Knicks Bulletin: ‘I had to switch the routine I had pregame’

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The Knicks beat the Nets for the 12th consecutive time on Monday.

At some point, we’ll need to stop calling this a rivalry, won’t we?

Here’s what the protagonist had to say before and after yesterday’s demolition.

"Good win for us on the road, and a lot of contributions up and down the lineup"

Mike Brown gives his opening thoughts on tonight's win over the Nets: pic.twitter.com/cUHz275TDU

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 25, 2025

Mike Brown​


On Hart’s defensive effort on Monday:

“That’s what leadership is about.”

On Towns’ performance against the Nets:

“He was really good. We tried to move him around quite a bit. Tried to have him at the elbow, at the post, in the pick-and-roll game. You could say his comfort level is starting to get there.”

On the increasing defensive physicality:

“One of the things we keep talking to our guys about is making sure we’re physical defensively and do it without fouling.”

On Josh Hart and Towns on the boards:

“Josh and KAT were monsters on the glass.12 boards each, and Josh earned the DPOG.”

On the team-wide effort during the Brooklyn game:

“While they’re going though this process, you can watch the last couple of games, they’re playing hard. You could see the marked improvement they’ve had since we’ve last played them.”

On the need for continued improvement on defense:

“We’ll keep working on it. We’ll keep addressing it. Again, we’re gonna be fine at the end of the day cause our guys want it. They have been better. We were better in Dallas. We were even better in Miami. There was a stretch where we were getting better. We’re gonna do this,” he said, gesturing upward, “and then we’re gonna do this,” gesturing downward, “and hopefully we don’t do this too long. But we want to keep trying to climb up, and I’ve seen us climb up in that area. We’re gonna keep pushing them to be great in that area, and they’re gonna keep responding by being great in that area.”

On losing key defenders and how to navigate it:

“They can guard different types of players and positions and we miss them. It’s no secret. But that’s what the NBA is about. It’s about trying to find a way every time you step on the court. It’s the next man up and everyone has to contribute, when it comes to missing whoever whether it’s offensively or defensively. They are both high level on ball defenders. Their impact we do miss … Both those guys are high level on ball defenders and they play with a level of physicality without fouling and versatility.”

On load management for Mitchell Robinson being impacted by his agent:

“[Knicks VP of Sports Medicine Casey Smith] is the one who dictates it along with Mitch and doctors and Mitch’s agent. So whatever they tell me, I’m just recycling what Casey says to Mitch, but I try to communicate with Mitch as much as possible.”

On the need for a greater defensive effort amid injuries:

“I’m confident we can be where we need to defensively. We played well in some instances and we haven’t played well. That’s what you go through especially during this part of the year. So I do think we can be a really good defensive team, but again, no matter who we throw out there, we’ve gotta have a feel and understanding of what we’re trying to do on that end of the floor to get things done.”

"If my life's taught me one thing, I'm thankful for the time I got with my family…this team…this City

"Thankful for the opportunity to put a Knicks jersey on

"To call my father & he answers

"To wake up every day

"And try again"

– KAT on Thanksgiving pic.twitter.com/woukXqbuE9

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) November 25, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On playing a complete game:

“Shooters shoot, of course. I know everybody wants me to shoot the 3-ball. But I’m a more complete player than that. And a lot of times, my career shooting the 3 allows me to get to the basket and opens the game up for myself and my teammates. And tonight was a good night where attacking the paint, getting some layups, tough layups, whatever the case may be, opened the basket up for me and made the 3-ball much easier.”

On navigating slumps:

“I’ve had slumps before. So experience teaches me a lot. So just keep shooting, keep trusting the work. It’s an opportunity for me to tell young guys. Obviously, the shot hasn’t been falling. But I continue to show up to work — first one there, last one to leave — and just continue to believe in the work. I know it’s disappointing to not see the results everyday to your standard, but never change the grind. … It feels good. And it raises the confidence.”

On his fall late in the game and how it felt compared to years past:

“When I was in my 20s, I felt pretty good.”

On missing OG Anunoby and others:

“OG is one of the best defenders in the NBA. He’s highly valuable to any team. Missing him is big. And Deuce not being available. And Landry getting hurt obviously hurts our team.”

Josh Hart​


On starting for the first time this season:

“I had to switch the routine I had pregame.”

On Towns’ performance on Monday:
“He was great; we needed him to be aggressive. That’s what we need from him.”

Josh Hart says it feels "a little bit" like old times being in the starting lineup tonight:

"I had to switch the routine I had pregame" 🤣 pic.twitter.com/stk9rk4vGv

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 25, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On team defense and accountability amid the current injury crisis:

“[We just have to] continue to try to keep the ball out front. That’s the start of it. Obviously we have to help each other out when it comes to rotations, but it starts with just guarding the ball. I mean, I’ve got to do a better job of [guarding the ball], clearly. No matter what the situation is with the coverage, we’ve got to have each other’s backs and we were just a step late.”

"Jordi Fernández, he doesn't get enough credit. He's doing a heck of a job with that team while they're going through whatever process they're going through"

– Mike Brown pic.twitter.com/Bpfkb3DtAH

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 25, 2025

Jordi Fernández​


On playing the right way:

“We want to play a competitive and winning game of basketball. It starts with the habits. I know he saw the ball go in, which are things you can’t always control, but you can control taking the right shots, make the right play. He had a 9-to-3 assist-to-turnover ratio, which is very good. So all those things are positive.”

On the Nets’ effort fading on Monday:

“We started with the right intentions, and the energy was there. Then as the game went on, I thought that our energy and purpose started to fade. There’s no excuses here with playing three in four nights, doesn’t matter. You’ve still got to come out with a purpose and sustain it. And we did come out with a purpose and we didn’t sustain all the way through. So winning the first quarter and the last quarter, that’s not enough.”

On defending Towns:

“Yeah [Towns] is a very good player, and we have to find ways to fight him better. We tried, it just didn’t work out very well for us. He scored 37 points and 12; just not good enough. Credit to him. We definitely should have been better.”

"Me I never lost to the Knicks since I been in the league"

–– Nic Claxton now 0-12 vs Knicks since this pic.twitter.com/Oe39S44lvh

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) November 25, 2025

Noah Clowney​


On the Nets’ offensive approach:

“When we came out instead of trying to get the quick points in transition and playing in the flow of the game, we immediately slowed down and went into half-court sets instead of what we were doing to keep us in the game in the first place. That’s a common trend. We don’t really want to slow down with a team like that and just play half-court execution versus execution game. Get the free ones and get ourselves and advantage.”

DPOG 🦺 Josh‼️😤 pic.twitter.com/6JYN17fC1s

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

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...tin-i-had-to-switch-the-routine-i-had-pregame
 
Knicks get optimistic update on Landry Shamet injury

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When Landry Shamet grabbed his shoulder and ran to the locker room during last week’s contest against the Magic, Knicks fans were shaken. Shamet had been a godsend for a Knicks team that had had its share of ups and downs. His three-point shooting and defense had been pivotal in keeping the Knicks afloat during the OG Anunoby injury. And he, and his career-high 36-point masterpiece, was crucial in the Knicks’ win over the Heat.

As he rushed off the court, fans were saddened that they were not only losing a key player but also watching him suffer the same dislocated shoulder injury he had worked so hard to come back from just a year ago. But on Thursday afternoon, we were all provided with a somewhat optimistic update on the wing’s injury.

While he will still be out for the foreseeable future, the current diagnosis, according to Shams Charania of ESPN, is that it is a right shoulder sprain, and not a dislocation, which would have sidelined him for much longer. Shamet won’t be back on the court again in 2025, and there is still no real timetable for his full return, but Charania reported that the guard would be re-evaluated in four weeks. Considering fans had expected the worst, this has to be a sigh of relief for the fanbase, the organization, and most importantly, Shamet himself.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...get-optimistic-update-on-landry-shamet-injury
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I hate it, but we didn’t do anything to shut them up’

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The Knicks beat the Hornets, what a shocker!

New York players got back home to celebrate Thanksgiving with their families as they gear up for Deer dessert on Friday.

Here’s what your Knickerbockers had to say before and after playing the Blue Bees on Thanksgiving Eve.

"I actually made decision before Brooklyn. I wanted to change it up…Stayed with it, will continue to & see…Everything's fluid this business…All these guys can start…I like to look at things…"

– Mike Brown on Knicks lineup change. Josh Hart starts, Mitch Robinson off bench pic.twitter.com/OsL7k2Co4O

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

Mike Brown​


On keeping Landry Shamet on the roster:
“That’s something that Leon [Rose] and his group will discuss. But Landry is a really big part of what we’re doing and I’ll give up my salary for him.”

On Shamet’s decision to avoid surgery:
“Anytime you can avoid surgery, at least from my novice experience, I think it’s great. But I don’t know much about it still. I know he has a right shoulder sprain and he’s going to go through the process, whatever that means.”

On his lineup experimentation and flexibility:
“We will continue to stay with it to see what direction it goes. I’m a guy who wants to take a look at different things. And I even said this to our staff. If at times it’s the right matchup, I’m not afraid to throw a rookie out there to start. It’s all about being early in the season and trying to find the right feel for the team. … Sometimes maybe switch things up. Take a look at what you have in front of you. And see if it’s the right move long term. Who knows? But it’s still early in the year.”

On allowing players exceptions to team rules:
“We explain to all our guys the types of shots that we want. But there are certain guys that you give a little leeway to, to kind of let them find their game. For instance, when it comes to rebounding, we have certain crash rules that apply to almost everybody but Josh [Hart]. There are certain defensive rules that apply to almost everybody but OG [Anunoby]. We have certain snap or quick decision rules that apply to everybody but KAT and Jalen [Brunson].”

On Towns’ improvement and team spacing:
“You can see his comfort level is starting to get there. But I will say that you know his teammates understand what one of our key staples is, which is spacing. If our spacing is right, especially after all the movement that we try to incorporate within what we do in [the] frontcourt, then he’s going to have room to drive. And if he has room to drive it’s going to be tough for his defender, because he can shoot the ball if you don’t close out close enough to him.”

"I've watched a lot of Kemba film…I've tried to shoot that shot 100 times"

– Knicks draft pick Deuce McBride at 2021 Summer League after news broke Kemba Walker was coming to the Knicks

4 years later the vet watches his rookie go 6-8 & 5-5 from deep on a game high +27 pic.twitter.com/8gtFVFNebc

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

Miles McBride​


On what changes with a faster lineup:
“I feel like when we have a faster lineup out there, we just get the pace going, we get stops. We have guys that want to guard, get stops and then get up the floor. And then we’re just good with sharing it. When KAT’s going, we’re looking for KAT. Obviously JB, he’s dominant. And then we all just feed off that.”

On his Thanksgiving eating strategy:
“You gotta pick and choose how you go about it. You gotta eat a lot earlier. I’m getting older. You’ve gotta play a lot more games. You gotta eat a lot earlier to offset it.”

On Thanksgiving food preferences:
“Mac and cheese, one. I’m a honey-baked ham guy. I’m really not a turkey guy. I’m gonna go mac and cheese, ham, yams, stuffing — oh, and the greens.”

On what Thanksgiving means to him:
“Just being thankful, getting family together. There’s no gifts involved. Just giving thanks and being together.”

On what Thanksgiving represents:
“Man, being out here, being able to just give God the glory. And being able to play this game at a high level.”

On whether or not he’ll be cooking Thanksgiving dinner:
“Nah. I’m on the end of it, you know? The end of it. Just the finished product.”

One word to describe this energy pic.twitter.com/2phV674txb

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

Josh Hart​


On his request for a shooting coach:
“It was, ‘What’s the plan for the staff?’ I want a shooting coach that could be here on staff that I can work with every single day.”

On Thanksgiving eating habits:
“I’m the type of person where I eat a decent amount, but I like a variety cause I like to taste everything, you know what I mean?”

On cutting back on wine for the holidays:
“[I’m gonna] limit the wine. Normally I would drink some good wine. So I’ll limit the wine to like one glass, and then maybe after the game I’ll indulge a little bit.”

On Thanksgiving favorites:
“Mac and cheese. Yams. Cornbread. Greens. Curry goat with some rice and peas.”

On his core values during the holidays:
“Family and faith. Throw friends in there. Friends, family and faith. The three F’s.”

On who’s cooking for Thanksgiving:
“Hell nah. I don’t cook a damn thing. We wanna eat. And we wanna eat good. We don’t need me cooking.”

