentality of the load management"

Vince: "But did you enjoy it when they tried to manage your load?"

Carmelo: "No because am… huh? I was different" 😂 pic.twitter.com/Fbc7MKNUNW

— Oh No He Didn't (@ohnohedidnt24) October 29, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/74782/knicks-bulletin-im-fine
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘It is on us to make sure everyone is eating’

gettyimages-2243500759.jpg


The only team collapsing bigger-time than the Knicks on Tuesday’s second half are the Dodgers in Los Angeles. Sheesh.

Anyway, now New York basketball today as the Knickerbockers get ready to play the undefeated (no typo) Bulls in back-to-back games scheduled for Friday and Sunday.

Here’s some of the stuff we’ve heard during the past few hours.

"I promise you. If we do the things that we're talking about offensively, in terms of our staples, KAT is gonna be more than fine. We gotta play with a little bit of pace. All of us, individually. I've talked to KAT about it"

– Mike Brown pic.twitter.com/kWak9FOfUo

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 29, 2025

Mike Brown​


On Karl-Anthony Towns’ first-half performance vs. Milwaukee:

“[KAT’s] first half was beautiful. He played the right way. And that’s all you can ask your All-Star guys to do. If you’ve got an All-Star, and they’re taking him out with a second guy [double team], believe in your teammates, believe in the process. When those guys make plays, eventually they won’t double as much, and you’ll get it back.”

On Towns’ early production vs. the Bucks:

“I thought the first half, KAT was the one that got us started. KAT’s first couple plays, he caught that thing, made a quick decision. He touched the paint — what did he do? He started the dominoes. He sprayed the ball and got guys wide-open looks. Or those guys, whoever caught it, snap drove. They touched the paint, they scored it or sprayed it. It all started with KAT. KAT played a remarkable first half offensively. Sometimes it doesn’t show up in your field-goal attempts when you play a remarkable game. He had one field-goal attempt because that’s the way they were playing him. When he touched it, he drew two and then kicked it.”

On Towns’ scoring rhythm and ball movement:

“We want the ball to move. We want the floor spaced the right way. And I promise you, if we do the things we’re talking about offensively — the staples — KAT’s gonna be more than fine. But we’ve all gotta play with more pace. I’ve talked to KAT about it. If you don’t play with pace in certain areas, you’ll get denied, pushed out, and now you’re catching it way out on the floor.”

On @Honda SportsNite, @emacSNY, @John_Jastremski & @CLoprestiWFAN discuss the Knicks' loss to the Bucks and if there is a legitimate concern about Karl-Anthony Towns' tough start to the season pic.twitter.com/g70kTTgi0t

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) October 29, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On adapting to his new role with the Knicks:

“I’ve got a new role. I just have to embrace it, and I didn’t do that for 48 minutes tonight. It hurts. It’s gonna be a tough car ride. It’s gonna be a tough two days to live with that, but I’ve had tough days before. Just mark this up into the same category. But it’s only Game 4.”

On learning Mike Brown’s offensive system:

“[It’s a] different system than we all have played recently, so we’re all finding our spots and finding where we can be the most effective. I’m learning — even at 11 years, I’m learning something new. You can teach an old dog new tricks, and I’m learning new tricks.”

On the need for playing with trust and avoiding overdoing it:

“We all want to win. We’re just doing things to help each other win. That’s what got us to where we were last year. That mindset has done us well. It’s just today, sometimes when you’re trying to win, you start doing too much, and I take responsibility. I thought I did a little too much midway through the third. I was trying too hard to win the game. I just have to have that belief, that trust that things will work out — and I didn’t do my part. I’ve gotta live with that.”

On the growing pains and feeling pressure in New York:

“I got a new role. I just have to embrace it and I didn’t do that for 48 minutes tonight. It hurts. It’s going to be a tough car ride. It’s going to be a tough two days to live with that, but I’ve had tough days before. Just mark this up into the same category. But it’s Game Four. I know everyone’s going to be stressing in New York, the way we talk, New York everything. We’ve got to learn, I got to learn. I’ve got to be better.”

