The Knicks are deeper than they were last year, but it’s deceiving

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Last season, the Knicks were a pretty shallow team.

Outside of their overly used starting five and key reserves Deuce McBride and Mitchell Robinson, they didn’t have any reliable pieces that would be ticketed for regular roles in Tom Thibodeau’s rotation.

Sure, they had Cam Payne, Landry Shamet, Delon Wright, and Precious Achiuwa, who would see time sporadically, but none of them stuck due to inherent flaws. Payne was frozen out due to his lack of defense and erratic shotmaking, Shamet never got in the circle of trust after a serious shoulder injury, Wright was a defensive ace who was only inserted out of need in the Eastern Conference Final, and Achiuwa messed with the spacing and was an awkward fit with Robinson or Josh Hart.

As a result, the young, deep, and talented Indiana Pacers overwhelmed the Knicks en route to the NBA Finals, costing Thibodeau his job in the summer. Mike Brown was brought in to lengthen the rotation by using the regular season to experiment with lineups, and for the most part, he’s done that (aside from continuing to start Hart).

The rotation has been extremely fluid. When the team was healthy early, they leaned on Jordan Clarkson and Guerschon Yabusele off the bench, but it’s evolved to include Shamet, Tyler Kolek, Mo Diawara, and the team’s newest hometown hero, Jose Alvarado.

But, unlike before, when the team is suffering injuries, the rotation is being expanded, not contracted. Those are where guys like Kolek, Kevin McCullar Jr., and Ariel Hukporti get their most opportunities. Even Clarkson, who briefly was Evan Fournier’d, re-joined the rotation.

But here’s the problem. When the Knicks are whole, they’re nearly unstoppable. They’re 13-3 when Brunson-Bridges-Hart-Anunoby-Towns are the first five. But when there’s one piece missing in the team’s core nucleus, whether it’s the captain and head of the snake or a guy like Deuce or Robinson, the house of cards starts to shake, and some nights, it comes crashing down.

When the top-seven is all healthy, they’re 8-4, something that isn’t overtly impressive, but the individual splits of the six (Mikal Bridges is indestructible) tell the story:

Without McBride: 13-7
Without Robinson: 10-6
Without Anunoby: 8-6
Without Hart: 6-6
Without Brunson: 1-4
Without Towns: 2-2


The Knicks are more able to stomach the losses of McBride and Robinson, as they’ve at least had enough games without them to hash out a plan. The team, however, plays dramatically worse when the other five miss time, even if the on-off stats say the team is fine without these players off the court.

It’s obvious that the team struggles without Brunson, with how much he does for this team, but they also play choppy basketball when Towns is sidelined. After a 10-game stretch where the Knicks had the best defense in basketball, the process got tremendously worse when Anunoby went down with a toe injury, as the team yielded miserable performances against the Detroit Pistons and lowly Indiana Pacers. When Hart’s been sidelined this season, the Knicks struggle to generate the hustle he brings.

But it goes deeper than not having them on the court. When these players are available, and just on the bench, they’re being replaced by the team’s very formidable bench. But when the starter is in street clothes, and Coach Brown is forced to go deeper into the bench, the minutes drop off.

With Anunoby, Robinson, and McBride out against the lowly Pacers, the Knicks couldn’t defend. They had nobody who could even put a body on Pascal Siakam, despite the best efforts of a small Josh Hart and inexperienced Mo Diawara. The lack of McBride, who would stick with Andrew Nembhard, didn’t help either, nor did the absence of Robinson with Ariel Hukporti struggling to make an impact.

Against the Pistons last week, the Knicks were never competitive, which is inexcusable regardless of personnel. That said, with Anunoby, McBride, and Towns sidelined, the lineups that the team ran were not ones that could survive against any playoff team.

Brunson was reduced to leading lineups that had one or two other players who could score. Bridges had a strong game, but he isn’t a ballhandler. Clarkson also saw an increased role, but lineups with him and Brunson have been catastrophic defensively all season. Kolek has the same problem on the defensive end.

But if the Knicks leaned on defense around Brunson, they would be incapable of putting the ball in the basket, especially considering the captain’s struggles that night. Putting guys like Diawara, Hukporti, Hart, and McCullar around Brunson leads to lineups that see JB trying to navigate a maze to break down the defense, only to not have any reliable knockdown shooters to pass to.

When the Knicks are whole, they’re a formidable group that can hang with anyone in the association, and that’s because they mask each other’s flaws.

Brunson’s creation on offense, both for himself and others, allows the players around him to play an efficient, off-ball role. Towns’ rebounding and gravity, both inside and outside, generate extra possessions and free up space. Anunoby and Bridges’ defense help keep lineups that contain both Brunson and Towns afloat. Hart’s hustle and intensity can carry the team through low-energy slogs and rough shooting stretches.

The Knicks aren’t the only team that is one or two injuries away from everything falling apart, but it makes what they do to manage the workloads of their key players down the stretch crucial. If any player has a nagging ailment and they miss a few extra games, this will be why. They need to be whole to have a chance at ending the team’s 53-year title drought.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...er-than-they-were-last-year-but-its-deceiving
 
Brunson, Towns, and Houston to appear in Kia Shooting Stars competition

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On Saturday, the Kia Shooting Stars competition returns after an 11-year break, and the Knicks have some dogs in the fight.

The competition uses a two-round structure. In the first round, four teams compete one at a time, with 70 seconds to score points by rotating through seven designated shooting locations around the court. All three teammates shoot at each spot in a fixed order. The two teams with the highest scores advance to the final round, where they repeat the course head-to-head. The higher-scoring team wins the title.

Each team has two current players and one legend. For the Knicks, that legend is H20!

The lineup:

  • Team All-Star: Scottie Barnes, Chet Holmgren, and Rip Hamilton
  • Team Cameron: Jalen Johnson, Kon Knueppel, and Corey Maggette (Dukies)
  • Team Harper: Dylan Harper, Ron Harper Jr., and Ron Harper Sr. (A family affair)
  • Team Knicks: Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, and Allan Houston

Brunson is an Eastern Conference starter for the second-straight year. This will be the sixth All-Star appearance for Towns, a Team World reserve and one of the best shooting big men in the league.

And Houston, he of the silky smooth stroke? The former Knick made the All-Star team twice in his 12-year career and won the Shooting Stars event in 2012, alongside Landry Fields (Knicks) and Cappie Pondexter (New York Liberty). These days, he serves as the Knicks’ Vice President of Player Leadership & Development.

The Shooting Stars event originally ran from 2004 to 2015 and often included a WNBA player per team before its hiatus. For some of us old guys, seeing Houston putting up shots again will be the highlight of the whole weekend.

The event occurs Saturday, during NBA All-Star Saturday Night at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood. Coverage starts at 5 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock. Tipoff is around 5:30 p.m. ET, right after the State Farm 3-Point Contest wraps up.

Go Knicks!

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ston-to-appear-kia-shooting-stars-competition
 
How to watch the 2026 NBA All-Star Game

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The 75th NBA All-Star Game tips off Sunday at 5 p.m. ET from the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, where the Clippers play. You can watch it on NBC or stream it on Peacock. Pre-game coverage starts earlier in the day. John Tesh will perform “Roundball Rock” live at the event, and perhaps we’ve taken this particular nostalgia item a bit too far. It’s a cool song, but can’t we appreciate it without watching a 73-year-old Tesh hump a keyboard?

This time around, the All-Star game has a different format. The league is switching things up with three teams: USA Stars (young Americans), USA Stripes (veterans), and Team World (self-explanatory). It’s round-robin style, kind of like the Ryder Cup.

The young USA squad is favored, but Giannis’s absence should help Team World’s chances. Miami’s Norman Powell, who has Jamaican roots, will switch from the Stripes to fill Antetokounmpo’s spot. De’Aaron Fox replaces Norm on team Stripes.

New York will send two guys, Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns—plus one legend, Allan Houston, appearing in the Kia Shooting Stars competition.

Brunson will play for Team Stripes, running alongside older fellas like LeBron James and Stephen Curry. Towns will represent Team World thanks to his Dominican heritage. KAT shares the jersey with Luka and Jokić.

P.S. I’m told that Ludacris is performing, which immediately cues my old friend Nate Dogg in my head. RIP, buddy.

Good luck, Jalen, Karl, and Al! And Happy Valentine’s Day, lovebirds.

Game Details​


Date: Sunday, February 15, 2026

Time: 5:00 PM EST (starting with the round-robin format and subsequent games following around 5:55 PM, 6:25 PM, and the Championship around 7:10 PM ET)

Place: Intuit Dome, Inglewood, CA (Home of Ballmer’s Follies)

TV: NBC | Streaming: Peacock

Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/79258/how-to-watch-the-2026-nba-all-star-game
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I don’t even know where we’re at’

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It’s All-Star Weekend.

Give us a break.

Not really, we’ll still watch whatever happens at those events.

Smile your Knicks play today 💫 pic.twitter.com/Y755FU8T8X

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 14, 2026

Mike Brown


On Diawara’s small details and flashes:

“There’s just a lot of little things when you see Mo play that make you go, ‘Oh my gosh, wow.’ And all those things, when you add them up to a possible opportunity, it gives you more confidence as a coaching staff to throw him out there and say, ‘OK, let’s see what’s going to happen.’”

On Diawara’s feel and instincts:

“In the summertime, you started to see his feel. His feel for the game is uncanny for a guy who is 6-foot-8 or however big he is and how young he is. Everything you try to teach him, he tries to absorb it and works very hard. He’s long and a pretty good defender … getting better. Just a lot of little things that you watch and go, ‘Oh, wow.’ All of those things, when they add up to a possible opportunity, it gives you more confidence as a coaching staff to throw him out there.”