First guy on his feet for Josh's first shot:

The guy he just replaced as a starter pic.twitter.com/SCAYjA1UEf

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

Jordan Clarkson​


On his Thanksgiving must-haves:
“For me, it’s chitterlings. That’s gotta be on the plate. My uncle used to throw it down. Then mac and cheese, and then a good dessert.”

On what Thanksgiving means to him:
“I’m thankful to be a New York Knick. Straight up.”

Jalen Brunson on Knicks defense getting stops, the offense getting to the paint, and the impact of Allen Iverson on his career.@BillPidto | @nyknicks | #NewYorkForever pic.twitter.com/7OYrGQS3cb

— KNICKS ON MSG (@KnicksMSGN) November 27, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On growing up watching and learning from Allen Iverson:

“A lot of (impact). I used to cut my mom’s socks to make shooting sleeves because of Allen Iverson.”

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On playing off Jalen Brunson:
“Jalen was doing an amazing job of attracting attention and it gave me a chance, you know, just be really aggressive. Just got opportunities. Of course, I know everyone wants me to shoot the three ball, [but] I’m a more complete player. A lot of times …, shooting the three allows me to get to the basket and open the game up, not only for myself but teammates.”

Knicks’ Guerschon Yabusele focused on fixing game — not talk about his weight https://t.co/T7XyeE9Drz pic.twitter.com/iEUarh8zmC

— New York Post (@nypost) November 27, 2025

Guerschon Yabusele​


On fan scrutiny about his weight:
“About this, because I heard it, and I could if I wanted to talk about it, but I just decided not to. People say whatever they want to say. If you guys check with my weight from last year, it’s the same. So last year it wasn’t a problem, why is it a problem this year? And I’m actually less than last year.”

On ignoring the weight discussion:
“I’m not focusing on none of that. I’m just doing my thing. I feel good and in great shape. So it is what it is.”

On adjusting to reduced playing time:
“Of course it is [hard]. I can’t lie about it. Today is a different situation. Of course I was playing more minutes last year, too. I’m just trying to fit in my new role and be the best I can.”

On his shooting slump:
“Shots are always up and down, especially in the season. If you look back at last season, some games I was making more than other games. Sometimes it’s not going in and sometimes it goes in. So I’m going to keep working every day, coming to the gym and make sure to get those shots. And when I get in the game, try to be prepared.”

On his conditioning:
“I feel good out there on the court. I feel like I’m in great shape right now. So just try to stay the same and work on my body and be as prepared as I can when I’m on the court.”

Q: "What is it like to hear the crowd cheering for the opposing team in your home arena?"

Miles Bridges: "I hate it. I hate it a lot. It happens when the Knicks come. It happens when the Lakers come. I hate it.

"But we didn't do anything to shut em up" pic.twitter.com/hmqSHPqXmp

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

Miles Bridges​


On Knicks fans filling opposing arenas on a steady basis:
“I hate. I hate it. It happens when the Knicks come, the Lakers come. I hate it, but we didn’t do anything to shut them up.”

Jameis Winston was asked what his favorite Thanksgiving dish is:

"My wife, man, she makes some kale collard greens. Her family’s from New Orleans so she makes a nice Creole dressing. It’s unbelievable. One of her cousins, her auntie, she always ships us some gumbo for us to… pic.twitter.com/oUAOwImJ5R

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) November 26, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...e-it-but-we-didnt-do-anything-to-shut-them-up
 
Pablo Torre Addresses Jalen Brunson’s Knicks Deal Amid Kawhi Leonard Links

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Pablo Torre isn’t ready to sound the alarm on the New York Knicks’ business with Jalen Brunson.

Torre, whose reporting led to the infamous NBA investigation into the Los Angeles Clippers and Kawhi Leonard, appeared on “The Joe Budden Podcast” this week to address the speculation about Brunson and his deal with New York.

The investigative journalist acknowledged that while there are questions surrounding how Brunson landed in New York with the Knicks, he doesn’t believe it mirrors the serious violations he uncovered with the Clippers.

Joe Budden podcast asking Pablo Torre what the difference is between the Jalen Brunson/New York Knicks deal and the Kawhi Leonard/Clippers/Steve Ballmer situation via Joe budden patreon. pic.twitter.com/KtvA6LBkOU

— joebuddenclips/fanpage (@chatnigga101) November 24, 2025
“What I suspect happened with Jalen Brunson is fundamentally different from what’s happened with Aspiration,” Torre said, referencing the Clippers’ alleged use of a $28 million no-show endorsement deal tied to Steve Ballmer and Kawhi Leonard’s relative Uncle Dennis. “I don’t have proof it happened. All I have is the theory I laid out.”

Torre pointed out that Knicks president Leon Rose, a former player agent at CAA, has long-standing ties to Brunson’s father, Rick Brunson. No need to mention, Rick joined the Knicks coaching staff just before Jalen signed an at-the-time-considerd-over-market four-year, $104 million deal in 2022, and stayed within the staff after Tom Thibodeau’s firing last summer.

“When he signed that deal, I was like, he’s a Honda Civic. Stable, reliable, trustworthy but not a superstar, not a luxury vehicle,” Torre said. “Purely theoretically, (the Knicks) could pay him a lot of different ways through emplooyees—namely his dad, who is already on the payroll—it wouldn’t be complicated. But I don’t know what they’re paying Rick Brunson.”

A few years after Brunson arrived as a free agent from the Dallas Mavericks, an with the guard already established as a bonafide NBA superstar, the Knicks inked the point guard to a discount deal valued at $156 million over four years with a relatively low average cap hit of $39 million per season. For context, Brunson’s 2025-26 salary of $34.9 million ranks just 46th league-wide.

“My suspicion is, (the Brunson-Knicks situation) is not Aspiration,” Torre said. “I have a hard time thinking that exists anywhere else.”

While noting that coaching and front-office salaries aren’t capped or made public, hinting at that as a possible way for under-the-table payments reaching players’ pockets, Torre made it clear he hasn’t found anything concrete.

“If someone gave me a tip and said, ‘Look into this thing with Jalen Brunson,’ and I started and I found something, I’d follow it to the logical conclusion,” Torre said.
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Earlier this year, Torre had teased the possibility of deeper reporting on Brunson’s deal.

“It’s funny, my tip line has never been more used by enemies of Jalen Brunson,” Torre said appearing on “The Dan Patrick Show” last September.

After Brunson left over $100 million on the table by signing an early extension rather than waiting for a $270 million max contract, some people began speculating whether additional incentives were involved.

“Well, look, how he arrived at the Knicks—this is where I have to defer to the reporting I may or may not do on this, certainly was interesting, right?” Torre said. “Like, OK, that’s a pretty good deal for the Knicks. Anyway, I don’t want to get ahead of myself in terms of that.”

Torre admitted that New Yorkers are keeping him straight when they cross paths with the journalist on the streets of Manhattan.

“Suddenly people on the street are like, ‘You touched Jalen Brunson, I’m gonna—'” Torre said. “Lay off Jalen Brunson. Stay away from him, he’s our beautiful, large-adult son.”

As for now, Torre has no accusations to make against the Knicks.

“I’ve been shocked at how often I start digging and there is something. Either I’m good at this, or the world is very dirty.”

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...brunsons-knicks-deal-amid-kawhi-leonard-links
 
Knicks 129, Hornets 101: Wrapping up the road-trip with a party in Charlotte

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Tonight at the Spectrum Center, the New York Knicks (11-6) routed the Charlotte Hornets (4-14) behind swarming defense, relentless rim pressure, and sizzling shooting. Josh Hart and Miles McBride impressed, Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns controlled the halfcourt, and Mitchell Robinson (playing with the second unit) dominated the paint. Charlotte bricked threes, coughed up turnovers, and showed few signs of life while the differential stretched to 28. Final score: Knicks 129, Hornets 101.

This NBA Cup game concludes a 3-2 road trip for the Knicks. They shot a season-low 26 threes, but they made 50% of them. Josh Hart takes the game ball, with a near triple-double (a season-high 22 points, eight boards, seven assists, +20). Jalen Brunson (33 points, 14-of-28 FG) heard chants of MVP at the foul line. Mikal Bridges added an efficient 18 points, plus three more steals and two blocks, while Karl-Anthony Towns chipped in 19 points and 10 rebounds. Miles McBride was a major contributor with 19 points on 6-of-8 shooting (hitting all five of his three-point attempts) and a game-best +27. Off the bench, Mitchell Robinson was a +18, Jordan Clarkson supplied eight points in 14 minutes, and rookie Tyler Kolek delivered another solid performance, recording a +15 in his 15 minutes.

We were interested in seeing Charlotte’s sharp-shooting rookie Kon Kneuppel, but he missed all seven of his three-point attempts. His teammate’s were equally unimpressive. All five starters finished with double-digit plus-minus negatives, and the team shot just 41% from the field and 30% from three. Brandon Miller (18) and Miles Bridges (17) led their scorers.

First Half​


The Knicks opened flat, giving up a pair of early threes and an alley-oop as Charlotte punched first and controlled the glass. After a bit of floundering, Hart and McBride jolted the team awake: Hart jumped a passing lane for a pick-six, Duece drilled back-to-back jumpers, and a string of stops flipped an 8–2 deficit into a lead.

Charlotte hung around behind Tre Mann and Collin Sexton, but the Knicks’ starters doubled down. Towns scored inside, Brunson scored from his spots, and Mitchell Robinson (from the bench) vacuumed up in the paint. By the final minute, the offense was humming, and New York closed the period on a 7–2 run. A defensive stand set up Bridges’ buzzer layup, giving the Knicks a 37–31 advantage.

JOSH HART 👀 pic.twitter.com/jONXzZp86m

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) November 27, 2025

To start the second frame, Tyler Kolek and Jordan Clarkson subbed for Brunson and Bridges, and the Knicks quickly stretched the lead to 14 against a haphazard Hornets team. Midway through the quarter, Coach Mike Brown tried a Kolek-Brunson backcourt. The pairing might be too small against stronger opposition, but tonight it let Jalen work off-ball and gave Kolek a chance to show off his ballhandling skills. Plays like this (and don’t miss Mikal’s ridiculous effort) are like manna from the basketball gods.

Mikal's hustle 😮‍💨 pic.twitter.com/XyOqh8fBZJ

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) November 27, 2025

Charlotte played with more energy, but their offense never stabilized. They shot just 44% from the field and 27% from deep, produced zero fast-break points, and couldn’t match New York’s rim pressure. They squeezed out 11 points off turnovers and swatted down three shots, but the Knicks’ overall efficiency and physicality troubled them at every turn.

New York delivered a near-perfect first half, with all five starters in double figures and posting double-digit plus/minuses. Our heroes shot a blistering 64% from the field, nearly 60% from three, and a perfect 10-for-10 at the line. Josh Hart topped the scoresheet with 19 points, seven rebounds, and four assists, and, in an excellent showing, McBride was a major swing piece with 10 points on perfect shooting and a team-best +23.

The Knicks crushed Charlotte on the glass 24–12, piled up 16 assists to just five turnovers, and overwhelmed the Hornets in the paint 38–24. Even the short-rotation bench contributed solid minutes, especially Robinson anchoring the interior. Charlotte, meanwhile, shot 44%, bricked threes, generated no transition offense, and got little from their starters, all of whom posted negative plus/minuses.

Second Half​


The party continued in the third quarter, with New York pushing their lead to 25, thanks to steady buckets from Jalen Brunson, who carved up the defense with floaters, pull-ups, and a step-back from deep. New York forced turnovers from Knueppel and Mann, dominated the glass, and received more timely shooting from McBride and Bridges. Charlotte tried to stay afloat with free throws and the occasional alley-oop, but their halfcourt offense repeatedly stalled against the faintest pressure.

Down the stretch, Hart grabbed extra possessions, Kolek continued to swing the ball cleanly, and the Bridges–KAT connections kept Charlotte scrambling. McBride’s deep three and Bridges’ rim attack helped seal a lopsided frame, while repeated Hornets misses counteracted any hope for momentum. Despite a turnover at the horn, the Knicks ended the quarter in command, up 98–75 heading into the fourth.

JB is hoopin pic.twitter.com/4L5jsBeZOL

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) November 27, 2025

Both teams rotated in fresh lineups to start the final frame. Charlotte tried to get something going behind Miller and Ball, but New York countered with solid defense—especially Robinson, a man among children forced turnovers and stifled a Miller floater. Scoring-wise, New York didn’t let up. Clarkson provided a floater, a steal, and a midrange finish, while KAT scored off a Kolek feed to keep the Knicks ahead. The Hornets chipped a bit at the margin, but also piled up bad passes, offensive fouls, and missed shots.