Jalen Brunson​


On the Knicks’ second-half collapse vs. Milwaukee:

“First off, you have to give them credit. Yeah, we had it tied but we weren’t playing the style of basketball that we should have been playing in the second half. Kept it close enough until the six-minute mark and the way we were playing crept up on us and then it got out of hand. I think we got complacent a little bit, myself included. Just got to keep the foot on the gas, keep playing the right way. We can’t lose our aggressiveness in the way that we were playing. We were really fluid out there, we were just making plays for each other and we had a lot of great shots and everything was tough in the second half.”

On the need for keeping teammates involved offensively:

“It is on us to make sure everyone is eating, everyone’s feeding off of each other.”

Exclusive: In his new book, Masters of the Game, Phil Jackson reveals it was Carmelo that drove him out of New York — and much more from his stint as team president.

Read here: https://t.co/lYOFI91WZK

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) October 29, 2025

Phil Jackson​


On the relationship with Carmelo Anthony forcing him to leave the Knicks:

“Dolan said to me, ‘Are you going to get run out of town by the media?’ I said, ‘I know who the media is; that doesn’t affect me.’ But Dolan felt it was too much. He said, ‘I don’t want you to go through it. I know what it’s like to deal with these people.’ I said, ‘Unfortunately, my relationship with Carmelo is kind of busted, and if he’s going to be here, it’s probably best that I go.’”

On the decision to trade Carmelo Anthony:

“I had this meeting with Dolan, I said, ‘I don’t want Carmelo back on the team; we’ve got to find a way to trade him.’ I said, ‘Let’s sit with [Anthony’s agent] Leon Rose and explain we’re not going to win a championship. Carmelo wants a championship; he wants to be on a team that has a chance, and he should be; he’s a Hall of Famer.’”

On Carmelo Anthony’s approach in Denver:

“[Karl said] ‘Kobe’s going to get his 30 points and we’ll deal with that; shut down everybody else.’ Carmelo interjected, ‘No, I disagree with that. We’ve got to defend Kobe first. We’ve got to throw everything at him.’ You know why? [Carmelo] said he wanted to be the top scorer.”

On his Knicks draft picks and coaching hires:

“Kristaps Porzingis — a good draft pick, but his brother was in the way all the time. Frank Ntilikina — the NBA game turned out not to be for him. I thought he’d be great in a two-guard system, 6–4, agile, but he could never shoot. Hiring Derek Fisher as head coach was a mistake because he wasn’t ready to coach.”

Carmelo Anthony​


On his departure from New York:

“When I left New York, I didn’t leave New York. I got pushed out of New York. Phil pushed me out of New York. I struggled to leave New York.”

Stephon Marbury: “For us to win we need KAT playing like his All-Star self…My message to him is…for now not overthink the new system…Great players make that adjustment—I know he will…Everyone is finding their style within the new structure…Get ready for Chicago. We’ll be OK” pic.twitter.com/u0WO3gPJW9

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

Stephon Marbury​


On Giannis Antetokounmpo possibly joining the Knicks:

“I think we’re set. I think we have enough to win the championship. Our style of play fits for the guys that are playing our style to play… He’s not a great 3-point shooter… And we… shoot threes, a lot of threes.”

.@KendrickPerkins has a message for Karl-Anthony Towns 👀 pic.twitter.com/zadxoEcZyH

— NBA on ESPN (@ESPNNBA) October 29, 2025

Kendrick Perkins​


On Karl-Anthony Towns’ slow start to the season:

“Karl-Anthony Towns, when is it gonna stop? Seriously, I’m expecting better from you. I’m expecting better from you at this time right now. What I’m seeing right now: you got a coaching change, right? Obviously, you didn’t want Thibs because you didn’t want Thibs in Minnesota. So, they bring in Mike Brown. You’re still picking up those dumb, silly fouls. Mike Brown said that he’s been talking to you about this — something that you should be trying to work to get better at. Those fouls come from a lack of effort in not wanting to move those puppies. I thought that you could have come into the season in better shape, but you didn’t. That’s a problem. We’re talking about with the East being wide open. The Knicks added to their bench. They’re pretty much everyone’s favorite to represent the Eastern Conference. He has to be better.”

"F*ck I'm talkin bout"

– An amped up Carmelo Anthony in the Syracuse locker room after Kiyan's first game in the Dome

Kiy off the bench in the 2nd and last warmup game for the Orange:

🟠 9 points
🟠 2-5 FG
🟠 1 three
🟠 2 stealspic.twitter.com/eAuTyFilkz

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) October 30, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...n-it-is-on-us-to-make-sure-everyone-is-eating
 
Game Preview: Knicks at Bulls, Oct. 31, 2025

usa_today_24756519.jpg


The New York Knicks and the Chicago Bulls will get their NBA Cup campaigns underway today, and I’m not sure if these two teams could be coming into Friday night’s opener on more opposing trajectories.