On Diawara’s offensive freedom:

“If you’re wide open, let that thing fly. If not, try to touch the paint and kick it out. He doesn’t have the leeway that obviously the other cats on the floor have to be able to go create a shot for himself. Now, having said that, one of the things that Mo has, and I’m amazed at for a young guy, he has a pretty good feel of where his open teammate is. Like, he’ll drive and it’s not like Chris Paul or Magic Johnson where they’ll drop a dime and everybody says, ‘Whoa.’ But if he touches that paint, that pass is getting there on time, on target and it’s like a laser. So he’s got a really good feel of where everybody is and his height and passing ability, he’s able to make timely passes that look simple, but are really hard, especially for a young guy. So he’s got a little more freedom in terms of drive and kick than a lot of younger guys might have at that time.”

Jeremy Lin with the 8-point dagger to win it for Team Giannis because of course 🗡️🗡️🗡️🗡️🗡️🗡️🗡️🗡️ pic.twitter.com/MsteI89LMw

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 14, 2026

Mohamed Diawara


On the relationship with his sister, who drew him into basketball:

“We never played one-on-one. When I started really playing basketball, she stopped. We were never on the court together.”

On choosing basketball over soccer once he discovered hoops:

“I was like, ‘That’s the perfect match.’”

On specializing to stay in the NBA:

“I felt like if I wanted to have a long career in the NBA, I had to be good at something. So, I got to specialize in something. Three-point shooting and defense. Those are things that are going to make me stay in the league for the longest.”

On believing in his progression:

“Because I trust my work, and I’m not working for nothing.”

Jeremy Sochan to wear 20?

Sochan’s agency just posted this graphic of Sochan wearing 20

Sochan’s Spurs #10 is Clyde’s pic.twitter.com/uxPMw8mLc2

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 14, 2026

Josh Hart


On the Knicks’ situation at the ASW break:

“I don’t even know where we’re at.”

On Diawara’s training camp impression:

“In camp, I thought he was going to be real good. He’s young, raw and inexperienced. He’s good defensively, and he’s an even better shooter than I thought. It always looked good, but now it’s going in. I think he’s a good decision-maker in the pocket. He’s athletic and can finish at the rim, get guys involved. I love where he’s at, and he’s continued to work.”

On Diawara’s improved shooting:

“He’s an even better shooter than I thought. I always thought the shot looked good, but now it’s going in.”

On Diawara coming out of shell:

“Now that (Yabusele) is gone, he doesn’t really … all he did was speak French to him. Now that (Yabusele) is gone, hopefully that forces him to come out of (his) shell a little bit more. He’s part of the guys. We’ve got to get him more acclimated to rookie duties.”

Rizz x KAT link up‼️ pic.twitter.com/6vb8EsO2OA

— The Rizzler (@Da_Rizzler419) February 14, 2026

Karl-Anthony Towns


On missing his pregame ritual after the passing of his mother:

“Usually, her ritual with me was, I’d be doing my warmup lines, we’d run out, we’d go into our two lines, and we’d start doing our layup lines. My mom made it her thing to stand next to the stanchion and just wave at me. It felt great, being your mom’s there, nothing can be wrong. She got me. I remember that first game back in Minnesota, I kept looking and kept thinking someone’s gonna show up, and no one’s gonna show up, so it was a different feeling.”

Carmelo Anthony on Chris Paul's retirement: "It's CP man. We can't downplay our Point God. We in his building (Clippers Intuit Dome)…Forget all the narratives…he's been CP…I just want him to get the flowers he deserve…certified legend in this game" pic.twitter.com/ob9SHUHbDH

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 14, 2026

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/79225/knicks-bulletin-i-dont-even-know-where-were-at
 
Game Thread: Knicks at 76ers, February 11, 2026

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NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 22: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks talks with his father and New York Knicks assistant coach Rick Brunson during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers in Game Two of the Eastern Conference First Round Playoffs at Madison Square Garden on April 22, 2024 in New York City. The Knicks won 104-101. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Knicks (34*-20) face the Philadelphia 76ers (30-23) tonight at Xfinity Mobile Arena. It’s New York’s final game on the schedule before the All-Star break. They arrive still stinging from last night’s overtime loss to Indiana, while Philly’s last game was a bust against Portland.

Game’s at 7:30 p.m. EST on MSG and ESPN. This is your game thread. This is Liberty Ballers. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Be good ambassadors of humanity. And go Knicks!

* Should be one more, but the Cup final doesn’t count.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/.../game-thread-knicks-at-76ers-february-11-2026
 
The New York Knicks are your 2026 Shooting Stars champs!

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LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 14: Rick Brunson, Jalen Brunson #11, Allan Houston, and Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the Team Knicks pose for a photo after winning the Kia Shooting Stars as a part of State Farm All-Star Saturday on Saturday, February 14, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Kyusung Gong/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The New York Knicks captured the revived Shooting Stars title Saturday night at NBA All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles, defeating three wannabe squads to claim the event’s first championship since its return to the ASW after an 11-year absence.

Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns and former Knicks All-Star Allan Houston, with the assistance of smooth passer Rick Brunson, combined for 47 points in the final round at Intuit Dome, beating Team Cameron’s 38.

KNICKS ARE SHOOTING STARS CHAMPS ⭐⭐⭐pic.twitter.com/dESqyElGH1

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) February 14, 2026

Team Knicks advanced to the final after posting 31 points in the opening round, the highest of the four teams. They then outscored Team Cameron (Jalen Johnson, Kon Knueppel and Corey Maggette) in the championship round, albeit not with a little bit of drama, with Brunson (how surprising!) and the legendary Houston converting late long-range four-pointers to secure the win.

The other teams included Team All-Star, led by Scottie Barnes, Chet Holmgren and Richard RIP Hamilton, and Team Harper, featuring Dylan Harper, Ron Harper Jr. and Ron Harper.


Saturday’s program also included the 3-Point Contest and Slam Dunk Contest, as has been the case for years on end.

To the surprise of everybody, Damian Lillard won the 3-Point Contest for a third time while still rehabbing from am Achilles injury, joining Larry Bird and Craig Hodges as the only three-time champions. Lillard scored 29 points in the final round to edge Devin Booker.

Miami Heat forward Keshad Johnson won the Slam Dunk Contest, defeating Carter Bryant in the final round. Adam Silver, please, kill this thing or entirely rebuild it.

🌟 USA vs. WORLD in the City of Angels 🌟

Watch the NBA's brightest stars take center stage at Intuit Dome for the 75th NBA All-Star Game, Sunday at 5:00pm/et on NBC & Peacock! pic.twitter.com/tHArXNLHt9

— NBA (@NBA) February 15, 2026

Coming up next, the All-Star Game on Sunday, which will feature a new format with players divided into three teams: two American squads (youngins and oldies) and one World team.

About your Knicks: Brunson is a member of the younger cohort of Americans while Towns will represent the World side due to his Dominican Republic raíces.

All-Star Game Details​


Date: Sunday, February 15, 2026

Time: Starting at 5:00 PM ET. Championship game at around 7:10 PM ET

Place: Intuit Dome, Inglewood, CA

TV: NBC | Streaming: Peacock

Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...rk-knicks-are-your-2026-shooting-stars-champs
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I did a two-hand dunk, which I never do’

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LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 14: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks poses for a portrait with the KIA Shooting Stars Trophy during the State Farm All-Star Portraits - 3PT Slam Dunk Shooting as part of NBA All-Star Weekend on Saturday, February 14, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Zach Barron/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Two Knicks appeared on the All-Star “Game” on Sunday.

Neither won the thing, and only one made it to the final match.

This is the first time all season someone involved with New York has failed to win a meaningless title.

"I'm not going to say his name, but number 3 on the Knicks… he's the most annoying person ever."

@jalenbrunson1

anything to say @joshhart?? 😆 pic.twitter.com/FM9qjum9hb

— NBA (@NBA) February 15, 2026

Jalen Brunson


On Jeremy Sochan’s addition and what he brings:

“Yeah, I’m very excited to see him. I think he brings a level of toughness. From what I’ve seen, he’s been a great teammate. So I’m very excited. It’s a great opportunity for us and for him.”

On his “holy grail” outside of winning a championship:

“Honestly, I feel like my journey has been very different from most. I’m very thankful for it. It made me work extremely hard. It made me realize the opportunity that I’ve had. I’m still chasing a lot. I write my goals — long-term and short-term — at the beginning of every year, and I keep that to myself.”

On lessons learned from the Eastern Conference Finals loss last year:

“Never looking ahead. You want to focus on the task in front of you. After last year, you can’t just jump right back into where we were. You’ve got to go through the journey all over again. So it’s taking it one day at a time, step by step, not focusing down the road — just being present.”

On Jose Alvarado’s impact:

“He’s had a great impact so far with his energy — who he is on and off the court, what he brings to the table. He’s a great person to be around. He’s already impacting our team and it’s going to be great for the Garden. Fans are going to love him if they don’t already.”

On who he’d want on his podcast:

“I’m a big SVU fan — Mariska Hargitay.”

On who is his most annoying teammate:

“I’m not going to say his name. I’ll just say No. 3 on the Knicks is the most annoying person ever.”

On game-day mental preparation:

“I’m very routine-based. I try to stick to the same routine. My focus comes from preparing — not just game day, but the days leading up to it, the summertime, the work I’ve put in my entire life. Your confidence comes from your work ethic. That’s how I prepare.”

On podcasting advice:

“It’s talking to one of my best friends. We talk about things we want to talk about. We don’t have to answer every question people want us to answer. You can create your own narrative, say things you need to get off your chest. It’s its own platform. It’s something we didn’t think we’d want to do, and now here we are in year three. It’s fun. It’s unique. It’s a great opportunity, possibly life after basketball if we want to continue it.”