The Knicks lead reached 28 and, with three minutes left, this game was over long before the final bell.

on time on 🎯 pic.twitter.com/mgVcs9ZTlB

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) November 27, 2025

Up Next​


The Knicks return home to host the Bucks on Friday. Happy Thanksgiving, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ng-up-the-road-trip-with-a-party-in-charlotte
 
Game Thread: Knicks vs. Bucks, Nov. 28, 2025

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The Knicks (11-6) return to MSG after a five-game road trip for a decisive NBA Cup matchup with the struggling Bucks (8-11). New York can clinch Group C with a win, while Milwaukee arrives on a six-game skid and leaning almost entirely on its three-point shooting. The Knicks will again be without OG Anunoby, and their perimeter defenders will have their hands full trying to contain a Bucks team that hits triples at a 41% clip. If Giannis suits up, he changes the equation, but even so, we like the Knicks.

Tip-off is 7:30 pm EST on (hiss) Amazon Prime. This is your game thread. This is Brew Hoop. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Mind your manners. And go Knicks!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-game-threads/75847/game-thread-knicks-vs-bucks-nov-28-2025
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I knew I was going to get beat up there’

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The Knicks are in.

New York hosted the Bucks on Friday, beat them nicely, punched their tickets for the quarters of the tourney.

Here’s what a few of yesterday’s protagonists had to say before and after the final group-stage NBA Cup game.

KNICKS SCHEDULE UPDATE:

Knicks play their NBA Cup quarterfinals game at Toronto on Tuesday December 9 at 830pm

If they win it's off to Vegas for Semis vs Magic or Heat on Saturday December 13

Finals Tuesday December 16

All games on Amazon exclusive pic.twitter.com/KEN3lzmPC3

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

Mike Brown​


On the pressure of playing a must-win NBA Cup game:

“One of the things I told the guys, pressure is a privilege in life. Everybody is human, so if you’re feeling some sort of pressure, that means you’re doing something that is pretty important — not just to you but to a lot of other people. So you embrace it. In order to win and win at the highest level and experience that as much as you can, you try to go get the Cup and get Cup games and put that pressure on yourself, so hopefully it can simulate what the playoffs are going to be to a certain degree. Mentioning it to our guys, talking about it with our guys, that’s probably about the biggest difference than another game.”

On the Bucks before tipoff:

“They’re starting to find their way a little bit. Record-wise they may not be sitting where they want to at all, but their last game out against Miami, they played hard. They could have easily won that game. So they’re young guys are starting to really step up and understand how they can have some success in the league. A guy like Rollins caught you off guard initially. And not anymore. He busted out behind up in Milwaukee and he’s gotten a couple other teams too. He’s got their number too. All their guys play extremely hard and they’re very talented and they come to play.”

On Jalen Brunson’s MVP case:

“He should be talked about right now, and it’s early, but as you know, [as a] potential MVP. There’s not enough chatter, which it’s early, so I’m not throwing a fit, but the guy had 37 tonight on 12-of-21, and he gets blitzed often, and he makes the right basketball play. So he basically did what he’s supposed to do, and that’s why I don’t talk about a lot, because that’s what he’s capable of doing, and that’s what he’s supposed to do, being of that stature. Hopefully, you guys and your peers will start really talking the right way about this young man in terms of him, having some MVP talk, because that’s what he is.”

On Brunson as the Knicks’ engine:

“We’re not playing the best basketball right now but we’re trending in the right direction and he’s the engine behind it. So to me, he just did what he’s supposed to do, which equates to him being the MVP of the league.”

On Mitchell Robinson’s off-the-pine impact:

“I’ve liked what I’ve seen so far. Mitch has given us a great punch off the bench, and his ability to offensive rebound against starters or backups is huge for us, so he has to keep bringing that to the table.”

On Tyler Kolek’s performance:

“I didn’t play him as much as I wanted to tonight but the last two games when he’s gotten minutes, he’s been really good defensively. He’s been really physical without fouling. He’s been really good pushing the basketball and distributing the basketball while getting us into our offense. I expect nothing but that from him and again I wished I’d played him a little longer because again, (he’s) on a pretty good run.”

On Josh Hart’s starting role and the energy he brings to the team:

“Josh, he’s a baller. It doesn’t matter what you throw in front of him, he just goes and balls out. That’s what you love about him. He just gets it done in any role that you give him. He’s shown he can help you coming off the bench, he’s definitely shown he can help you as a starter. He’s playing high-level basketball.”

"When there's a chance to win something go & win it"

–– Jalen Brunson on NBA Cup as Knicks advance 🏆 pic.twitter.com/f9Q8FWgSMI

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

Jalen Brunson​


On the NBA Cup tournament:

“There’s a little added juice to it knowing what’s at stake. Win and move on and try and win something. We have a lot of guys and coaches who don’t make as much as some of the guys on this team and it’s an added bonus for them as well. You’re not just playing for yourself, you’re playing for this entire team.”

On the MVP chatter:

“I’ve thought more about winning vs. winning the MVP. It’s not something I’m thinking about. Honestly, when you win, everyone eats, so just focused on winning as a team.”

On Josh Hart’s value:

“He played well on both sides of the ball, and he’s in a good rhythm right now…. We just need him to stick with that. He’s the x-factor of what we do.”

On beating Milwaukee:

“I’m just happy we won. No matter what the situation is, who’s out there, who we have on the court, it doesn’t mean anything to me. I’m just happy we were able to win against a team obviously is really good and put us on the brink.”

Josh Hart’s 15 rebounds is not his Black Friday high

That came three years ago at the Garden when he had 19 rebounds

For the other team

10 weeks later he was a Knick pic.twitter.com/MNRp5grnPj

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

Josh Hart​


On defending Giannis without OG Anunoby:

“I knew I was going to get beat up there. For me, obviously we don’t have OG who is an extremely physical defender and we always put him those matchups, so with him out I knew I kind of had to step it up a little bit. We talked about being more physical on the ball — that’s something I’ve been trying to do the past few games and I’ve got to continue to do that and try to set the tone, at least while I’m starting and in those types of positions.”

On starting games again:

“I had to switch the routine that I had pregame so far [this season]. I’m just trying to find my little pregame routine. But obviously getting out there to start is fun.”

On playmaking when Brunson is double-teamed:

“I love it. That’s a position I’m extremely comfortable in. Normally, we get good looks when that happens.”

More Kuzma on Brunson: "He's got the green light. I mean, anybody that has the green light is gonna be a tough guard in this league. When you have that many live reps game after game, you're just ultraconfident. I think that's the best part about him" pic.twitter.com/PxZdIquncO

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

Doc Rivers​


On Giannis’s minutes restriction:

“With Giannis back, obviously he was on a minutes restriction tonight, which is really difficult in a game like this. We lost the leads when we took him off the floor.”

On losing the numbers game:

“The bottom line is they had 13 more shots than us, they had eight more free throws. We’re outshooting teams (in accuracy). Shooting 52 percent, but it’s the turnovers, it’s the offensive rebounds, it’s the fouls. It’s a numbers game, and we have to win that game. Especially with Giannis, if we win that game, we’re going to win the game.”

Giannis on Bucks 7-game skid: "…If you're so concerned about scoring…& it doesn't work now you feel like you cannot do nothing…Not a 1-man show, we have to do it together…We gotta get our competitive spirit back…Nobody should have personal agenda…Worry only about winning…" pic.twitter.com/vuYAA0FZqh

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

Giannis Antetokounmpo​


On returning from injury:

“Obviously, you want to win games, you want to win tournaments. We had the opportunity to go to Vegas twice in a row. Not going to Vegas and not being able to gamble on ‘34-Red’ one more time, I think it’s going to be very tough for me. At the end of the day, I want to win. We’ve lost seven in a row, and I don’t remember the last time I lost seven in a row. We gotta lock in … and be able to get that win tomorrow [in Brooklyn]. But I felt good. … For the first game back, I felt powerful. I hoped that I could help the team win the game, but we have another one tomorrow and we have to get back on track.”

On the team’s recent losing skid:

“Does it matter what I’ve seen (when I was sidelined with the injury)? It doesn’t matter — it happened. We’ve lost the games. We’ve lost, what, six in a row? Seven in a row?”

On doing the little things:

“You gotta come in, do your job, do what you’re paid to do, defend, rebound the ball, do the little things. And sometimes when you worry about doing the little things, all the other things add up. If you’re so concerned with scoring the ball and getting yourself going offensively, and that doesn’t work for you, now you feel like you cannot do nothing. You cannot worry about one shot or two shots that you miss, which took four seconds out of the game to dictate 47 minutes, 56 seconds of the game.”

On the team’s mentality:

“We’ve gotta get into the mindset that we’ve gotta compete. We gotta get to the mindset that this is not a one-man show, that we have to do together. We’ve gotta move the ball. We’ve gotta find open threes; we’ve gotta run, we gotta create spacing. Overall, we gotta get our competitive spirit back to where it’s supposed to be. Nobody should have a personal agenda, nobody should worry about what they want from themselves, worry only about winning mentality. Winning mindset. The more we can win games, the more everything can take care of itself.”

Cade Cunningham’s G.T. Cuts tonight: pic.twitter.com/ujhb5UcfYI

— Hunter Patterson (@HunterPatterson) November 28, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...letin-i-knew-i-was-going-to-get-beat-up-there
 
Knicks 118, Bucks 109: Winning with a lot of Hart

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When Milwaukee (8-12) beat New York (12-6) in October, the Knicks attempted 40 three-pointers, and the Bucks made 14-of-34 from deep. The Wisconsinites shot well back then; they shot even better in the first half tonight, and making 58% from the field and 12-of-22 from deep kept them in control for most of two quarters tonight. The Knicks clawed back behind free throws and paint scoring that briefly gave them a lead before halftime. The Knicks surged ahead in the third and early fourth behind hustle plays, improved shooting, and a cooling of Milwaukee’s attack. New York’s defense fought off a late rally attempt and sealed the gritty win, 118-109.

With the win, New York clinched Group C of the NBA Cup tournament. On to the quarterfinals!

The home team won because Josh Hart (19 points, 15 boards, seven assists, three steals) and Jalen Brunson (37 points, 12-of-21 shooting) completely took over the game. Miles McBride’s five threes were clutch (19 points tonight), and Bridges’ two-way stability (14 points, two steals) helped to lock down the victory. Karl-Anthony Towns managed just nine points, but added 10 boards and four assists in his 36 minutes. Off the bench, Jordan Clarkson made just 2-of-13 but managed to be +9 in his 22 minutes; Tyler Kolek provided steady ball-handing once again; and Mitchell Robinson grabbed seven boards and two steals in 19 minutes.

Before the game, Giannis Antetokounmpo was questionable with a groin strain, but we knew he wouldn’t miss a chance to play at Madison Square Garden. He had an efficient scoring night (28 points, 9-of-13 FG) and 15 boards in limited minutes.

Stan Van Gundy called it Kyle Kuzma’s best game of the year, and he was probably right. Kooz scored 20 points on 8-of-9 shooting (including 4-of-5 from deep), but those nice stats are marred by a -11. A.J. Green dropped a season-high six three-pointers, and Ryan Rollins cooled off after a strong first half, finishing with 13 points in 41 minutes.

First Half​


Don’t be fooled by the record. The Bucks are a dangerous team from behind the arc, with five rotation players averaging 39% or better from deep, so their first-quarter fusillade (8-of-11 to start) and subsequent ten-point lead were no surprise. Milly’s A.J. Green hit 4-of-5 from long (a first-quarter career high), and even though the Knicks fought back to take a one-point advantage, the Bucks outscored them 14-3 over a late three-minute stretch to regain control.

12 points. 4/4 from downtown.

AJ Green is FEELING IT in the 1Q!

🏆 NYK clinches East Group C with a win@emirates NBA Cup on Prime pic.twitter.com/rpg15mrl2P

— NBA (@NBA) November 29, 2025

Due to a minutes restriction because of an adductor strain, Giannis played seven minutes of the first frame. Thank the basketball gods for small favors, since the Knicks could do nothing to slow him down.

By the quarter’s conclusion, the visitors had shot 65% from the field and taken 13 three-point attempts to New York’s six tries. It’s not just OG Anunoby’s defense we’re missing—although we really missed his D tonight—it’s those corner threes of his, too. While Milwaukee moved the ball at will to the tune of 11 dimes, the Knicks survived by making all their 14 free-throw attempts. All told, the Knicks were lucky to escape the first frame down just 37-33, thanks to two freebies hit by McBride with 2 seconds left.