The Knicks, who entered the season as one of two teams expected to make the finals out of the Eastern Conference, have stumbled out of the gates with back-to-back road losses and a 2-2 record. Meanwhile, the Bulls, who have been perpetually stuck in the non-contending, non-lottery team purgatory, remain undefeated and have gotten out to a very surprising 4-0 start — claiming wins over the Pistons, Magic, and Hawks, all of whom have playoff expectations.

Making the Bulls’ feat even more impressive is the fact that they haven’t even had Colby White, who is one of their best players.

For New York, it’ll be a chance to not only hand the Bulls their first loss of the season, but also right the ship and calm down a fervent fanbase, even if it’s only for a couple of days.

Meanwhile, Chicago has the chance to stick it to the Knicks and enjoy its first 5-0 start to the regular season since 1996, when the Bulls put together a 12-0 record to begin with and eventually won the championship.

So, how can the Knicks prevent falling to 2-3 and watching their former rivals get off to one of the best starts in franchise history? It likely starts with looking in the mirror.

The Bulls have done some really neat things, but the Knicks need to straighten out their own play. They’ve struggled to hit open shots, can’t generate enough good looks when Brunson isn’t on the court, have struggled to integrate Karl-Anthony Towns, and have had a hard time limiting fastbreak opportunities. If they can address all, or even most, of those things, they should have the talent to beat the Bulls and gain some of the recently lost trust back from their fans.

But, given the unlikeliness that all of those things suddenly take a 180-degree turn 72 hours after their last loss, New York will likely also need to address Chicago’s strengths. While the Bulls rank right around the middle of the pack in many scoring stats, they do a great job of sharing the wealth. They don’t have a single player averaging more than 20PPG, which is a rare occurrence in today’s NBA, but they are second in the league in assists per game, and third in the league in assist percentage. They have five players averaging between 14.8PPG, and 19.5PPG, and have three players averaging five or more assists per game. As impressive as those numbers sound though, it has been their defense that has carried this team thus far.

They rank third in the league in defensive rating, give up the sixth least amount of points per game, and are holding opponents to a comically low 25.9% from three. Some of that can be attributed to a small sample size, and we can expect that number to go up a bit as the season progresses. But if you look at their defensive stats from last season, you’ll learn that this isn’t something new. While the 2024-25 Bulls weren’t a great defensive team overall, one of the few things they did really well was defend the three-point line. Last season, they finished second in the league in that category, holding opponents to 34.4% shooting from beyond the arc.

Screenshot-2025-10-30-124445.png

This should be concerning because the Knicks, as mentioned earlier, have struggled to convert on threes. They are currently shooting 33% from three, which ranks 24th in the league, despite hoisting up 44.8 attempts per game. And in their last two games against the Bulls last season, they shot 26.7% and 30.4% from three. Chicago also ranks in the top half of the league in fastbreak points per game, and plays with the seventh fastest pace — two stats that could be of concern for a Knicks team that is giving up the eighth-most fastbreak points per game so far this season.

Prediction


Over the last few years, the Brunson-led Knicks have been relatively good at coming up with much-needed wins, either stopping a losing skid or winning back the trust of the fans. And as much as I want to believe that’ll happen tonight, this game has all the markings of an early-season loss that’ll leave fans shaking their head, and wondering if this team has what it takes.

The vibes of the season so far have gone from good to subpar quickly, and playing a young team with nothing to lose, that also happens to be a very unfavorable matchup for the Knicks, sounds and seems like a recipe for disaster. I expect Towns and Anunoby to be better. I expect Bridges to continue his great early-season play. And I expect Brunson to be the best player on the floor like he so often is.

But I have the Bulls riding their three-point defense and balanced attack to get to 5-0, and hand the Knicks their third loss of the season.

Game Details


Date: Friday, October 31, 2025

Time: 8:00 p.m. ET

Place: United Center, Chicago, IL

TV: MSG

Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...4821/game-preview-knicks-at-bulls-oct-31-2025
 
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