On his first NBA field goal:

“It was a dunk against the Lakers. It came off a Julius Randle turnover — Julius and D’Angelo Russell were fighting over the ball. It ended up in my hands, and I did a two-hand dunk, which I never do.”

On the possibility of Jason Tatum returning this season:

“He’s a very dangerous player in our league. Obviously, seeing him go down last year, it sucks to see. You never want to see that from anyone in any sport. But the fact that he’s worked so hard to get to where he is and is preparing to come back, that just speaks to who he is. Basketball fans around the world are excited to see him come back.”

Malika Andrews: "Y'all have now won at All-Star Weekend, the NBA Cup––is there a 3rd bigger one coming?

Jalen Brunson: "If you have the script tell us"

KAT: "Yeah that would be great. Let us know"

Malika: "We'll let you know what's coming" pic.twitter.com/fYM3gSUSH1

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 15, 2026

Karl-Anthony Towns


On representing the Dominican Republic and inspiring kids:

“I don’t think it’s pressure. I put the time and work into the gym and my craft, and I feel very confident every time I step on the court. I know this is bigger than me. I’m super happy I have the opportunity to show Dominican kids it’s possible — not only to get a scholarship, but to make the NBA. I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention my mentors who showed me it was possible — Charlie Villanueva, Francisco Garcia, Felipe Lopez, Al Horford. It means a lot that I was able to take their teachings and continue to show the next generation that it’s possible.”

On Dominican culture influencing his game:

“The work ethic, the passion. Dominicans are passionate about family, about food, about having a good time. I translate that passion into my game. Every time I’m on the court or in practice, I’m passionate. I take the work serious. I look for quality over quantity.”

On international basketball and future opportunities:

“I love international basketball. It would be cool to see it grow and operate at a high level. Maybe one day be a part of it. There’s so much talent in the world. Making the NBA as one of 450 players is extremely difficult. Some guys fall through the cracks but have the talent and work ethic. It would be cool to see those guys get a chance to show their talents and live their dream.”

On comparisons between New York and Los Angeles:

“I love both. In New York, I’ve got my family — my father, grandmother, my whole Dominican family, my mom’s side too. In LA, my fiancée’s family is here. Happy mother-in-law solves a lot of problems.”

On the Knicks’ deadline moves:

“It’s unfortunate losing someone like Yabu, who was a big part of our locker room. But I’m glad to see him thriving in Chicago. Jose brings a lot of energy. It’s great to have someone who can jolt the game whenever we need it.”

On playing in the World Cup:

“It was really cool. I think it was the biggest World Cup attendance game of all time. Playing with my mother’s country on my chest, in a different atmosphere, not an NBA game — that’s something I won’t forget. I’m super happy our country got the win.”

On inspiring the next generation:

“It’s special. I’m honored to be in this position to show the next generation that it’s possible — to show them where I’ve been successful and where I’ve made mistakes, so they don’t make the same ones and can take this game and this flag to even greater heights.”

Nikola Jokic was so happy to see Boogie. 🙌🤣

(via @nuggets)

pic.twitter.com/HPYGjBkUvO https://t.co/We1OKe949x

— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) February 15, 2026

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...lletin-i-did-a-two-hand-dunk-which-i-never-do
 
The Knicks need to match the Pistons’ intensity to open the second half

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DETROIT, MICHIGAN - FEBRUARY 06: Mitchell Robinson #23 of the New York Knicks reacts against Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons during the third quarter at Little Caesars Arena on February 06, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Does the regular season matter?

Well, you need to win enough games in the regular season to make the playoffs and get a favorable seed in the playoffs. Home court advantage is very important.

But does it matter who you beat and who you lose to? Probably not. The Knicks won the season series with the Hawks in 2021, the Heat in 2023, and the Pacers in 2025, but flamed out against all three in the playoffs. They were beaten up by Detroit and Boston last year in the regular season, but they sent them home in the playoffs. It doesn’t matter what happens before the playoffs start in that regard.

So, how much do I take from the two blowout losses at Little Caesars Arena in January, the same arena that the Knicks won thrice in the playoffs last April? Not much. We all know what happened with the Celtics last year.

But there was one thing that happened in the Knicks-Celtics season series that year that made you raise an eyebrow. On April 8, the Celtics, without Al Horford but otherwise pretty healthy, came to the World’s Most Famous Arena and, after three blowouts in the season series, got caught up in a very competitive game.

The Knicks led for much of the first half, but the Celtics took control late in the third quarter. Yet, the Knicks rallied back from a seven-point deficit to take a three-point lead in the final 15 seconds, only to get their hearts broken by Jayson Tatum at the end of regulation and in overtime.

While the Celtics prevailed and pulled off the season series sweep, that game being as competitive as it was surely made the Knicks believe in that locker room, “We can beat these guys.” If they fouled up 3 or executed in overtime, they would’ve won. They used the lessons from that clutch scenario to pull off several clutch games in the second round series.

So, even though the Knicks knocked off those same Pistons last season, it’s imperative that they don’t get embarrassed a third time. They had excuses the first two games, they don’t on Thursday.

In the first game, they were in the midst of their 11-game rut where they couldn’t defend a thing, and the offense similarly slumped. In the second game, they were down OG Anunoby and Karl-Anthony Towns, along with the still-injured Deuce McBride. Towns and possibly Anunoby will be back on Thursday, and the game will be in MSG.

They have to match the intensity. The Pistons are a team that knows they were a few key plays away from pulling off the upset last year, and they don’t like that the media still hasn’t anointed them as the East favorite. They see the Knicks on the schedule and feel hatred. They can’t get revenge until May, so they want to beat them into the ground to vindicate themselves until then.

The Knicks haven’t felt like they needed to match that intensity yet, and you can do with that what you want. It feels like they have to on Thursday, even if they don’t pull it out for whatever reason. You can’t get boatraced every single game in the regular season series. That’s when doubt starts to creep in.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...the-pistons-intensity-to-open-the-second-half
 
P&T Round(ball) Table: Predictions for remainder of New York’s regular season

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Here’s another edition of our Round(Ball) Table, where the Posting & Toasting crew convene to share our speculations, worries, and frustrations. With the All-Star weekend now behind us, it’s time to speculate about the remainder of the season.

With the New York Knicks sitting third behind the Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics, what seed should they realistically target, and how hard should they push for No. 2?​


Antonio Losada: No. 2, and not much. It’s going to be rather hard to overtake Detroit in the standings, and I don’t think it’s worth entering a war for the regular-season Eastern Conference crown. Let the Pistons win it, sit second, beat them in the playoffs. The Celtics, I don’t believe, will hold onto that No. 2 seed, and I think there’s nothing left to add about the Cavs’ chances at anything, because they’ve lowkey turned into Clippers East—now even with James Harden in town!

Michael Zeno: No. 2. The Pistons are out of reach, barring an unforeseen collapse by them, so the Knicks will have to strive for the 2-seed and their first Atlantic Division (is that still a thing?) title in 12 years. I believe they should prioritize getting as high a seed as possible, as we’ve seen the team go from dominant at home to average on the road. Average doesn’t cut it in the playoffs, so they’ll need to secure home-court against a potential second-round matchup against Cleveland or Boston.

Andrew Polaniecki: Maintaining their position is more important than anything right now. Securing the No. 2 seed would certainly be ideal, but slipping from the No. 3 spot could prove far more damaging for the New York Knicks. They are currently just one game ahead of the fourth seed, and the Cleveland Cavaliers look like a very different team than they did two weeks ago following the addition of James Harden. The Knicks cannot afford to surrender home-court advantage, especially with only 1.5 games separating Cleveland and the Boston Celtics in the standings, particularly given the uncertain timetable surrounding Jayson Tatum’s return.

Miranda: I don’t think it matters. The Knicks won three times in Detroit and twice in Boston in last year’s playoffs, and those Celtics didn’t feature Jayson Tatum working his way back after nearly a year away. Adding Nikola Vučević gussies up their ability to play 5-out, but when he’s on the floor the defense that’s eighth in defensive rating and top-five the past four years has a soft underbelly. The last time the Cavaliers got past the second round without LeBron James was 1992. These Knicks don’t need to duck anyone.

Kento Kato: The two seed, but not at all costs. The Knicks should want to secure home-court advantage through the first two rounds, but at the end of the day, health is all that matters. This team, when healthy, and not coming off of an ugly NBA Cup hangover, have shown that they can beat anyone. Teams like that shouldn’t, and don’t need to, lay everything on the line during the regular season. Outside of last season, when Jalen Brunson missed 15 games after going down with an ankle injury, the Knicks have fared well after the All-Star break in recent years. In 2023, thanks in large part to the Josh Hart trade, the Knicks went 14-8 after the festivities, and a year later, they went 17-10, despite both Julius Randle, and OG Anunoby missing significant time. New York will be sans Deuce McBride for a few weeks, and that’ll sting. But I don’t see why a team that seems to have put their lowest lows behind them, and has historically saved some of it’s best for February, March, and April, can’t do so again.

What players deserve high marks for the season so far, and who has underwhelmed you?​


Losada: Brunson gets into the high-mark category by default, so I’m picking Josh Hart for proving Coach Brown wrong early in the season, putting on never-ending Engerzier Bunny efforts, and simply being invaluable for this team (honorable mention for Deuce, whose injury hella bugged me). On the other end, I have KAT. He’s sublime at his absolute best, but he does so many maddening things on a nightly basis that I just can’t deal with him more often than not, let alone his awful shooting this season.