Sticking to his recent formula, accounting for the absence of Landry (shoulder) Shamet, Coach Mike Brown subbed in Tyler Kolek to start period two. Plays like this will keep Kolek in the mix:

sheeeeesh tyler 🙌 pic.twitter.com/T5ztWwD4vV

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

Across the quarters, the Knicks went on a 13-5 run that cut the differential to two points. Brunson scored seven of those. Soon after, though, the Bucks scored eight unanswered, with three-pointers from the two Garys—Trent, Jr. and Harris. It was time for the Knicks bench to provide some spark, and it came from Mitchell Robinson (two mighty dunks) and Jordan Clarkson (a floater, a few free throws). With a Hart corraling loose balls, Brunson canning a 26-footer, and Bridges scoring five straight, the Knicks were back in the mix, taking a brief lead before Kuzma closed the half with a triple. Halftime score: Bucks 62, Knicks 61.

this is what we like to see 🙂↕️ pic.twitter.com/oy4BFKOSKg

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

Through the half, the visitors had hit 58% from the field and 12-of-22 from downtown. They dished 16 dimes and scored 13 points off the Knicks’ turnovers. For the Knicks, making 18-of-22 from the charity stripe, distributing 14 assists, and tough stuff in the paint (26 points there, six offensive boards), kept them competitive. Shooting 44% and making 5-of-13 from yard wasn’t going to cut the mustard, though, with Milwaukee scoring so easily.

Second Half​


The Knicks charged into the third quarter, capitalizing on offensive rebounds, Hart’s hustle, and timely threes from Brunson, McBride, and Towns to flip their deficit into a lead. The visitors answered with Giannis getting to the line, A.J. Green drilling another deep ball, and Rollins hitting a three, but New York’s activity on the glass and some nice touches from Bridges pushed them ahead 74–72 at the Bucks’ timeout with 7:41 left.

Around the midway mark, Giannis tried a nine-foot jumper with Mitchell Robinson in his face. No luck. If the Knicks could keep switching Mitch onto him, they seemed to have found an answer to their Giannis problem. Meanwhile, Milwaukee’s shooting had cooled ever so slightly, which opened enough of a window for the Knicks to mount a six-point lead.

The Captain was cooking:

Brunson banks it in 💪 pic.twitter.com/PLl9vxylKJ

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) November 29, 2025

Having less luck at the grill: Towns, struggling to score seven points so far on 2-of-6 shooting. You can depend on the big fella for rebounds (eight through three quarters), but it was a very quiet night offensively thus far.
With under two minutes remaining, New York could have padded their lead, but sloppy play (looking at you, Clarkson) and a shot-clock violation allowed the Bucks to grab a lead. Bailing them out, Brunson and Bridges hit back-to-back from the outfield to take a 92-88 lead into the final frame.

To start the last quarter, New York drew first blood with three three-pointers—two by Deuce and one from Kolek. The Garden went into a frenzy, watching their home build a 13-point lead. Giannis returned to the battlefield.

New York missed seven shots and committed three turnovers through the heart of the quarter, but their rivals missed three and also coughed up the rock thrice, so no great consequences. When Kuzma hit from deep with just over six minutes left, a 104-100 Knicks lead was too close for comfort.

Giannis finds Kyle Kuzma to cut the lead to four 🤝

📺: SN1
📲: Stream on Sportsnet+ pic.twitter.com/Yv96T2jcBa

— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) November 29, 2025

After that, KAT whiffed from beyond the arc, and Antetokounmpo dunked to make it a two-point game. New York missed seven shots and had made 4-of-16 by the four-minute mark. Giannis and Kuzma doubled up on Brunson, but the Knicks failed to make hay with a four-on-three advantage.

The Knicks took a four-point lead into the final two minutes, and they slammed the door with defense and just enough shot-making. After Giannis fumbled a possession that Hart stole, Brunson delivered another dagger, a driving floater plus the and-one to push the lead to seven. Milwaukee fired blanks from deep while Hart grabbed even more rebounds, and he calmly knocked down two free throws to make it a nine-point game. No looking back after that!

Hart was everywhere tonight. Give him the game ball.

WE SEE YOU, JOSH ‼️ pic.twitter.com/HfV7XjVweT

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

Up Next​


Old friends RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley return to the Garden on Sunday. Rest up, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...icks-118-bucks-109-winning-with-a-lot-of-hart
 
Game Preview: Knicks vs. Bucks, Nov. 28, 2025

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Hope you survived the Battle of the Belly Bulge 2025. On the heels of a 3-2 road trip, and stuffed to the gills with Thanksgiving turkey, the Knicks (11–6) return to the hallowed halls of Madison Square Garden to host the Bucks of Milwaukee (8–11). The game starts at 7:30 PM. Stream it on Amazon Prime Video.

This NBA Cup game marks their second meeting this season. The Bucks won the first tilt 121–111 on October 28. Giannis Antetokounmpo dropped 37 points in the victory, and the Knicks, although sitting pretty with a 71-59 advantage at halftime, scored just 40 points after intermission.

Presently, the teams are aimed in different directions.

New York has won two straight and seven of its last ten. They sit fourth in the Eastern Conference behind Detroit, Toronto, and Miami (betcha didn’t see that coming), and their home record is 8-1. Our heroes have a top-three offensive rating (as of this writing), but their defense remains squarely in the middle of the pack. They take a truckload of shots in Mike Brown’s offense, but still edge on the bottom third of the league for pace. Grabbing almost 14 offensive rebounds per game, protecting the ball (third in turnovers), and limiting the opponents’ o-boards (surrendering a league-leading 9.2 per game) helps a lot. Even on cold shooting nights, the Knicks manage to stay competitive because they generate more attempts than their opponents.

The Knicks kept their In-Season Cup hopes alive with a blowout win in Charlotte on Wednesday, improving to 2–1 and setting up a key matchup for Friday. Group C will finish with two 3–1 teams, and if New York beats the Bucks tonight, the ’Bockers win the group because they hold the head-to-head tiebreaker over Miami.

Milwaukee visits the Big Apple with a six-game losing streak yoked around their necks. They’re 11th in the conference and a bottom-10 team overall: 21st offense, 20th defense, neutral pace. In Wednesday’s game, a 106-103 road loss to Miami, they leaned heavily on jump shooting, while Kyle Kuzma, Gary Trent, Jr., A.J. Green, and Ryan Rollins combined to take a single free-throw attempt.

So, don’t expect a lot of pressure in the paint tonight. Where the Bucks can getcha is beyond the arc, where they attempt 38 shots per game and convert 41%. Keep an eye on these cats:

  • Green, who takes almost seven triples a night and hits a studly 48%
  • OAKAAKUYOAK Bobby Portis, taking three and making 48% (he’s listed as probable)
  • Myles Turner is taking 5.8, hitting 41%
  • Rollins, six and 40%
  • Trent, 6.2 and 39%.

Sheesh, that’s impressive long-range shooting. The Knicks will be without the services of OG Anunoby (ankle) again, so the pressure will be on Mikal Bridges, Miles McBride, and Josh Hart to lock down the perimeter.

Prediction


ESPN.com favors New York at 77%. If Giannis plays, of course, his 30+ scoring and rim pressure change everything. We expect he’ll at least try to take the court; Le Greekus Freakus loves to play in front of the MSG crowd, remember? With or without him, New York’s wings might struggle to contain a barrage from deep throughout the night. But never fear these deer—New York will win in the end. Knicks by eight.

Game Details


Date: Friday, November 28, 2025
Time: 7:30 PM ET
Place: Madison Square Garden, NYC
TV: Amazon Prime Video
Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...5842/game-preview-knicks-vs-bucks-nov-28-2025
 
Game Preview: Knicks vs. Raptors, Nov. 30, 2025

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The New York Knicks (12–6) welcome the Toronto Raptors (14–6) to Madison Square Garden tonight in what feels like a temp check.

New York is riding a three-game winning streak, most recently handling the Milwaukee Bucks on Friday night, 118–109. They’re rested and practically unbeatable at home (9–1 at the Garden, curse those Magic punks). Toronto, meanwhile, is playing the second night of a road back-to-back after an overtime collapse in Charlotte. The Raptors were a few possessions away from winning their 10th straight, but collapsed late. Scottie Barnes logged a 30-and-12 double-double in defeat.

Recent history favors New York, who have won five straight against Toronto, but these Canadians have more bite under head coach Darko Rajaković. They play genuine, top-three defense (111.9 opponent PPG), while holding teams to 31.8% from deep. That will be a real test for a Knicks offense that ranks fifth in scoring (120.7 PPG) and launches 15.3 threes a night.

This matchup is also a preview of their NBA Cup showdown on December 9. Sadly, tonight’s tilt will be missing a familiar face and secondary scoring option: OAKAAKUYOAK RJ Barrett is out with a right knee sprain.

Projected Starters (Raptors)

  • Immanuel Quickley (15.8 PTS, 6.3 AST, 4.7 REB) is playing heavy minutes (third-most on the team) with a high share of team field‑goal attempts. Half of his shots come from beyond the arc, where he’s making 37%. He loves playing at the Mecca and reminding us of his talents. Count on a big game from him tonight.
  • Scottie Barnes (20 PTS, 8.1 REB, 5 AST) is second in minutes and field‑goal attempts. The offense runs through him a lot, both as a scorer and as a facilitator, and his diet is half rim-to-ten-feet shots and about 20% beyond the arc. He’ll drive often into New York’s frontcourt.
  • Brandon Ingram (21.9 PTS, 6 REB, 3.7 AST) is clearly their primary scorer with the highest minutes (680) and usage rate. His rim and short‑midrange efficiency is strong, but he hits just 31% from deep on four-and-a-half shots per game. Look for him to hunt Karl-Anthony Towns and test New York’s paint protection.
  • Ja’Kobe Walter (5 PTS, 1.9 REB, 1.1 STL) Walter is a low-usage shooting guard whose offense leans heavily on perimeter jump shots, which comprise 67% of his shot profile. He started last night in Charlotte; expect him to go again.
  • Jakob Poeltl (10.5 PTS, 8.3 REB, 2.3 AST) is a pure interior big. Almost all of his attempts come at the cup, where he finishes at a very high clip.

Expect a lot of scuffling on the glass. New York averages 45.7 boards (9th), Toronto 42.9. On the other end, the Knicks’ defense sits 14th (114 allowed) but remains atrocious against threes, giving up 15.2 makes per game (29th).

The Raptors play with pride, and, finally, Ingram looks like he actually wants to be in the game. His play, and good coaching, has changed their ceiling and placed them a surprising second in the Eastern Conference.

Prediction


Toronto will bomb away from three, with dingers from Walter, Barnes, Quickley, a couple from Ingram, and a handful of splashes from Sandro Mamukelashvili and Jamal Shead (still love that kid) off the bench. Conversely, against stout perimeter protection, the Knicks will bumble into one of their classic 4-for-16-from-yard first halves. The home team will surge after halftime, as they’re wont to do, but even with last night’s extra cardio, travel, and an earlier call time, Toronto is wired to prove that they are no fluke. They’ll win the frontcourt, win the three-point battle, and finally win by three to snap New York’s streak.

Game Details


Date: Sunday, November 30, 2025
Time: 6:00 PM ET
Place: Madison Square Garden, NYC
TV: MSG
Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-preview-knicks-vs-bucks-nov-28-2025#comments

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...73/game-preview-knicks-vs-raptors-nov-30-2025
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘We have a standard. That’s that contract everybody signed’

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The NBA let pretenders look like contenders until the Knicks grabbed them wannabe-contenders and sent them back packing to pretender status.

New York hosted Toronto, endured a couple of scares, but ultimately put the Raptors in the blender on Sunday.

Here’s what the protagonists had to say before and after yesterday’s trouncing.

RJ Barrett postgame with Mitchell Robinson, Jalen Brunson & Mikal Bridges pic.twitter.com/GW2M9XLNiL

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) December 1, 2025

Mike Brown​


On OG Anunoby’s rehab:
“He’s doing on-court work, which is a good step for him in the process. We’re continuing to monitor him. We’re not gonna rush him.”

On the timetable for OG Anunoby’s return:
“No, I don’t (have one), but like I said, he’s doing on-court work, which is a good step for him in the process.”

On learning more about the roster during OG’s absence:
“You have to play other guys. Sometimes you gotta play smaller guys against bigger guys because OG is a big wing. You find out who you can throw out to, who you can give extended minutes to, but also you’re not looking for one player to replace OG on either end of the floor. It’s gotta be a collective effort.”