Zeno: Brunson, Hart, Shamet, Deuce (when healthy), and Mitch get the high marks. Hart’s recovered well from his early-season struggles and has become a sniper from deep, as has Shamet. Mitch is as healthy as he’s been in several years thanks to load management. KAT and Clarkson are the more underwhelming ones, but you see flashes from the Big Bodega. Clarkson just seems completely lost right now. I’m in the middle when it comes to Wingstop, as they’ve both excelled defensively but have had extremely inconsistent offense.

Polaniecki: I have to go with Josh Hart. He struggled in the first four games and has missed 11 due to injury, but his impact when he’s on the court is undeniable. The Knicks are more than +75 in plus/minus with Hart on the floor this season. During the 11 games he missed, the Knicks lost six of them, roughly a third of their total losses this year

Miranda: If John Starks, Pablo Prigioni and Jeremy Lin had a baby, that baby would be Jose Alvarado. That’s impressive! Also impressive: Mo Diawara going from a bright future to a bright present. The biggest disappointment has been how many national games Mike Breen’s done this year, because Tyler Murray and Walt Frazier go together like Ewing and Cartwright. Frazier’s been funnier than ever this year, something Murray never, ever runs with. Sometimes he sounds like he has no sense of who Frazier was, like the time he told him he’d been underrated defensively; Clyde couldn’t hide his surprise before gently explaining the seven All-Defensive honors. If Breen and Frazier are the Frazier and Monroe of MSG broadcasters, Murray & Clyde are more Marbury/Francis.

Kato: Brunson is the by far the best player on the team, and as ungrateful as it may sound, his production at this point is almost a given. We all take it for granted at times, but that’s also what star players make you do. When I think of players that deserve high marks, I think of players who have overperformed expectations. And to me, that has been Deuce McBride, and Mo Diawara. We’ve all known what McBride can do, and what he is capable of. But somehow, he continues to surprise us, and defy what an undersized combo guard can really do for a team. He’s followed up a somewhat disappointing season with career-highs in PPG, RPG, and 3P%, and has certified himself as one of the best role players in the league with one of, if not the, best contracts in the league. As for Diawara, not many had him being this good, let alone this quick when he was drafted. But after a surprising Summer League, and some very intriguing minutes over the last few weeks, he has leapfrogged every other recent draftee as the most promising and exciting prospect on the roster due to his unique combination of size, defense, passing, and an unexpected level of shooting.

Will the deadline addition of Jose Alvarado stabilize the bench?​


Losada: It should, even more with Deuce McBride out for the regular season and due to his defensive chops. We have yet to see if Jordan Clarkson ever returns to a playable dude, but on the other hand, we’ve enjoyed some blossoming from Mohamed Diawara, and we’ve yet to see how the Jeremy Sochan addition works, and if it provides a little boost up front while helping keep bodies (looking at you, Mitch) fresh for the playoffs.

Zeno: Absolutely. Tyler Kolek has had his moments this season, but he still hasn’t solidified himself as the team’s backup point guard who can run the offense when Brunson sits. Alvarado not only brings the ability to do that, but his intensity on defense makes it so that you can feasibly play him with Brunson in certain lineups, giving him a more diverse role. The bench will really be turbocharged when McBride returns from his hernia.

Polaniecki: 100%. He’s already made an immediate impact and plays with the kind of energy you can’t fake. You can tell he’s genuinely thrilled to be wearing a New York Knicks jersey and representing New York, you could just tell how he wears his heart on his sleeve every night.

Miranda: Stabilize? Stabilize? The past two playoffs, McBride led all Knick reserve guards in minutes; Alec Burks was second in 2024, Cameron Payne last year. Assuming Deuce is back for the postseason, Alvarado, Shamet, Clarkson and Kolek are an entirely different class of bench backcourt.

Kato: We’ve had a small sample size thus far, but we’ve already seen Alvarado impact the game in multiple ways, in a way, akin to McBride. Alvarado may not be the shooter that McBride is, but he provides some much needed ball-handling, passing, and connectivity that the roster, both starters, and bench players, lacked. McBride will be sorely missed, but being able to replace Clarkson, and Kolek’s minutes with Alvarado cannot be anything besides a big win for New York. We’ve already seen him go off 26-points against the Sixers, and dish out five assists in 18 minutes against the Pacers, so in a way, we’re getting the best out of both Clarkson, and Kolek, while getting much, much, much more defense. Alvarado, along with Shamet, Diawara/Sochan, and Robinson should prove to be one of the better benches in the league.

Has Mike Brown met expectations in Year One, and what adjustments would you like to see?​


Losada: The expectations were gaudy from the onset, and James Dolan only made it tougher for Brown with his mid-season, championship-or-bust, comments. That said, Brown took over a team nearly fully built and already on its way to making a Finals run, so he’s doing what he was supposed to, even amid ups and downs. There is still time to address a few pending issues and perfect the machine, but we’ve already seen how the Knicks can perform when everything clicks. I have to approve Brown’s work, solid A grade.

Zeno: There were three main reasons the Knicks moved on from Tom Thibodeau after last year’s Eastern Conference Finals run. They wanted to lean more on the team’s depth to minimize regular-season workload, get the most out of this offensive juggernaut, and get a coach who would adjust and not be so “my way or the highway”. Mike Brown has met all three, lowering the starters’ minutes while leaning on rejuvenated depth, augmenting the offense to make it one of the best in basketball, and making a big defensive adjustment to stop the early January nosedive. We’ll see how the playoffs go, but I’m a fan through the All-Star break.

Polaniecki: In some ways yes, and in some ways no. Would they be sitting in third place if Thibs were still the coach? Maybe. But his stubbornness and reluctance to expand the rotation ultimately cost him his job. It’s been great to see the New York Knicks actually use their depth this season. The bench has a role. The minutes are more balanced.

But are they truly better than they were a year ago? That’s still up for debate. If Brown doesn’t take them to the Finals, then for me, the answer is no.

Miranda: They’ve gone from 11th in corner 3s to third. The defense has been best in the league since they shifted from pushing ballhandlers to the middle of the floor to pushing them toward the sidelines. I don’t know if Towns is “struggling” so much as having his role changed, and I don’t hate it; even when his shot’s off, he’s impactful on the glass and as a spacer. All that said, if Brown is still coaching in June, his hiring was a success. If not . . .

Kato: This largely depends on what your expectations were. For me, his regular season was always going to be graded on his, and the team’s process. Sure, winning 55+ regular season games would be nice. But if he did that by running the same heliocentric, stagnant offense, limiting on-court experimentation, and forgoing playing time of the younger players, then keeping Thibodeau would have been the move as it would’ve lead to a higher floor. Thus far, Brown has done a good enough job of, simply put, not being Thibodeau. His offense, while still over reliant on Brunson at times, sees more movement, more threes, and more sets, and actions, and his rotations aren’t perfect, but still better than Thibodeau’s. So far, so good, but ultimately, he’ll be graded on how the Knicks fare in the playoffs.

What’s the biggest obstacle for a Finals run?​


Losada: It’s going to be a grueling playoffs, as “weakened” as the Eastern Conference is said to be. See, the Pistons are young, tough, strong, and will probably have homecourt advantage through the postseason. The Celtics might bring back Jayson Tatum, and I fear that if they know he’s coming the might take it easy later in the season to enter the playoffs healthier, thus dropping to a lower seed and making it tougher for a top-4 seed. The Cavaliers, I don’t care about. But the Raptors, the Sixers, and mostly the Magic and Heat have underperformed and/or can give you fits and steal a couple of postseason games, so it’s going to take more than a Fo’ fo’ fo’ to get to the Finals. Will the Knicks stay healthy through it all? Will they get the No. 2 seed and actually benefit from starting (and finishing) series at MSG, or will it turn against them? Not an obstacle this year: another 1-in-100000-odds shot made by Hali.

Zeno: Inconsistency. One day, they look like they’ll win the Finals, the next day, they might be a first-round exit. There are certain first-round matchups that make you wince, but those mostly depend on health (looking at you, Philly). If Jayson Tatum returns, Boston could be extremely tough. The Cavs can’t be counted out, and then, of course, there’s Detroit. The Knicks will need to play their best basketball come playoff time and can’t rely on Brunson’s hero-ball for the fourth year in a row. We need KAT to get back to what made him a perennial all-star, Bridges to get more confident on-ball, OG to be making his shots, and the bench to be healthy and able to hold their own. I’m confident in the team, but there’s a lot that can go wrong.

Polaniecki: The Cup curse. Just kidding! But all jokes aside, the Knicks eliminated the Detroit Pistons in last year’s playoffs, but now sit five games behind them in the standings. They beat the Boston Celtics with Jayson Tatum available for most of that series, yet currently trail Boston as well.

Cleveland added James Harden. The conference landscape has shifted, and the path to the Finals is going to be much harder than people thought at the beginning of the season, especially if Tatum comes back for the Celtics.

Miranda: The likelihood that at some point in the playoffs, KAT’s gonna be in foul trouble, Mitch is gonna be injured and Ariel Hukporti’s playing 30+ minutes.

Kato: I’m stuck between saying “themselves”, and “roster construction”. I think talent-wise, they are, and should be, the favorites. But there’s still a part of me that fears KAT’s ability to hold up defensively more times than not through three or hopefully, four playoff series. And offensively, the Knicks still lack reliant ball handlers, and playmakers over the height of whatever Brunson, and Alvarado are listed as. But even with those roster limitations-the same ones they dealt with last season, they found themselves a couple games, and a historical choke job away from making the NBA Finals, even while being coached sub-optimally. That leads me to lean towards the former. If they are healthy, get their minds right, and show up, they’re still good enough to win four out of seven times against most teams in the league.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ons-for-remainder-of-new-yorks-regular-season
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘One hundred percent, I sacrificed for the team’

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NEW YORK - JUNE 22: NBA Draft Prospect, Jeremy Sochan poses for a portrait during media availability and circuit as part of the 2022 NBA Draft on July 22, 2022 at the Westin Times Square in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Steven Freeman/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Knicks basketball is back as New York takes on Detroit for a third and final time this season.

The Pistons won the first two meetings easily, but they have their two brutes—Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart—suspended for Thursday.

Knicks, please.

unserious all-stars 😭👟 pic.twitter.com/XVtVmrJiPt

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) February 17, 2026

Mike Brown


On the losses to the Pistons ahead of Thursday’s matchup:

“Yeah it should. They didn’t just win the game. They beat us pretty bad. So for us, I don’t want to say this game is more important than the next game. Every game is extremely important, but there comes a certain point when you’re in competition. If wins and losses are as lopsided as those two losses, that should shake you up a little bit. At the end of the day, we win tomorrow or win the next two games or however many games we play them, that doesn’t necessarily guarantee come playoff time or vice-versa. I’m a firm believer that I’ve been around this thing too long enough to see some teams go 0-4 and still win the series and some teams go 3-4 and still win the series. So that part doesn’t matter, it’s just about how the first two games turned out for us.”

On the need for evaluating Sochan before the playoffs:

“[Sochan] knows the league. The league knows him. He knows the officials and vice-versa, so they’re gonna get an opportunity, but at the end of the day, I’m gonna play who I think is best for us and right now, Jeremy, he hadn’t played for us, so I’ve gotta see — rather quickly — what we have in him before getting to the playoffs.”

On new lineup combinations and Sochan’s fit:

“When we put our rotation together, I try to think of how the group on the floor fits for a lot of different reasons, not just because this guy is a high-level shooter and this guy is not a high level shooter, but can this center play with this power forward? Can this guard play with this guard in terms of being able to bring the ball and handle against pressure? So there are a lot of different–does this group have enough guys that can go defensive rebound? So I try to look at a lot of different combinations when it comes to putting them together or the pros and cons of the individuals when it comes to putting the individuals together, and it’ll be no different with Jeremy or Jose at the end of the day.”

On Sochan’s size and versatility:

“When you look at Jeremy, you like his size right off the bat, especially for a four. OG is of that size but nobody else really is of that size. And you look at the versatility, over the years, he’s been able to guard one through five, and so to have that versatility on that end of the floor is huge, especially if OG’s out. We’re a lot smaller if OG or Josh or they both are out. And then [Jeremy’s] energy, his physicality, all those things that don’t necessarily show up in a stat sheet in my opinion are welcomed by any team.”

On missing OG Anunoby’s presence:

“At that size and skill set, you always miss that when he’s out. But at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter who’s in uniform. You’ve gotta go try and play the right way to win but it’s good to see him back on the floor for sure.”

On Sochan’s expected role:

“I’m not sure how many minutes I’m going to play him, but I plan on trying to use him. And hopefully we get to a point where he’s versatile enough to play one through five for us.”

On Mo Diawara’s future with Sochan in tow:

“Mo’s had a good season so far. As a young guy… and, as you guys know, I’ll play young guys. I have played young guys in front of vets before. But I’m going to give Jeremy an opportunity.”

On Landry Shamet as a true professional:

“When you think of a (true professional), you think on time. When you tell him something, he always looks you in the eye, always trying to correct things. Always playing hard. Never making excuses. Sacrificing for his teammates. Always thinking team first. He can play two minutes, come out and be OK. Or he can play 30 minutes in a row, come out and be OK. The maintenance aspect isn’t there. He’s always connected to the group, trying to help others be connected and his competitive spirit is off the charts. He believes in his teammates and the process. He wants to be held accountable. All those things bode well for having someone like (Shamet) on your team.”

.@JLEdwardsIII "Do you have relationships with the players here?

Jeremy Sochan "I know Jordan Clarkson…he's from San Antonio…The rest is just during games, talking sh*t…OG's from England too, Josh supports a sh*t club Chelsea––

JLE "I'm a Tottenham fan

Sochan "Aw hell no😆" pic.twitter.com/CNSDdCL7vt

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 19, 2026

Jeremy Sochan


On struggling with his diminishing role in San Antonio:

“Yeah, it’s tough. In my whole career, I’ve never been sitting on the bench and getting DNPs [did not play, coach’s decision]. You go through a process of questioning why or what’s happening. It can get stressful. But at the end of the day, I came from England, where basketball’s not big. I know my worth. I know what I can bring to the team, and I’m blessed that the organization here has seen that.”

On a fresh start in New York:

“I’m super excited to get a fresh slate and show what I can do.”

On what he brings to the Knicks:

“[I bring] energy, the kind of mold that coach has been doing and what the Knicks have been doing and what he wants from me, I feel I can really excel in. I bring versatility, defense, energy, a little bit of that nasty, so I can’t wait.”

On the lack of opportunity in San Antonio:

“Just no real opportunity, in my opinion. And it is what it is. It’s a very deep team. And maybe I didn’t see eye to eye with Coach, and Coach didn’t see anything I could do for the team. And it is what it is. And I’m just blessed to be in an opportunity where I can grow and blossom.”

On choosing New York as a free agent:

“We’ve talked a lot and it’s just seizing whatever opportunity I can get. And I think one of the reasons I picked New York is it’s a really deep roster, a lot of really talented players. I think it’s a pretty cool opportunity to watch and grow from that too. I think I’m still young, too. So just being around players who have established themselves and have done a lot of stuff in this league is a crazy opportunity for me. … I do believe in myself and I do believe I can do well on the court, too. But I do look at it in the bigger picture. And what’s happening here, I think I can be a part of it.”

On the NYC culture:

“Very excited. The culture here, at the Knicks and New York in general, is crazy and very global. And I feel like I’m global, too. So I’m just super excited to be here and just grow with this city and the club.”

On his versatility and level of effort:

“I’m versatile. I can do a little bit of everything, so whatever coach wants me to do, you know, whatever gets me on the court, I’m gonna do it and I’m gonna do it 100 percent.”

On always being himself on court amid comparisons to Draymond Green:

“At the end of the day, I wanna be Jeremy. I wanna be myself. … I bring versatility, defense, energy, a little bit of tenacity, so I can’t wait.”

On fitting Mike Brown’s plans:

“I think I embody what Mike Brown is asking from his players. I’m a quick learner, so I think I’ve been doing pretty well… The way I view everything is team-first. I’m always gonna be there for my teammates on and off the court. I’m bringing energy, positive vibes and I think that’s the most important thing – consistency. Whether that’s on the court, off the court, I’m gonna be myself every time.”

Last fall, I met Jalen Brunson at his go-to spot to talk about his rise, taking less in his last contract, the Thibs firing, staying out of front office matters, and whether the Knicks can win it all.

For @VanityFair’s March issue: the King of New York. https://t.co/4h5T58CFFW

— Tom Kludt (@TomKludt) February 17, 2026

Jalen Brunson


On Knicks lacking intangibles compared to last season:

“We’re very gifted. We’re very talented. But we need the little things that help us be better, the intangibles. We got to that point last year where we had it. We don’t have it right now.”

On his contract sacrifice and future expectations:

“If I’m thinking about playing well to make sure I get paid, that could mess with me. I play best when I have a free mind, and that did that for me. A lot of people say I sacrificed for the team. One hundred percent, I sacrificed for the team. But most importantly, I made sure my family and I are taken care of. … Obviously, we’d love for them to do right by me. I think anyone would. I feel like I sacrificed.”

On regular season vs. playoffs:

“I don’t look at regular-season games as a barometer because, come playoffs, it’s a different basketball game. Especially when you talk about a seven-game series. I’ve been with different teams that went to the Finals or played deep in the playoffs that lost the season series to teams and still won in the playoffs.”

On the meaning of true professionalism:

“It should be. It’s not as common (as you would think). It’s more than showing up every day. If you’re doing the bare minimum, you’re not a true professional.”

On Shamet’s value around the league:

“He’s also a big asset. He does a lot for the teams he’s on, and other teams see that. It’s who he has been. I’ve seen that from afar playing against him, and it’s even better when you’re playing with him.”

If you look at media day and postgame interviews each All-Star gave, KAT's are the longest both times

Here PR tries to literally pull him away to his next event but he won't go

Answers a question about youth sports in the Dominican Republic

Did this last year too pic.twitter.com/68sJQjzbZD

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 17, 2026

OG Anunoby


On his toenail injury and recovering from it:

“I’m not for sure exactly how or what led up to it, but I had it removed. It’s getting better each day. It’s not even 2 weeks yet. But it’s healing and each day, it’s getting better and better. I have no toenail. I don’t know when it’ll grow back.”

Josh Hart


On Shamet as an example in today’s NBA:

“People come in and they have to learn to be professionals. Depending on where you get drafted to, it can take two, three or four years, especially if you don’t have a good vet. With how things are shaking out now, there’s a lot less vets on teams to hold guys accountable. It’s (rarer) now, and (Shamet) is a great example of that.”

Are the Knicks primed to win the East?@imanshumpert thinks so, and it's not because he's a "Knicks guy." 💪 pic.twitter.com/nVdhSG9kJn

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) February 16, 2026

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...one-hundred-percent-i-sacrificed-for-the-team
 
Pistons 126, Knicks 111: “Kinda contentious”

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NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 19: Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons drives to the basket during the game against the New York Knicks on February 19, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Broadway. CBGBs (RIP). The Apollo. Yankee Stadium (RIP).

Ain’t a patch of terra firma anywhere else on the whole damn terra can rival the platforms NYC does. Madison Square Garden’s on that list, where last night Cade Cunningham was Sinatra, the Beatles, James Brown and Michael Jordan in a 126-111 Detroit Pistons win.