On the Knicks’ defense improving on a daily basis:
“I gotta give our guys credit. Our team defense has gotten better. They’re trying to trend upwards. We’re gonna run into some hiccups and go the other way, but they’ve been trying to do their best on the defensive end on the floor. Not just with what the game plan is, but with their focus and their effort and all that stuff, physicality without fouling.”

On Toronto’s strengths before beating them on Sunday:
“[They’re] extremely athletic. They’re big and have big wings, and they can shoot the ball very well. They really get out in transition and punish you in transition. A lot of guys who can run well. They can score at all three levels, and then defensively, they’re aggressive, they create turnovers which creates points for them in other ways.”

On holding the Raptors to 94 points:
“To hold a group like this to 94 points speaks a lot about us defensively tonight. You’re not going to do this to the Raptors night in and night out. Our physicality without fouling while getting back in transition was huge for us.”

On failing to properly address Josh Hart’s early-season role:
“Especially (keeping him out of the starting five in) our first three losses, I’ll take the hit on that. The tough part was even backing up further, [Hart] didn’t really play in the preseason, he didn’t even really practice in the preseason. So, for me, I was behind the eight ball and was really trying to figure out how to incorporate him with what we’re trying to do. It just took time and he was extremely patient with the process.”

On Hart’s leadership and belief in the process:
“We have a standard and that’s that contract that everybody signed (that hangs in the Knick locker room) and it’s about sacrifice, connectivity, competitive spirit, but then a belief in each other, but just as much as that, have a belief in the process. Josh was huge on two of those things. His sacrifice was unbelievable because when I took him out, he just sat. When I called his number, he went out and played, but more importantly, his belief in the process, even if he thought I was wrong, was awesome. When you’re a leader, you have to show that or embrace those types of things more than everybody else cause you got to set the example and if somebody steps out of the realm of what our standard is because you did it as a leader, now you can tell them, ‘Hey, come back over here because we all got to do this. I had to go through it, you may have to go through it, this guy may have to go through it.’ So, he’s a special player, but he’s also a great human being to be around.”

On not expecting Miles McBride’s shooting ability:
“I didn’t know he could shoot it as well as he does. He’s a high level shooter. Also, his work ethic is really high. So those two things are something I learned being around him.”

On Mikal Bridges’s defense on Brandon Ingram:
“Guys like Ingram, it’s really hard to quote-unquote ‘shut them off.’ For us, we always talk about, it’s five guys guarding the basketball. Mikal was at the point of attack against Ingram, and he did a hell of a job.”

On Jalen Brunson’s MVP case:
“It’s not necessarily about (height); it’s about what you bring to the table. It’s still early and we’re in the top part of the eastern conference. And the numbers he’s putting up are pretty good. I don’t know exactly how they compare to others across the board that are in the top 3, 4 spots in the East and West. (And) I don’t see it all the time but when I see people talking (about MVP candidates), or I see lists, I never see him. And I’m amazed at the lack of attention that he gets for what he’s done in this league already. And what he continues to do, night in and night out. Especially when he’s the guy on a team that’s in a pretty good spot in their conference.”

On Brunson’s footwork compared to Kobe’s:
“I’ve been fortunate, blessed, lucky to be around a bunch of great players and Jalen’s footwork around the basket – especially for his size – is probably second to none. His footwork is really good. I’ll probably get killed for saying this but Kobe’s footwork was really good, and I’m not saying Jalen’s Kobe or vice versa, their patience, their footwork in that painted area is at an extremely high level and not many guys have that.”

Mike Breen: "I think KAT doesn't get enough calls on his drives bc he's so big…but I also think he has to stop complaining after all calls…The officials will listen to you if you don't yell foul every time…sometimes he complains too much–but he's got a right on a lot of them" pic.twitter.com/zjtGd2PU42

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) December 1, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On OG Anunoby’s value:
“OG is one of the best defenders in the NBA. So it’s going to be an obvious answer. He’s highly valuable to any team. Missing him is big.”

On playing and winning at Madison Square Garden:
“Our fans make playing at home so fun, and the support they give us and energy they give us is priceless, so 10-1 — of course we want to give the fans the best product, the best version of ourselves every single night. But it’s really the fans that bring out the best in us and shout-outs to them. They’ve carried us to the finish line many more than just home games.”

On the Knicks’ continued growth:
“I still think we have room for improvement. But we did a great job tonight of competing with a team that’s really hot and playing well and finding a way to play Knicks basketball.”

Josh Hart on rewarding the best fans in the world with home wins at The Garden 🗣️@nyknicks | @alanhahn | #NewYorkForever pic.twitter.com/tYivD4OGoP

— KNICKS ON MSG (@KnicksMSGN) December 1, 2025

Josh Hart​


On the Knicks’ rollercoaster game against Toronto:
“Just discipline. Getting stops and being disciplined offensively and defensively, I think that was the biggest thing. I think at times, we got a little lazy, a little sloppy, but we kind of cleaned that up and were able to build a lead. They’re a good team, they made runs, and we were able to weather the storm.”

On his defensive improvements:
“(Assistant coach) Darren Erman talked to me about being more physical on the ball. That’s something I’ve been trying to do the last two, three games. I got to continue to do that and help set the tone, at least while I’m starting, in those positions.”

"When I was playing with him he wasn't making all them shots"

–– Immanuel Quickley on Josh Hart (8-12 FG, 4-7 three) pic.twitter.com/XLf7utcbk9

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) December 1, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On the need for team accountability and improvement:
“We’re holding each other more accountable. We’re paying attention to detail a little more — we can still do better at that. I think the little things matter more than people think. If we keep believing that and keep doing that, then we’ll keep winning games.

“Playing in this league, there’s so much talent around the league, the little things can make or break wins and losses. We have to continue to do all that little stuff.”

"We're locked in through film, walk-thrus and practices…Our coaches have done a really great job preparing us"

–– Deuce McBride to Bill Pidto on Knicks defense (101 points allowed per game during 4-0 stretch) pic.twitter.com/caM5kbEXcr

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) December 1, 2025

Miles McBride​


On the Knicks’ improvement at communicating:
“We’re communicating a lot better. Tonight, we had a few bumps getting back in transition, but that’s what they do really well, so give credit to them. But I feel like defensively we’re just locked in a lot more.”

On the importance of defending home court:
“I feel like protecting home court in the NBA is really, really important. MSG is a place where guys want to come in and really get off. So we have to be even more locked in at home than other places.”

On Mikal Bridges’ defense taking on Brandon Ingram:
“You did great.”

Mikal Bridges critiques his individual defense tonight on Brandon Ingram: "Fouled him a lot, scored a couple buckets on me – I don't think it was the best defense, but…"

Deuce McBride in the background: "You did great, Mikal"

Bridges: "Thanks Deuce, thanks man" pic.twitter.com/IWl7AtQEbL

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) December 1, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On his defensive performance on Brandon Ingram:
“Just trying to do whatever to help my team win. That’s pretty much it. Just trying to be in the shifts, trying to make a play on the ball, try to help my teammates out.”

On road wins vs home wins:
“I think I’m more leaning on getting wins on the road. Home is a little bit easier. So to have that attitude and grit to do it on the road is a little bit more important to me.”

Darko Rajakovic on Brunson: "Same conversation I can put Luka, Jokic…Guys playing at own pace. You can't speed them up. Their awareness amazing…Elite…Not the fastest…but skill level & shooting amazing. And that makes him one of the biggest offensive weapons in the league" pic.twitter.com/7Gul8R03mG

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) December 1, 2025

Darko Rajakovic​


On RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley’s growth:
“Those two guys, obviously, we got them, they were like 23 at the time, 24. They grew up a lot since that time. Obviously, RJ coming back and playing in Toronto is a big deal for him and his family. He’s playing with extra juice for Toronto fans. And both of them, they were able to make a huge jump and really improve on both ends of the floor. We’re really happy with those two guys.”

On Quickley’s transition and development:
“As leaders of a team, as competitors, both of them, they made huge strides with their bodies. They got stronger, they got in better shape. Quickley is establishing himself as a point guard and he was more of a two-guard when he was playing [in New York] and joined us. So that’s a big transition when you change positions and from coming off the bench to becoming a starter in this league.”

On Barrett and Quickley’s specific improvements:
“Immanuel improved his defense on the ball dramatically. He’s one of the best defensive players that we have now on the ball. Also very disruptive with his hands. RJ’s shot selection is a little bit different. He’s getting much more to the rim, he’s doing catch-and-shoot 3s, he’s scoring more off cuts. Those two guys — they’re investing a lot in their individual and personal development and that’s affecting our whole team.”

On the Knicks’ offensive identity shift:
“I think it’s still early in the season. First 10 or 12 games, 15 games, whatever it was, they were running more. And now it looks like they’re settling into more personnel and how they’re playing more to the strengths of their players, trying at the same time to implement ball movement and body movement. Obviously, they are a very talented team, a lot of great players. So it’s the right thing to concentrate on the strengths of those guys and let them be who they are.”

On Josh Hart’s performance on Sunday:
“He did a really good job of playmaking, rebounding and he was, in my opinion the best player on the court.”

On Jalen Brunson’s greatness:
“He is the type of player that I can put in the category of Luka Doncic, Nikola Jokic – different position, obviously. But guys who are just playing at their own pace. You cannot speed them up. Their awareness is amazing. At any point of time they know where the hand of the defensive player is. What is the footwork, how can they get by somebody, how can they get to their sweet spot from the floor. How can they score from there, how can they playmake from there. And he’s elite at doing it. He’s not the strongest, not the fastest, but his skill level and shooting ability is amazing and that makes him one of the biggest offensive weapons in the league.”

Audi Crooks 🫨🌪️

47 Points. 19/25 FG. #Big12WBB | @CycloneWBB pic.twitter.com/sTu3ZffdeB

— Big 12 Conference (@Big12Conference) November 30, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...standard-thats-that-contract-everybody-signed
 
Close games have become a rarity under Mike Brown’s Knicks

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It is estimated by the IUCN that there are nearly 16,000 species of animals that are either endangered or critically endangered. Endangered species are a tragic occurrence in the wild that can be caused by a variety of factors. Many species have been driven to the brink or even gone totally extinct due to environmental effects, natural causes in the wild, or, the most common cause over the last 500 years, human interference.

Whether it’s poaching, deforestation, or any other factor that causes a population to dwindle, there have been many species that see their populations dwindle due to man-made causes. But while the most common use of the word “endangered” is regarded in the wild, it can generally be used for any particular thing that is in danger of being wiped out.

So what does any of this have to do with the Knicks? Well, one thing that is “endangered” regarding the Knicks is something that was their bread and butter a year ago. No, it’s not the slow pace or challenges, but rather close games. Last year, the Knicks would play 31 games designated as “clutch” games, and those games would generate a bunch of iconic moments for Jalen Brunson, boosting him to winning the NBA’s Clutch Player of the Year.

But in 2025-26? The Knicks have played in just two games decided by less than eight points as December begins. While seven games have technically been “clutch”, just two have come down to the wire. That’s not to say the other clutch games didn’t have drama, but there haven’t been the last-possession heroics that are commonplace around the league.

On Opening Night, the closest that Cleveland got was five points with two minutes left. The Knicks had slim hopes in a fake comeback against Miami in October, closing an 18-point deficit to five with 90 seconds left before an Andrew Wiggins dagger. They were in a close game in Milwaukee for 44 minutes until the Bucks ran roughshod to close the game. Same can be said for the NBA Cup opener against the Bulls.

So right, there are four “clutch” games that were decided when the final minute of the game began. The only other clutch games were the two-point loss to Miami in November, the two-point win in Dallas, and Friday’s NBA Cup finale against the Bucks, where Jalen Brunson’s and-1 with 1:27 to go made it a seven-point game and put it away.

Just three of the Knicks’ last 14 games had any semblance of drama, and only two of them were real. The Knicks had multiple opportunities at pulling out the win in South Beach that fell off the rim, and they survived an upset against the incredibly shorthanded Mavericks on an offensive foul with one second left.

Other than those games, the month of November has been as milquetoast as possible. Some games have been competitive, but are ultimately never in doubt by the end. What’s driving this?

Volatility. The Knicks have become a boom-or-bust team on offense with Mike Brown’s philosophy of making the team hard to keep up with. The formula for a Knicks win is usually a boatload of three-pointers and offensive rebounds with few turnovers. When executed well, the team can be close to unstoppable.

Boxing out Mitchell Robinson is insane. Even when you face guard and push him out, you open a lane for someone like Deuce to sneak in and grab the offensive board. pic.twitter.com/lECI9Jrmy8

— DJ Zullo (@DJAceNBA) November 6, 2025

But there is a flip side. If the team is neutralized on the boards (especially when Mitchell Robinson is out), it places enormous pressure on making their threes, which they’ve been inconsistent on. Last night was a perfect example: the Knicks started 9-for-14 from deep and built a 24-point lead, only to miss 15 of their next 17 from distance and see Toronto pull to within three in the third quarter.

Ultimately, the rebounding helped save the Knicks, as they grabbed a monstrous 25 offensive rebounds, but there have been games where it doesn’t save them. They’ve shot under 34% from three in five games this season and are 1-4 in those games. The lone win? Barely surviving D’Angelo Russell and Naji Marshall in Dallas. Both losses to the Heat saw the team shoot under 30% and Kel’el Ware did a great job negating the rebounding differential.

That means the Knicks are a blistering 12-2 when they shoot above 34%, which is a comfortably below-average rate in the modern NBA. They’re 9-1 when they clear 36%, only losing to the Bulls in Chicago in the team’s worst defensive performance of the season. All of these wins are mostly comfortable, with the closest being Friday against Milwaukee.

They’re also unstoppable when they’re dominating the boards, for obvious reasons. 4-0 when winning the rebounding battle by at least 10, and only two of their losses saw them win it by more than five (overall record of 9-2). When they lose the rebounding battle outright? 2-3.

It might seem obvious that when the Knicks succeed at their strengths, they win games, but the fact that when they succeed, they blow teams out is notable. Last season, while they went 22-2 when shooting over 41% from three, they went just 18-11 when they shot between 36% and 41% compared to 7-2 in the same span this year.

But there’s one more thing that the Knicks have in their identity that has prevented games from reaching this point, and it’s been a part of their philosophy for years under Tom Thibodeau: they don’t blow big leads.

Sure, they struggle to put teams away at times, and Clyde Frazier isn’t wrong when he says the team lacks the “killer instinct” to step on their opponents’ throats and turn games into OKC-level blowouts, but they rarely fully let go of the rope.

The Knicks have held a 15-point second-half lead on 89 different occasions since the start of the 2023-24 season. They have won 88 of those games, the best record in the NBA in that span. They won 75 of those games in a row over two consecutive seasons until they endured the most tragic collapse in recent memory in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals.

Regardless, they don’t let go of the rope. There are games where they go up big early and fall apart, sure, but when the team is firmly in control of a game in the second half over the past three seasons, they almost always win. It’s a far cry from the pre-Brunson Knicks that never could hold a lead. I don’t need to regale you with what the 2021-22 Knicks did on a near-daily basis, do I?

Speaking of Brunson, that’s probably the biggest reason for that. The Knicks have a closer who can command the ball and dictate the offense when the going gets tough. We’ve seen a few times this season where Mike Brown’s pace-and-space, spray to open shooter philosophy has taken a step back to Brunson hero-ball when the Knicks can’t buy a bucket. That’s a good thing.

It’s all resulted in games that feel mundane. You usually know pretty early what way a game is going, and that can be boring to some, but if the Knicks are winning? I have no problem with it.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...s-nba-mike-brown-clutch-brunson-tom-thibodeau
 
Knicks’ Jalen Brunson named NBA Player of the Week

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New York Knicks point guard Jalen Brunson, along with his old Mavericks running mate and current Los Angeles Lakers leader Luka Doncic, has been named NBA Player of the Week for Week 6 of the 2025–26 season, putting a strong finish on the month of November for the Knicks.

NBA Players of the Week for Week 6.

West: Luka Dončić (@Lakers)
East: Jalen Brunson (@nyknicks) pic.twitter.com/AZneuxzI6x

— NBA (@NBA) December 1, 2025

Brunson put together a big-time stretch, averaging 28.8 points and 4.5 assists while shooting 48.3 percent from the field and 40.7 percent from three. His play pushed New York to a perfect 4 and 0 week, giving Knicks fans plenty to be thankful for during the Holiday week.

The highlight of Brunson’s week came against the Milwaukee Bucks on Friday night, as he led the Knicks with 37 points during a hard-fought 118-109 NBA Cup win.

Brunson had two other 30+ point performances against Orlando and Charlotte, as well as a 27-point performance against the cross-town rival Brooklyn Nets, and 28 points against his former team, the Dallas Mavericks.

This is the seventh time Brunson has taken home the Player of the Week honor. He is now just one away from tying Carmelo Anthony for the second most in Knicks history, with Patrick Ewing still holding the top spot.

The Knicks will be on the road on Tuesday, facing the Boston Celtics at TD Garden, before returning to MSG for a three-game homestand starting Wednesday against the Charlotte Hornets.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ks-jalen-brunson-named-nba-player-of-the-week
 
Celtics 123, Knicks 117: Scenes from the 500th game between two rivals

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On a chilly night in Massachusetts, the New York Knicks (13-7) crushed the first quarter behind scorching shooting from McBride and Hart, but the Celtics (12-9) stormed back with a dominant second period and rode Jaylen Brown to a 58–52 halftime score. In the third, Brown kept scoring in the paint (from everywhere, really), the Knicks’ defense vanished, and the score ballooned to 94–76 heading into the fourth. With Jalen Brunson spinning his wheels (6-of-21 from the floor tonight), Mikal Bridges provided second half heroics and the Knicks won the final frame 41-29, but an 18-point hole proved too much to overcome. Boston wins, 123-117.

Bridges finished with a season-high 35 points and a career-high of eight three-pointers, missing only four long attempts. Add six boards, three dimes, and two steals and this is a contender for best Bridges game as a Knick. Conversely, Brunson’s statline is brutal: 15 points on a horrible shooting night, uncharacteristically missing normally money bunnies and yapping at the refs for no-calls. One for the wastebasket.

Boston won the boards and outscored New York by 14 in the paint. Brown recorded 42 points on 16-of-24 and Derrick White added 22. The Celtics, known for their longball shooting, changed their strategy to attack from within the arc. They made just 13-of-40 from deep, but 56% from the field. Tough loss, and you just know it would be a different story if OG Anunoby was available.

First Half​


It was weird to hear so many fans at TD Garden saying, in unison, “Deeeuuuccceee!” whenever McBride cocked back for a triple. The Knicks fanatics who infiltrated the enemy camp had reason to cheer early, as the visitors went ahead 17-4—thanks in part to Miles hitting two from deep. According to the intrepid Ian Begley, with that pair, McBride had hit 14 of his last 22 attempts from deep. Sure seems like he’s overcome whatever ailed him to start the season.

Also on fire: Josh Hart, making all three of his first 3P attempts. With three minutes to go, and Mitchell Robinson in, Boston coach Joe Mazzulla began his Hack-A-Mitch strategy. The big fella made one of four freebies. It makes for a tedious watch. Meanwhile, the Celtics turned the ball over five times to the Knicks’ one, and Boston missed eight longball tries until Anfernee Simons made one with 30 seconds to go. Score after one: Knicks, 32-21.

In the second frame, Boston made 12 straight, trimming New York’s lead to two. After that dip, the Knicks tried to right the ship with another Hart three-pointer (4-for-4 so far) and this crafty Kolek move:

Boston had momentum, though. They outscored the Knicks 12-3 and, behind a Jaylen Brown scoring burst (he dropped 18 points in the frame), took the lead around the five-minute mark and went ahead by seven with two-ish minutes left. Outscored 37-20 in the quarter, the Knicks entered intermission behind, 58-52.

New York lived on the perimeter, hitting nine threes at a 43% clip and swinging the ball for 13 assists. They also grabbed six offensive boards and five steals. The Beantown Bunch was supposed to attack behind the arc, but thus far, they’d hit just four threes (24%) and done all their damage scoring 32 points in the paint.

Second Half​


Jaylen Brown found the Knicks frontcourt exceedingly accommodating to his driving layups, and so he continued to visit the cup. When he felt like mixing it up, he added a mid-range jumper, and, for kicks, a three-pointer. Here the jerk imitates Dirk:

Mikal Bridges was warming up, making 14 of his 18 points (so far), but the Knicks still trailed by 10 with about four minutes left. They weren’t getting calls, which flustered them, and they didn’t play defense, which burned them. A 12-0 Celtics run to end the frame—which included two poorly-timed Knicks turnovers—goosed the score to 94-76. Wherefore art thou, OG Anunoby?

Coach Mike Brown followed his usual formula, starting Kolek for Brunson to kick off the fourth quarter, letting Captain Clutch recharge for late game availability. Coach also went double-big, with Towns and Robinson sharing the floor (finally…), plus Hart and Clarkson. While Jaylen Brown also rested, the Knicks’ odd assortment started the period 11-2 to come within nine. That 18-point hole was mighty deep to overcome, however. Sam Hauser hit a trey; KAT turned the ball over (trying to dribble behind his back in traffic…), which resulted in a Simons three-point play; and Brunson, back on the battlefield, whiffed on another long attempt (he was 1-of-8 by late in the fourth). It didn’t look good. . . .

But here comes Mikal! He scored eight points in the first half of the fourth to whittle the difference to three.

Immediately after, Jordan Walsh scored four unanswered points (and stole the ball), and Josh Minott made a corner shot without a defender in spitting distance. Every time the Knicks got close, they let the Green Goons pad the lead again. With two minutes left, New York was down by five. Brunson tried to draw a charge but that backfired. Brown hit two freebies for a seven-point lead.

Bridges drilled a triple to make it a four-point game with 45 seconds left. Brown passed the ball to the front row, giving them another try, but Mikal missed from yard, and, some late game sloppiness notwithstanding, that concluded matters.

Up Next​


A proper Miranda recap for you lucky mucks. As for the Knicks, they’re zipping home to face the Charlotte Hornets tomorrow. Safe travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...scenes-from-the-500th-game-between-two-rivals
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I’ll go have lunch with them right now. We’re good’

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The Knicks made TD look like Madison Square for a quarter, then got mollywopped and sent packing to the one and only Garden.

New York keeps losing road games they should win against subpar teams. Alas. The Knicks are back at MSG tonight with a get-right chance against the ludicrous Hornets.

Here’s what you need to know that came out of the protagonists’ mouths.

Mike Brown: "I thought the second and third quarter, we didn't play up to the level we're capable of, which is going to happen."
He loved the first quarter approach.

"Their bench had a really good impact on the game."

— James L. Edwards III (@JLEdwardsIII) December 3, 2025

Mike Brown​


On complaints to officials hurting the Knicks:
“At the end of the game, we had 17 free throws, and they had 14. We went to the free-throw line more than they did. One of the things we pride ourselves on is to try and be a ‘no excuse’ team. I thought tonight we were all on the officials a little too much. That was big.”

On the horrible second and third quarters vs. Boston:
“I thought the second and third quarter, we didn’t play up to the level we’re capable of, which is going to happen. Their bench had a really good impact on the game.”

On player attitude toward officials:
“We got caught up in the officials a little too much. They’re human, they’ll make some good calls and some bad calls in the course of the game. But we had 17 free throws and they had 14. One of the things we pride ourselves on is being a no-excuse team. Tonight we were on the officials a little too much.”

On the offensive execution against Boston:
“A post-up is a paint touch, and a drive is a paint touch. If anyone draws two … they got to spray it. I thought through the first quarter we did a good job of spraying the basketball. I think we had seven sprays in one quarter, which we lead the league in. … We didn’t do a great job in that second quarter of touching the paint and spraying it, and Towns was one of the few guys that didn’t do that.”

On Jalen Brunson’s shot selection on Tuesday:
“I thought he got the normal looks that he normally takes. So he’s got to keep shooting them, he’s got to keep getting to his spots. I thought he took good 3s, too. They just didn’t go in. And that happens sometimes. So a guy like him, he’s got to keep letting it fly if he’s open.”

On Mikal Bridges’ effort vs. Boston:
“He was feeling it and he was aggressive and I thought our guys did a good job trying to find him, and he hit some big shots for us. He was one of the guys trying to will us back into the game offensively.”

On the defensive breakdowns against the Celtics:
“We just couldn’t get it done defensively. We didn’t play at the level we’re capable of. We know we can play better. That’s going to happen from time to time.”

On managing player minutes:
“If we had our whole roster, it would be less. This is why we try to manage our minutes from jump street, because we’re gonna have injuries. We’re gonna have tough, tight, overtime ballgames. So guys are gonna have to play extended minutes from time to time. But you hope, more so than not, when you have everybody, you can have the minutes for everybody in the low 30s. At the end of the day, it’s gonna all balance out. Eventually, we’re gonna get guys back and it will start balancing out a little bit better.”