The Knicks went into the All-Star break winners of 10 of 12, but this was the first leg of their most brutal stretch of the season, the first leg of a two-week gauntlet featuring home dates with Houston, San Antonio and Oklahoma City, while visiting Cleveland, Toronto, Denver and the Lakers; three of those road games games are one end of a back-to-back.

Every win is a good win, but with only three games separating the East’s second- and fifth-seeds, every win is one the Knicks need, not only for their confidence (now 16-15 against winning teams) but for their playoff positioning. One slip in form — one injury — and instead of hosting the Magic in the opening round and the Celtics in the semis, they might need to win as the lower seed against Cavs only to open the next round in Michigan.

Dunno know if you heard, but this season the Pistons have whupped the Knicks not once, not twice, but thrice. You can tell they and their fans are awfully excited, and who can blame them? Knick fans know better than most what it’s like to suffer a long dry spell, then awaken back to life. Yet Detroit was without their top two bigs, Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart, both suspended after the latter sprang to the defense of the former after he’d been sucker-punched by someone who’s twice beat up his children’s mother (twice that we know of). It seemed the Knicks caught a break. All they caught was a whupping.

Last year the Pistons beat them five times in the regular season and playoffs by a total of 32 points. Detroit took the first two meetings this season by 31, then 38; while this game was closer (the Knicks were still in it midway through the third), Mars is closer than Jupiter, yet very far indeed. Last night was easily the most competitive game between the teams this season and Detroit still led the final 40 minutes. Counting last year and this year’s regular-season and playoffs, they’re 8-5 against New York.

I haven’t believed these Pistons can beat the Knicks in this year’s playoffs, mostly because of things that have little to nothing to do with these Pistons. They haven’t won a postseason series since George W. Bush was the inept war criminal Nepo Baby-in-Chief, as opposed to the metastasized malignancy in place today. NBA teams don’t go from “haven’t won a series in 17 years” to the Finals. It just doesn’t happen. Then again, jump-shooting teams never won till Golden State did in 2015. Of course, they were never “just” a jump-shooting team.

Maybe what these Pistons are matters more than whatever they’re not. What they are is physical, big and long, and dead certain they’re better than the Knicks. What they’re not is a great shooting team, nor is Cade considered a great shooter, and yet this year against the Knicks the Pistons are shooting 56/46/80 AS A TEAM, outscoring their more accomplished elders by 40 points on 2s and 51 on 3s.

This is a rivalry now, or what passes for one after decades of owners with dildos for brains devolving until it’s nearly impossible to keep a team together more than 2-3 years or find where to watch half their games. The Knicks and Pistons can both taste it. “The old East is dying,” Gramsci might’ve said, “and the new East struggles to be born. Now is the time of monsters.” Such a time to be a monster!

The Pacers are on sabbatical for a year. The Celtics are under new management. The Cavs, the league’s most disappointing playoff team the past few years, are risking it all on James Harden, the league’s most disappointing playoff performer for over a decade. The Banchero/Bane Magic have yet to make any. Despite getting the best run of play Joel Embiid’s shown in nearly two years, the 76ers have made it clear they’re no longer about the present and are looking to the future. The Heat haven’t been the Heat for a while.

The East’s two best teams met last night, as did its two best players. Jalen Brunson scored an efficient 33 to go with eight assists (33rd and 8th!). But he also had half his team’s dozen turnovers. Cunningham’s no debutante, but his performance felt like a coming-out party, a degree of leveling up you maybe weren’t expecting. Mozart’s last two symphonies. Beethoven’s last. Radiohead going from The Bends to OK Computer. Cade going from “that man is niiiice” to “that man is nassssty.”

THE SPLIT TO A LEFT HAND DUNK ?!?!Cade Cunningham is that dude !!!#SkyHoops

Daniel Thompson (@dr-thompson.bsky.social) 2026-02-20T02:31:58.280Z

There’s all kinds of fans and all kinds of fandoms. Me, personally, I was first drawn to the Knicks and the NBA because of my love of the game. So while I def wouldn’t react the same way in May, best believe I enjoyed Cade’s effort immensely. The East has stunk for a while. Cunningham joining the Tatum/Haliburton/Giannis-when-he’s-healthy stratosphere is a treat for those who love stargazing.

Also, Cade is dangerous. Legitimately. Trae Young had a good two weeks against the Knicks in 2021, but they’ve pretty much always had his number in the regular season; there wasn’t ever a second act to develop real drama. To varying extents, Tatum and Haliburton’s teams have punted on this season, if only to better position themselves to relaunch. Jeremy Sochan had some very nice defensive moments, but Cunningham roasted every Knick that tested the flames. Too big, too quick and too good.

When’s the last time (some of you may be too young to have an answer for this) the Knicks mattered and were up against legit dangers like Cunningham and Haliburton, players you know ached to beat them? I’d think after last year Tatum and Jaylen Brown would love nothing more than a second-round rematch. The Knicks are (despite last night’s L) a great team! And a lot of great teams in the East have a target on the Knicks’ backs. If this doesn’t quicken you as a fan, we’re not the same species.

Quoth Jaybugkit: “Kinda contentious.” These Pistons are. They oughta be; nobody values wealth like someone who grew up poor. Two years ago Detroit had the league’s worst record; now they have the best. Two to three months from now, they could meet the Knicks with a lot more than bragging rights at stake.

I hope by then both teams are healthy (OG Anunoby returned to the lineup after two weeks out and looked like someone returning after two weeks out). I hope Cade and Brunson bring their A-games. I hope the Knicks remember Karl-Anthony Towns being a great shooter and scorer for a 7-footer also means he’s a 7-footer, so get his butt down on the block for once instead of everything being a 3 or a drive 25 feet from the hoop. These Knicks/Pistons games have all almost been over before they began. Hopefully the rivalry is just getting started.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...9386/pistons-126-knicks-111-kinda-contentious
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘It builds a confidence going into a series’

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NEW YORK, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 19: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks talks to the referee during the second quarter against the Detroit Pistons at Madison Square Garden on February 19, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Knicks aren’t winning it all this season.

Assuming they finish the regular season with a top-three seed, they’ll only meet the Pistons in the ECF.

That’s it, that’s where everything will end. The season won’t last past that.

Mike Brown said he liked the 3s his team generated in the first half but “they just didn’t go in.”

— James L. Edwards III (@JLEdwardsIII) February 20, 2026

Mike Brown


On Towns’ comfort in offense:

“He’s comfortable. We’re continuing to try to do different things to help free him up. And we’ll continue to search to try to do different things to free him up throughout the course of the year.”

On choosing Shamet over Bridges to close the game:

“Landry had hit a couple shots. We needed to score. They’re both really good defenders. And so I just stayed with Landry. But it wasn’t anything where, ‘Oh, I’m going to sit Mikal because he’s not doing this, or he’s not doing that.’ We were looking to score points and Landry was the only one to make a shot from behind the arc.”

On the Pistons’ defensive adjustments:

“In the first half, too, [the Pistons] switch a lot. So, with [Mitchell Robinson], they’re going to blitz or double-team the ball. With KAT, they’re going to switch, especially if they create separation. And so we tried running some of the same actions they switched, and he didn’t get as many good looks as he did in the second half. We opened it up and tried to set the screen a little bit higher and a little bit quicker in that second half, so we can get right to it, which freed him up at times.”

On defending Cade Cunningham’s size:

“He can do a lot for a guy his size and puts teams in predicaments with the stuff that he’s doing because really your guy is [6-foot-2], 6-1 and is on a guy who is 6-7 doing it. And you’re putting a small forward on him. Most of the time the small forward isn’t used to navigating the stuff that he does on the floor.”

On failing to keep ball out of the middle:

“We want to try to keep the ball off the middle of the floor. And we didn’t do a good job of it. We allowed him to get to the middle of the floor often. And when he got to the middle of the floor he hurt us. So we have to do a better job of trying to keep the ball on the sidelines and not allowing it to get to the middle of the floor.”

On the three-point shooting struggles on Thursday:

“We did a great job of generating some wide-open looks, especially from the 3-point line. They just didn’t go in tonight.”

On Sochan’s debut minutes:

“I thought his minutes were pretty good. It gives us the ability to give a guy like Cade [Cunningham] a different look. You know with his length and his strength and his athleticism, and we want to be physical.”

On Sochan’s physical defense:

“He hadn’t played in a while, but most of the time that he was on the floor and guarding Cade, there was a physicality to it, and we liked that. We need it.”

On overall debut evaluation:

“I thought for him, not having played in a while and him only being here for a couple of days, I thought he did a pretty good job.”

On the locker room disappointment following another lose:

“Nobody wants to lose. And everybody is disappointed. And I’m sure everybody is trying to figure out how they could’ve played better to help the team win. So it’s not a fun feeling. It shouldn’t be a fun feeling for me or anybody else in that locker room. But for sure it’s not the end of the world. We got to regroup, watch the film to see how to get better and get the next one.”

On Adam Silver’s tanking fixes:

“Definitely trying to make somebody fight for it at the end of the season. Whether you have a small tournament before the playoffs start or something like that to where it’s not just guaranteed that the team with the worst record gets the best odds. That may change it a little bit.

“Adam’s a smart guy and he’s figured out a lot of really good things for this league, so I have a ton of faith in him that he will figure it out.”

Jose Alvarado: "Playoffs is a whole different ballgame. We're not going to sit here and say, 'oh, they beat us in the regular season…' We're not thinking like that." pic.twitter.com/Dm1QB2oxbZ

— Ian Begley (@IanBegley) February 20, 2026

Jose Alvarado


On the Pistons’ regular season sweep:

“Playoffs is a whole different ballgame. We’re not going to sit here and say, ‘Oh, they beat us in the regular season.’ We’re not thinking like that.”