On minutes management philosophy:
“It’s important to win, but you also have to understand, ‘Hey, I want to keep this guy’s minutes here, this guy’s minutes here, this guy’s minutes here, instead of trying to extend everybody’s minutes.’ Because if the season is long, we don’t want anybody worn out by the end.”

Mike Brown on Brunson's struggles: "I felt he got the normal looks he takes. He's got to keep shooting and get to his spots. I thought he took good 3s, too. They just didn't go in."

— James L. Edwards III (@JLEdwardsIII) December 3, 2025

Jalen Brunson​


On his awful performance in the Celtics loss:
“I didn’t do my team any service. It’s unfortunate. Throughout the game, I just didn’t help at all.”

On the need for team accountability and attention to detail:
“[We’re] holding each other more accountable, paying attention to detail a little bit more. I think we can still get better at that. I think the little things matter more than you think, and if we keep believing that and keep doing that, we’ll keep winning games. But playing in this league — there’s obviously so much talent in this league — the little things can make or break wins and losses. So we’ve gotta continue to do all the little stuff and keep piggybacking and going off those wins.”

Brown said, at this point in year, he wants to Mitch to work through his free-throw shooting. But said he's also not opposed to making a change if they need to.

— James L. Edwards III (@JLEdwardsIII) December 3, 2025

Karl-Anthony Towns​


On Jalen Brunson’s struggles against Boston:
“Things like that happen. It’s 82 games in the season and he’s one of the best players in the NBA. So things happen. He didn’t lose his mojo. We know who he is, what he does. So he’s going to be all right. I expect him to bounce back like he’s been doing all season.”

On the current starting lineup:
“It’s just a different lineup. Mitch in the starting lineup, Josh Hart in the starting lineup, we feel comfortable going out there every night that we have a chance to win. And it’s because of the work we put in in practice and on our games individually in our free time. Josh has done a great job of playing recently, and he’s been fantastic all year, but any one of us could be in the starting lineup and feel like we can contribute and impact winning. So that just speaks to our locker room.”

On the Game 1 comeback against Boston last playoffs:
“That was not our strategy. We did not big-brain that. I know Thibs is a madman with an amazing IQ. That was not one of the ideas. I think that Game 1 showed all the improvements that we made not only as players, as physical talents, but you know, mentally. Last year we were such a mentally tough team that nothing bothered us or wavered us. And the 20-point deficit against the champs and being in their home, that didn’t matter to us. We keep fighting to the horn goes off.”

On the Game 2 win in last year’s series:
“We just kept fighting to the horn went off and found ourselves with the win and Mikal getting an amazing steal. So didn’t expect deja vu, but it was. And it showed that if you doubted us Game 1 we showed what we can do with the same situation. Obviously not favorable for us. Not something we wanted to be in. But it just shows the mental fortitude of our team.”

On his desire to stay with the Knicks by signing a long-term deal in New York:
“Hell yeah, hell yeah. I want to stay here. Obviously get a chance to be home, see my family. It means more than the money, you know. So just to be able to be here with the fans, be with the family. It means a lot. I would like it to continue.”

On his relationship with the front office:
“Me, Leon Rose and Gerson Rosas and everyone, we’re great. I’ll go have lunch with them right now. We’re good.”

On playing center vs. power forward:
“It’s just a different place I’m in in our system. Totally different system. So when I’m 5 or I’m 4, it’s a totally different script for me in the game. Trying to impact winning as much as possible and I’m happy I’m able to do that so far this year.”

An incredible performance for Mikal Bridges despite the loss 👏 pic.twitter.com/aL9pnpG76N

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) December 3, 2025

Mikal Bridges​


On the defensive breakdowns vs. Boston:
“We weren’t guarding the ball well, but, also, secondary help. Obviously, we have to guard the ball well. But there was no help the helper. We can’t do that to a really good team. It felt like we were leaving guys on an island, and guys can get blown by — there was no stepping over and making them kick it out.”

On the minutes load under Mike Brown:
“Not complaining at all.”

On adapting to a new coach and system:
“Just understanding and adapting through a new system, a new coach, and for the guys not listening to noise. I know fans and stuff — I’m not saying all because I know a lot understand what a new system and a new coach does for players — how difficult it can be trying to learn, especially off past success. It’s different. It’s going to take some time. I think we’re learning and not paying attention to what others think and knowing that being here every single day all we’ve got to do is learn. It’s going to take growth.”

On the Celtics being dangerous despite missing players:
“Man, they still got the coach, coach Joe Mazzulla, and I think he’s a hell of a coach. They’ve got guys that are going to play hard, smart, a lot of talent. I know they’ve got guys banged up or not here, but they’ve got next man up and they come out playing hard, physical, and doing whatever it takes to win.”

"I thought Josh Hart got off to a great start in that game. When something like that happens, it forces you to have to decide what you're going to do from an adjustment standpoint."

Joe Mazzulla talks about the Celtics' adjustments after the Knicks' fast start tonight: pic.twitter.com/T1gtTHweND

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) December 3, 2025

Josh Hart​


On the team priorities going forward:
“We have to make sure we’re locked in on making sure the success of the team is the No. 1 objective.”

On letting Tuesday’s game slip away:
“We got off to a good start, and we relaxed.”

On th need to avoid complacency with big leads:
“We can’t get bored with what’s working, what’s winning basketball. I felt like we got bored doing that. And then we started doing whatever, playing bad offense, giving up anything defensively. So we’ve got to make sure we’re locked in on making sure the success of the team is the No. 1 objective. I mean, it’s human nature sometimes when you get those big leads. Now you’re up 15, up 20 sometimes, let me figure out a way to score, how to get mine. Not in a bad way. That’s human nature. We’ve got to try to combat that. We’ve got to make sure even when we get up 15, we get up 20, we’re continuing to push the pace, continuing to play fast, continuing to play our basketball. I think it’s frankly just kind of stupidity to play one style of basketball, get a 15, 20-point lead, and then abandon what got you the lead. We’ve got to make sure we continue to focus on that and build off of it.”

On playing starter minutes again:
“Sometimes, obviously when you’re starting, it’s a little bit different, because your body is already moving, you’re already warm, those kinds of things. When you come off the bench, you gotta get your body warm again. … It’s a lot of getting warm, cooling down, trying to stay warm, those kinds of things. Starting and playing, you obviously don’t gotta worry about getting cold or stiff.”

On the Knicks’ improving chemistry:
“We’re extremely comfortable. I think we’re starting to make reads and starting to play off each other’s movements and those kinds of things and knowing where guys are going to be and knowing certain spots. So we’re getting more and more comfortable.”

Deuce McBride’s NBA on NBC player introduction was 🔥.

WVU Legend @deucemcb11 pic.twitter.com/Szcd0cpyf9

— The New York Daly News (Sports) (@NYDALYNEWS) December 3, 2025

Deuce McBride​


On his recent hot shooting stretch:
“I expect to make shots. My teammates did a great job of find me. I just wanted to shoot it with confidence.”

On hearing the crowd shouting his name:
“Usually after it goes in the net… that’s when I start listening a little bit. But whoever started [the chant], shout out to them.”

On shooting routine changes helping improve his numbers:
“Honestly? [I haven’t done] anything different than I’ve done my whole life.”

Joe Mazzulla was asked about Mikal Bridges exchanging words with the Celtics' bench:

"I don't mind that stuff. I like it. It's part of the game. Keeps me going and I thought the guys handled it well." pic.twitter.com/58dnDSTneu

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) December 3, 2025

Joe Mazzulla​


On adjusting to Hart’s hot start:
“I thought Josh Hart got off to a great start in that game. When something like that happens, it forces you to have to decide what you’re going to do from an adjustment standpoint.”

On Bridges’ trash talk:
“I don’t mind that stuff. I like it. It’s part of the game. Keeps me going and I thought the guys handled it well.”

Jaylen Brown talks about the Celtics' win over the Knicks:

"It's a great win for us. That was a great win. I'll take every one we can get. Obviously, a team that knocked you out in the playoffs, it's even sweeter to come back.

But it's just one game. We've just got to focus on… pic.twitter.com/yWSm1hBE3z

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) December 3, 2025

Jaylen Brown​


On beating the Knicks:
“It’s a great win for us. That was a great win. I’ll take every one we can get. Obviously, a team that knocked you out in the playoffs, it’s even sweeter to come back. But it’s just one game. We’ve just got to focus on the next one now and that’s what’s most important.”

With Chris Paul news, resurfacing what I reported that the Knicks had discussed possibility trading for the future Hall of Famer. Paul was repped for a long time by Leon Rose. https://t.co/nE4LCr6A7W

— Stefan Bondy (@SbondyNBA) December 3, 2025

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...l-go-have-lunch-with-them-right-now-were-good
 
Knicks 119, Hornets 104: Big KAT beats bugs

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With everyone buzzing about a possible Thanasis Antetokounmpo trade, basketball was played at Madison Square Garden tonight, with the New York Knicks (14-7) hosting the Charlotte Hornets (6-16). For the second straight night, New York controlled the first quarter (limiting the Stingers to just 12 points) but faltered in the second, clinging to a 53-47 halftime lead. After a concerning start to the second half, Karl-Anthony Towns took charge, and the ‘Bockers withstood a scoring barrage by LaMelo Ball to win, 119-104.

Towns was the dominant force of the night, pouring in 35 points with 13-of-23 shooting, grabbing 18 boards, and adding five assists, two steals, and just one turnover. Jalen Brunson added 26 points on 9-of-16 from the field and had the steady hand whenever Charlotte got frisky. Josh Hart delivered his usual all-around excellence with 17 points, eight rebounds, and eight assists, while Mikal Bridges quietly chipped in 16 points and timely stops. Rounding out the starters, Miles McBride continued his hot shooting from three and posted 15 points and +18 in 34 minutes.

The bench scoring was mostly invisible, with just 12 points split between Jordan Clarkson and Tyler Kolek. Guerschon Yabusele and Ariel Hukporti combined for zero points and three boards in 21 minutes. The latter fouled out in 12 minutes, which is kind of impressive in a way.

For the Hornets, Ball finished with 34 points, nine assists, and eight boards on 12-of-27 shooting. And Kon Knueppel, the popular rookie, scored 13 points and made one three-pointer. He’s 1-of-13 from deep against the Knicks this season. Stick that in your Rookie-of-the-Year pipe and smoke it.

First Half​


The Hornets began the contest missing seven of their first nine shots. New York was bricky, too, missing all four of their first long attempts, but they made half of their field goals to take a 14-7 lead by midway through the quarter.

Charlotte really excels at fouling, leading the league in that department, but played a pretty clean first quarter (three fouls for them, none for the Knicks). However, the visitors finished the frame with six turnovers to five made field goals. The ugly shooting was contagious. The teams combined to shoot 3-of-23 from downtown, and New York missed eight tries before Deuce McBride dropped one with the clock running out. By the break, New York was ahead 27-12. That’s right, 12.

Rookie of the Year contender Kon Knueppel missed all seven three-point attempts when these clubs clashed last Wednesday. He missed three to start tonight. For the Knicks, Coach Mike Brown subbed in Ariel Hukporti with under two minutes to go, playing minutes that would have gone to Mitchell Robinson (load management).

In the second period, New York stretched their lead to 20, but Charlotte clawed back with a flurry of threes from Kon Knueppel, Salleun, and LaMelo Ball, plus lively paint play by Ryan Kalkbrenner, trimming the lead to three. The Knicks were out-rebounded and outgunned.

Making two of three so far tonight, McBride has made 19 of his last 28 three-point attempts. Aside from him and Tyler Kolek, the home team went 2-of-16. Towns hit one of those, and Brunson canned the other at the buzzer, giving New York a 53-47 lead.

This game mirrored last night’s, with the Knicks dominating the first quarter and snoozing through the second. After limiting the Hornets to 12 points, they were outscored 35-26 in the second period. This seemed like a possible trend, but perhaps not. According to the stats I checked, they’ve won the first quarter 13 times this season but lost the second in just four of those. So, maybe not a trend after all?

Through two quarters, both teams shot 43% from the field, and the three-point accuracy was mutually unattractive (Knicks 6-for-21; Hornets 6-for-22). Our heroes doubled Charlotte’s assists (14 to 8) and won the turnover battle (five giveaways, all in Q2, to the Hornets’ nine). KAT led the way for New York with 19 points; LaMelo Ball scored nine for the villains.

Second Half​


The Knicks began the half with terrible defensive efforts, causing Mike Brown to beg for a timeout before two minutes had passed. Whatever wisdom he imparted seemed to correct the problem. From there, KAT served up two treys, Brunson added a bucket or two, and Bridges had a few beautiful touches at the rim to restore an 18-point lead. Bridges and Hukporti recorded back-to-back blocks, both of which were cashed in at the other end. With help from Ball, Liam McNeeley, and Knueppel, the Hornets showed some interest in keeping up. By the quarter’s curtain, New York was ahead 90-75.

Hukporti recorded his second block to start the final frame, then fouled out after 12 total minutes of play. Shortly before his sixth foul, Huk passed up a dunk to kick out to the corner, and Mike Breen was flabbergasted. So were we. This is not the Incredible Huk we’d hoped for. . . .

Until midway through the fourth, the Hornets circled that 15-point deficit, making insincere feints at comebacks. Then Ball hit back-to-back triples and a free-throw, and now the number was 11; and after two McBride free throws, Tidjane Salaun scored five straight to make it eight. Would the Knicks gird their loins, summon their resolve, and prevent a collapse?

They would. McBride hit a triple, Brunson scored an And-1, and with two-ish minutes remaining, the 14-point differential was secure.

Up Next​


Jazz at the Garden on Friday. Rest up, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...021/knicks-119-hornets-104-big-kat-beats-bugs
 
Game Thread: Knicks vs. Hornets, Dec. 3, 2025

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The New York Knicks (13-7) enter tonight’s game against the Charlotte Hornets (6-15) as favorites, but smarting from last night’s close loss in Boston. Our heroes are 10-1 at home, while the injury-shortened Hornets limp in after losing to the Nets on Monday. This would be the perfect game for the Knicks’ bench to get a lotta reps.

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

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...6008/game-thread-knicks-vs-hornets-dec-3-2025
 
Mike Brown’s rotations need some work without OG Anunoby

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The way the Knicks are built, things will never be fully cohesive without their best defender. While OG Anunoby has reportedly resumed taking contact in practice and is inching closer to a return, the Knicks are likely going to slow-play him, not risking things in an 82-game season.

Mike Brown said that OG Anunoby has taken contact in practice but the Knicks "won't rush him" pic.twitter.com/tZLSHsXqY0

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) December 3, 2025

So in the meantime, the Knicks have to deal with what they’ve got. That task became especially more perilous when Landry Shamet hurt his shoulder two weeks ago, thinning the Knicks’ depth to the point that Tyler Kolek got out of the doghouse.

For the most part, the Knicks have held serve without Anunoby, currently being 6-3 in nine games without him. While they’ve benefitted from a soft part of the schedule, they’ve also defeated the Bucks and the Raptors, two teams who figured to take advantage of a smaller Knicks team with their leading scorers being big wings (Brandon Ingram and, of course, Giannis).

But there’s been a pattern, win or lose, in the last few games for the Knicks. Starting with the blowout win over the Raptors, the Knicks have jumped out to jaw-dropping early leads, only to squander them, either fully or partially.

  • 11/30 vs TOR: up 48-24 in Q2, Raptors go on 22-3 run and eventually pull within 3 in Q3.
  • 12/2 @ BOS: up 39-25 in Q2, Celtics go on 12-0 run, eventually take 18-point lead after 3.
  • 12/3 vs CHA: up 41-21 in Q2, Hornets go on 26-9 run to pull within three in just seven minutes

Of course, these can be just the ebbs and flows of an NBA game, but if you look deeper, it’s predicated on the lineups being run.

There are three lineup no-nos in the modern NBA. You don’t run a lineup that’s too small against most opponents, you don’t run spacing nightmare lineups, and you don’t keep your two best offensive players on the bench at the same time.

The Knicks have run all three of these no-nos at times this season, but the first and third ones have been a big issue in that three-game stretch.

Despite their weaknesses defensively, there should never be a lineup without Jalen Brunson or Karl-Anthony Towns on the court. Yet, we’ve seen brief spurts where the Knicks utilize a lineup with neither, and it predictably doesn’t work. The Knicks’ on/off stats with KAT and Brunson (removing garbage time) are pretty evident.

Screenshot-2025-12-04-at-11.40.48%E2%80%AFAM.png

The Knicks have an elite offense, as long as one of them is out there. They’ve only played 15 meaningful minutes without either when both are available, and it goes about as you expect. Even if you add in games where one is unavailable, it’s more of the same.

That issue, however, isn’t the most prevalent. Mike Brown knows he can’t rely on lineups with neither for more than a few possessions, so the focus shifts to the supporting cast.

In these last three games, the Knicks have deployed a starting lineup of Jalen Brunson, Deuce McBride, Mikal Bridges, Josh Hart, and Karl-Anthony Towns. That lineup, in 55 total minutes, has bludgeoned teams to a net rating of plus-30.1, powered by an unstoppable offense (148.7 ORtg) and crisp passing (3.9 assist-to-turnover ratio).

But what happens in those other minutes? The second-most common lineup is the traditional unit that starts the second quarter, where Towns, Hart, and McBride stay on while Jordan Clarkson and Tyler Kolek relieve Bridges and Brunson. That lineup, in 16 minutes, has been horrifically bad, posting a miserable minus-32.1 net rating.

Those are the only two five-man lineups to accrue more than six minutes in that stretch, but we can look deeper and see which players are stumbling when paired together. The worst pairings? They’re when the Knicks play a brand of super small ball that also involves a smattering of bad defenders.

Kolek and Clarkson, as the two main backup guards, played 30 minutes together in this sample and got crushed (minus-35 net rating). Kolek paired with Hart produced even worse numbers (minus-42.4 in 24 minutes). Don’t get me started with the eight brief minutes he shared the floor with Brunson, which produced an unbelievable defensive rating of 229.4 and a net rating in the negative triple digits.

There were four brief minutes of Kolek, Clarkson, and Brunson that, predictably, had generationally bad numbers. There were also rough numbers when Kolek and Clarkson were paired with either Towns (minus-14.6 in 22 minutes) or Mitchell Robinson (minus-50.8 in nine minutes).

So what’s the fix in all this? It might just be to be smarter in how the team plays Deuce McBride and Mitchell Robinson.

On a team full of small guards, you need to prioritize the one who can defend. McBride, especially with his recent hot shooting, has been a key contributor on this team and should be utilized in a way to break up lineups that contain Clarkson and Kolek. There’s also a way to help counteract the team’s struggles with size by utilizing Mitch more with KAT instead of exclusively as a second-unit big.

There was a reason Mike Brown decided to move Robinson to the bench, and he’s been overwhelmingly successful in that regard, but since Robinson’s benching, he’s rarely used the two bigs together. In the first two games, the two got crushed in 15 combined minutes, to the point where it seems to have slightly scared Mike Brown. Yet, in the two games since, they’ve seen tremendous success with both on the floor.

Even with Robinson missing Wednesday’s game due to load management, the Knicks got good results with Ariel Hukporti teaming up with Towns for five minutes before he proceeded to be the quickest Knick to foul out since Michael Beasley eight years ago.

Ultimately, there’s no perfect fix. Unless Mike Brown gets haunted by the “Ghost of Thibs’ Past” and shortens the rotation to play the excelling starters even more, this will probably continue to happen. With big games upcoming against Orlando and Toronto (NBA Cup edition!), Coach Brown will continue to have to tinker.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-rotations-og-anunoby-kolek-clarkson-robinson
 
The Knicks sting the Hornets to win their 11th game at MSG [EXCLUSIVE VIDEO]

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The Knicks bounced back at Madison Square Garden on Wednesday night, powering past the Charlotte Hornets 119–104 and extending their home record to 11–1. Karl-Anthony Towns set the tone with a 35-point, 18-rebound performance, while Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart steadied the rotation—just what the doctor ordered after Tuesday’s loss in Boston. Shara Taylor was on-site for Posting & Toasting, covering the team’s adjustments, Mike Brown’s reflections, and the atmosphere of a Garden of Dreams Foundation night.

Watch her video below:

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...to-win-their-11th-game-at-msg-exclusive-video
 
Knicks 146, Jazz 112: They shoot horses, don’t they?

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The Utah Jazz (8-14) beat the Brooklyn Nets last night for their second road win. Despite their record, they’ve put forth spunky efforts many times this season. And they have NBA players (Lauri Markkanen, Keyonte George, etc.) on their roster. There was reason to expect the Salt City crew to give the Knicks a little bit of challenge tonight, something in the way of competition. They surely wouldn’t be complete and total pushovers.

Brother, let me tell you that was a disastrous performance. New York started the game with a 23-point run and never bothered to check their mirrors. They led 68-47 at halftime, scored a season-high 47 points in the third quarter, and finished with a 146-112 win.

That brings New York’s home record to 12-1. Best in a long time, apparently. Tonight also marked OG Anunoby’s first game back after missing nine with a strained hamstring. Although he looked rusty at times, he provided steady two-way support and 11 points in his 23 minutes.

Karl-Anthony Towns was a force inside and out, scoring 18 and grabbing nine boards while hitting 4-of-6 from deep. Josh Hart delivered another hustle performance, piling up eight points, six boards and assists, and was a +37 in his 28 minutes. Mikal Bridges played just 20 minutes, probably an overdue breather for the iron man. He scored an efficient 10 points on 5-for-7 shooting. And Jalen Brunson dominated, dropping 33 points and making 6-of-9 from deep in 31 minutes.

With an embarrassment of riches tonight, one might edge out the others: Miles McBride, back with the second unit due to Anunoby’s return, finished with 22 points in 22 minutes, making seven of ten attempts from beyond the arc. He’s made 27 of his last 42 longball attempts. Bench scoring problem: solved.

For the Jazz, Markkanen and George scored 18 each. The team shot 40% and 36%, were out rebounded 46-37 and outscored in the paint 54-36. It’s hard to imagine the Knicks will have a more dominant performance this season.

First Half​


The Knicks totally blitzed the Jazz in the opening quarter. New York scored 23 points and held Utah scoreless for the first six-and-a-half minutes, building a lead that eventually reached 28 points. The telecast said it was historic, and according to the NBA’s X feed, “The 23-0 starting run by the Knicks is the largest game-opening run without an opponent point in the PxP era (1997-98).” Wild.

The visitors made just 4-of-23 from the field (17%) and zilch in the paint, while our heroes converted shots at a 61% clip, dominated the glass 20–8, and racked up easy points in transition and at the rim. With a 16–0 advantage in the paint and a 9–0 edge in fast-break scoring, the Knicks finished the period ahead 41-13. That was their second straight first quarter rout; on Wednesday, they limited Charlotte to 12.

Mikal went 5-of-5 in the quarter. Cue the Sweet Georgia Brown:

The Jazz opened Q2 still down big but still showed some fight. Midway through the frame, Utah strung together a few makes by Markkanen, Love, and George, but New York was just taking a breather. McBride hit multiple threes, Hart and Bridges scored in transition, and Robinson hammered home a dunk to keep the margin comfy and cozy. By the buzzer, Utah had outscored the Knicks 34-27 but didn’t once trim the deficit to less than 20. Your intermission score: Knicks, 68-47.

Through the first half, the Knicks hit 51% from the field and nearly 48% from deep, doubled Utah’s paint production (24–10), and beat them in transition. Utah scraped together some threes and free throws, but their 33% shooting and performance in the paint could fairly be described as woeful. Off the bench for New York, Miles “Can’t Miss” McBride’s 16 points on 5‑8 FG (5‑7 3PT) topped the scorecard. Keyonte George had 14 for the Jazz.

Second Half​


Has the NBA ever had a mercy rule? By the 3:30 mark, when Deuce McBride drilled back-to-back treys and stretched the differential to 33, my cold, callused heart began to feel some sympathy for the visiting team. Then it got worse. Hart dunked and the lead reached 35. A minute later, Brunson hit another triple and free throws, making it 39. With 30 seconds to go, the lead reached 41. Will Hardy’s boys were waving a white flag, a white towel, white undies—anything they could get their hands on to signal a plea for mercy. New York scored 47 points in the frame, their highest total for a quarter this season. Hell, we’ve seen plenty of games when the Knicks scored less than 47 points in a half.

Heading into the fourth quarter, up 115-77, the Knicks were thoroughly enjoying themselves. The last of the starters subbed out (McBride at the nine minute mark, Anunoby at seven), and the second stringers oversaw the end of the game. What’s that mean? It means that Tyler Kolek, Ariel Hukporti, Guerschon Yabusele, and Jordan Clarkson got extra reps, and you get a Mohamed Diawara highlight!

Up Next​


The Orlando Magic return to the Garden on Sunday in what should be a more competitive affair. Sleep tight, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...icks-146-jazz-112-they-shoot-horses-dont-they
 
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