"Just not up to our standards"

Jalen Brunson after the Knicks' 126-111 loss to the Pistons, their third loss in three tries against Detroit this season: pic.twitter.com/FFIlkxu7pn

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) February 20, 2026

Jalen Brunson


On Pistons’ regular-season dominance:

“It’s a new year.”

On another loss to the Pistons:

“They play great against us. I think today was not as bad as the first two losses. But it’s just not up to our standards.”

On failing to slow Cunningham:

“We just didn’t slow him down fast enough, or even at all.”

Karl-Anthony Towns believes regular season games against an opponent "mean a lot" should you face off against that team in the playoffs:

"It builds a confidence going into a series…you also have great film to see what did work" pic.twitter.com/NFus2rZ1v0

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) February 20, 2026

Karl-Anthony Towns


On yet another loss to Detroit:

“It builds a confidence going into a series. You also have great film to see what did work.”

On his role on the Brown’s offense:

“I mean, our offense is our offense. It’s been that way all year. So we have our system and we’re gonna — regardless of who’s in the game or not in the game — we run the system that we have implemented for our team to the best of our abilities.”

On his third-quarter aggressiveness:

“Just trying to make a play, be aggressive with play-making. Got a chance to get a shot up and wanted to capitalize on those opportunities. And hopefully get us a spark, start the third quarter on a strong note. What I definitely wanted to, if I could control anything in the third, was get us off to a quick start. I’m happy I was able to do that and find chances to impose my will in the game.”

On no moral victories in losing to Detroit by fewer than 90 points:

“There’s no moral victories or one New York wants to see. But we got a lot of film and we’ll see each other in the playoffs, and we got to be ready.”

pic.twitter.com/2b4WehIFaq

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 20, 2026

Mohamed Diawara


On his role uncertainty after Sochan’s addition:

“I’m just gonna continue what I was doing. Keep working and being ready for each opportunity that I’m gonna get. I’m not worried about that. I know the coaching staff and the team is gonna do whatever is good for the team, and that’s what I’m trying to do.”

On his mindset amid his rookie season:

“I’m a rookie, rookie year, first year in the league. The league, anything can happen, so I’m just gonna take what I have to take and not take anything for granted and just keep working until I’m gonna be that player [I want to be].”

On where he’s improved the most in the NBA:

“I think my 3-point shot. I think my 3-point shot became a little bit more consistent. I think that’s the biggest thing, and maybe my defense too, a little bit.”

“It means a lot to sweep a team as good as them.”

Cade Cunningham speaks on the #Pistons sweeping the Knicks during their three-game regular-season series. pic.twitter.com/gSgLcY7hOW

— Coty M. Davis (@CotyDavis_24) February 20, 2026

Cade Cunningham


On his MVP candidacy:

“It comes from doing the things I said, what I needed to do to be in that conversation. Now that we’re getting closer, there’s more [talk] like ‘What is your case? You should speak on it.’ I don’t really care to speak on it. I want the people that vote on it to be smart enough to look at the game for themselves.”

On sweeping the Knicks:

“To sweep a team as good as them, they play high-level basketball. To beat them, we’re trying to win tiebreaker and stuff, that means something. Just competing against the Eastern teams, beating a good team, means a lot.”

On making a statement on Thursday:

“What is it? I mean we’re the best team in the East, I don’t know what statement. The statement is coming to play every night, and we’re going to compete until you lay down for us.”

#BREAKING Charlotte Hornets star LaMelo Ball was in a wreck Wednesday afternoon in the heart of Uptown Charlotte. pic.twitter.com/r5sJsDDeXS

— WSOCTV (@wsoctv) February 18, 2026

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-news/79403/knicks-bulletin-xxx
 
Pistons 126, Knicks 111: Scenes from miss after miss after miss. . . .

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Tonight at Madison Square Garden, the Detroit Pistons (41-13) completed a three-game sweep of the Knicks (35*-21), 126-111.

The first half was physical and fast. New York gave away an early edge by missing 15 straight threes and failing to engage Karl-Anthony Towns. Meanwhile, Cade Cunningham powered Detroit to a 58-48 halftime lead. Towns opened the third with a nifty four-point play, but Detroit’s paint pressure and rebounding extended the margin to 90-79. In the fourth, the Knicks cut it to 11 late after trailing by 19, but by then, the outcome was never in doubt.

New York shot 8-of-35 from deep (23%) and lost the rebounding battle 44-38. Jalen Brunson led them with 33 points and six assists; Towns recovered from a two-point first half to post a 21-11 double-double; OG Anunoby scored eight on 3-of-13 but tied a career high with four blocks; Mikal Bridges had eight points on nine shots, and Josh Hart added 11 points in 28 minutes.

Landry Shamet supplied 15 off the bench and Mitchell Robinson chipped in seven points, six boards, two steals, and a block, but the second unit delivered no offense otherwise. Jose Alvarado and Jeremy Sochan defended well but combined for eight points.

For the victors, Cunningham finished with 42 points, 14 assists, and eight rebounds on 17-of-34 shooting; third-string center Paul Reed scored 18 points and seven boards; and Tobias Harris recorded 11 points and 10 boards.

Happy Lunar New Year, folks.

First Half​


Even though Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart are serving suspensions, the remaining Pistons still brought pipes and hammers into MSG. Josh Hart took exception when hit from behind on a dunk, and the refs checked their shoelaces. He wasn’t the only complainer. Both sides bemoaned the excessive contact, but New York received more penalties by midway through the frame.

Karl-Anthony Towns with a TOUCHDOWN pass to Josh Hart for the dunk 🙌pic.twitter.com/Afa7GWrYiM

— Knicks Nation (@KnicksNationCP) February 20, 2026

Early on, OG Anunoby missed two wide-open triples, but Detroit shot worse. The visitors made 1-of-10 as New York went up by seven points in a game that was not only chippy but speedy. The sneakers were slappin’, the perspiration was flyin’, and the dude with the sweat mop earned his paycheck. Landry Shamet came off the bench to spell Mikal Bridges. Soon after, Mitchell Robinson and Mohamed Diawara replaced Karl-Anthony Towns and OG Anunoby. No Jeremy Sochan yet. . . .

After Motown’s cold start, they made seven of their next eight to leapfrog New York on the scoreboard. Shooting 1-of-8 from deep in the quarter didn’t help New York. Around the three-minute mark, Jose Alvarado clocked in and received a cheer. Jose repaid the affection with a tasty fast-break layup. And the newest Knick, Sochan—possessor of the best diastema in New York sports since Michael Strahan—made his MSG debut for the final defensive possession of the period. When the bell finally rang, Detroit held a 28-26 lead.

Jeremy Sochan gets a LOUD ovation from the crowd pic.twitter.com/eSEBnm56Mr

— KnicksNation (@KnicksNation) February 20, 2026

Boatloads of contact continued in Q2. Meanwhile, Karl-Anthony Towns had taken just two shots total by the midway point of the period. With Duren and Stewart out, we were convinced Towns would explode tonight. It’s strange stuff when Mitch outscores KAT (7-2) in a half.

New York wasted opportunities and fell behind by six. Alvarado had another of his famous back-court steals, but Hart blew the layup; on the subsequent possession, Brunson botched a contested layup, and Mitch couldn’t corral the board. Alvarado contributed four misses to New York’s awful three-point shooting—they converted just 1-of-16 in the half. Give credit to Detroit for keeping the Knicks out of the corners, where they’re most dangerous.

Defensive intensity kept New York alive for most of the half, but it wasn’t enough. E.g., Brunson tried his best, but Cunningham was just too much to handle, scoring 24 in his first 19 minutes. The Pistons went on a 7-0 run over the final 1:20 of the half to take a 58-48 score into halftime. Brunson topped the Knicks box score with 13.

Second Half​


Spotting Detroit 10 points? Not the best strategy. The second half started on a promising note, though, with a four-point play by Towns (plus three more buckets) in the first three minutes.

COUNT IT AND THE FOUL. pic.twitter.com/zL7eS2DiIG

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) February 20, 2026

Every time the Knicks drove the lane—whether it was Towns, Anunoby, Brunson, or whoever—the Pistons collapsed and stuffed them. Consequently, the breakneck speed of the first half slowed due to an increase in foul calls, and New York began to get a more favorable whistle.

Anunoby did a good job guarding Cunningham, but when OG rested, the gates swung open.

To quote Clyde, Matador D pic.twitter.com/EEb6wdORMe

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 20, 2026

Once again, the Knicks gave up too much ground at the end of a period. They fell behind by 13 down the stretch and went into the fourth quarter behind, 90-79. It would have been worse if Sochan—again playing the final minute—swatting back a driving Cunningham.

Brunson and Cunningham opened the quarter on the bench. The Knicks turned to Towns, Bridges, Hart, Alvarado, and Sochan, but early sloppiness stalled any push. Bridges threw it away, then missed a three-pointer, and Towns lost the ball after grabbing a defensive board. Meanwhile, the Pistons took a 19-point lead, capped by two Caris LeVert triples and a Daniss Jenkins’ bunny.

Midway through the frame, Brunson was back. He and Cunningham were dueling buckets. Coach Brown deployed Sochan again, gluing him to Cade. The newcomer had two steals and a block in five minutes. A line-up of Brunson, Shamet, Sochan, Anunoby, and Robinson was heavy on the defense, but Detroit’s was tougher. Brunson spun with a dribble right into Ausar Thompson’s arms. A potential Mitch dunk was blocked from behind by Paul Reed. And on one sequence, Harris and Cunningham both missed from deep, but Detroit’s relentless offensive rebounding brought the ball back to Cade for another attempt that finally found the net. With shenanigans like that, New York fell behind by 19.

With a minute-and-a-half left, Brunson hit a three to make the deficit 11, then stole the ball from Cunningham—but he bricked from deep, KAT blew the putback, Detroit scored at the other end, and all the air left the building. Ballgame.

Up Next​


Matt Miranda’s comin’ at ya with a recap. Then the Houston Rockets come into MSG on Saturday. Rest up, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

* Should be one more, but Adam Silver robbed us.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...ks-111-scenes-from-miss-after-miss-after-miss
 
Knicks Week Preview: Feb. 22-28, 2026

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NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 22: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks shoots against Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during their game at Madison Square Garden on October 22, 2025 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Depending on tonight’s result against Houston, your emotions about the Knicks will fall somewhere between “We’re back!” and “Bring me the cyanide.” Hoping for the best, champs. After tonight, our heroes will begin an Eastern Conference-themed road trip. Get yourself a couple of cold cold ones, microwave some brats, and clog our arteries with a bowl of melted cheese, we’re heading to Milwaukee!

Sunday, February 22 – Knicks at Bulls, 8:00 PM ET (MSG)


But first, Chicago. Tomorrow night, the Knicks will face the Bulls for the third time this season. They’ve split the first two games: a 135-125 loss at the United Center on October 31, followed by a 128-116 victory at home on November 2.

The Bulls are on a streak of seven losses (likely to be eight after tonight’s game versus Detroit). Both Chicago and New York will be playing the second game of a back-to-back, with the Knicks flying in from NYC. Fatigue could play a factor, but a dominant team with championship aspirations should mop the floor with these calves, who rank in the bottom tier for offense and defense.

Watch this one on MSG.

Tuesday, February 24 – Knicks at Cavaliers, 7:30 PM ET (MSG, Peacock)


Next up, a short hop over to Cleveland on Tuesday. This will be the third contest between the Knicks and the Cavs. The good guys swept the first two home games: a 119-111 win on opening night, October 22, and a 126-124 Christmas Day thriller on December 25.

As of this writing, the Ohio Players sit in third place thanks to a seven-game win streak and winning 13 of their last 15. The pairing of James Harden and Donovan Mitchell seems to be paying off. Kenny Atkinson’s crew rates fifth for offense and is heading into the top-ten for defense . . . damn it all. This tilt is a potential playoff preview and easily the toughest test of the week.

Watch it on MSG.

Friday, February 27 – Knicks at Bucks, 8:00 PM ET (MSG)


Raise the sails as we voyage to the seas of cheese, Claypoolers! Will these creamy waters be choppy, cap’n? Aye, could be! As of this writing, the Giannis-less Bucks have won six of their last 10, including a 17-point win over the Thunder.

This marks New York’s third clash with the Bucks of the season. Thus far, they’ve split the series: a 111-121 road loss on October 28 and a 118-109 home win on November 28. The Deer are inconsistent, but so are the Knicks. Ryan Rollins and Kevin Porter, Jr. can get buckets if not handled properly, and look for OAKAAKUYOAK Jericho Sims in the starting line-up. You’ll pardon some queasy feelings about this one.

Watch it on MSG.

Go Knicks.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/knicks-game-previews/79439/knicks-week-preview-feb-22-28-2026
 
Knicks 108, Rockets 106: Scenes from a five steal, three charge, 15-point comeback.

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On Thursday, in their first game since the All-Star break, the Knicks (36*-21) fell way short yet again to the Detroit Pistons. Tonight, they faced off against another tall and physical team, the Houston Rockets (34-21). Through the first quarter, the Knicks set the pace, passed beautifully, and played great defense, but a second-quarter sag put them behind by one at halftime. Houston hit the gas in the third quarter, and an evidently doomed Knicks squad entered the fourth trailing 91-75. Needing a spark, they got it in Jose Alvarado, who had two vital steals and big buckets down the stretch, and Jalen Brunson (otherwise in the barrel all night), who drew three charges overall and hit a couple of big shots in the clutch. Flipping a 15-point deficit, New York wins, 108-106. In a nationally televised game, no less.

New York got OG Anunoby (20 PTS, 4 STL) and Karl-Anthony Towns (25 PTS, 7 RBS) going early. In the first quarter, KAT hit on two hooks and logged a steal, while Anunoby scored on a running three and two dunks (one off his own steal). OG defended the notorious internet troll Kevin Durant, who missed eight of his first 10 shots. Durant would turn it around, though, finishing the night with 30 points on 10-of-26 FG (and a +15).

OG steal ➡️ OG slam pic.twitter.com/ZiIIhSp7sV

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) February 22, 2026

With Houston bricking 13 of their first 16 shots, New York built a nine-point lead in the quarter, but five offensive boards helped Houston keep pace. At the five-minute mark, Coach Brown paired Brunson (20 PTs, 6-12 FG) with Landry Shamet (14 PTS), Jeremy Sochan, Mohamed Diawara, and Mitchell Robinson (6 PTS, 4 RBS). Sochan, a 29% three-point shooter over his career, was stationed on the perimeter. Not ideal, Coach. The new Knick missed two shots, picked up a foul, and was yanked after two minutes.

A late Reed Sheppard (10 PTS) three-pointer barely lifted the Rockets over the 20-point mark. New York won the period, 27-21.

To open the second, Brown stuck with his starters but handed the keys to Jose Alvarado (8 PTS, 5 STS, 4 AST, 20 MIN). Jose responded with a quick three and two steals, and the Knicks stretched the margin to 13. Brown shuffled the deck from there—Shamet and Robinson in, then Brunson alongside Alvarado. The ball was moving crisply, and New York’s 16 assists were the most ever by the franchise in a first half.

Jose Alvarado gathers for a corner three 🔥pic.twitter.com/caB0y4KxU5

— Knicks Nation (@KnicksNationCP) February 22, 2026

Nothing good can last around here. Alperen Şengün (16 PTS) went to work with a hook, fadeaway, dunk, free throws, and set up Jabari Smith, Jr. (21 PTS) and Sheppard. Durant added three baskets as Houston methodically chipped away, scoring on nine straight possessions during a 13–4 run that cut the deficit to one. Then, with 15 seconds remaining, a loose-ball foul by Towns sent Durant to the line. His two free throws gave the Rockets a 54–53 lead at halftime. It’s the silly fouls that kill us.

Through the half, Durant and Şengün led Houston with 13 points each, while Jabari Smith Jr. added 11 on a perfect 4-for-4 shooting. Thompson put Brunson in a barrel, limiting him to 2 points, 0-for-4 shooting in 17 minutes. Anunoby carried the home team with 16 points on 7-of-9 shooting and three steals. Both teams shot 51% overall, but Houston held the edge from three (47% to 38%) and on the glass, 19–13. The Knicks forced seven steals, but their 10 turnovers cost them 15 points.

OG putting on a show for New York on Saturday night 💯

He's up to 16 in the 1st half.pic.twitter.com/ynEP3qwcVH

— Knicks Nation (@KnicksNationCP) February 22, 2026

The Rockets came out of halftime on an 11–2 burst. The Garden groaned. When Towns picked up another hooking foul on a drive and then had the gall to argue it, that familiar sinking feeling came back. (Later, KAT hit his 1,200th career three, FYI.)

Tari Eason (11 PTS, 12 RBS) controlled the glass, piling up defensive boards and fueling an 8–0 run that stretched Houston’s lead to 10 as the Knicks missed four straight shots. Durant drilled a three during the surge, and another 8–0 spurt in under a minute pushed the margin to 15 with 2:42 left in the quarter. Ime Udoka sent extra bodies at Brunson on nearly every touch; CAP managed two tough mid-range jumpers, but received little help from his cohorts. In the third frame, Towns chipped in five, Anunoby went scoreless, and New York mustered just 22 points, heading into the fourth down 91–75.

The Knicks needed a shot of adrenaline and got it from Alvarado. He found Shamet for a three, slipped a pass to Towns for a cut-and-finish dunk, and buried a three of his own to spark an 8–0 run that forced a Houston timeout and cut the deficit to six. Brunson drew a charge on the next trip, and Towns powered to the rim to make it a two-point game with three minutes left. After Eason answered with a hook, Brunson calmly knocked down a 9-footer to keep it tight.

KAT throws it down over Jabari Smith 💪 pic.twitter.com/3vfKUjfXM9

— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) February 22, 2026

Alvarado wasn’t done. He picked off a pass and finished a tough layup, then came up with another steal (his fourth steal of the night) that led to a Brunson layup. Tie game, 1:30 left. Brunson wasn’t done, either—he drew his third charge of the night on Durant, then hit a pull-up. Two-point lead, 30 seconds left. Durant missed from mid-range, Smith missed from three, and Towns secured the rebound.

This right here. THIS RIGHT HERE pic.twitter.com/e1BTRMK5eI

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 22, 2026

OG Anunoby made two free throws with six seconds to go. Out of a timeout, Durant struck from 25’ to make it a one-point game. Two seconds left. Shamet was fouled, made one of two, and KD missed from midcourt as the buzzer buzzed. Ballgame!

Up Next


Matthew Miranda is up next with a radical recap. On to Chicago our heroes go for a tilt tomorrow night. Safe travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

* Should be one more, but the NBA Cup Final was merely a scrimmage.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...m-a-five-steal-three-charge-15-point-comeback
 
Game Preview: Knicks at Bulls, February 22, 2026

gettyimages-2245409704.jpg


Fresh off a fourth-quarter heist at the Garden, the Knicks (36*-21) head to the United Center to face the Chicago Bulls (24–33). The matchup gives New York a chance to firm up its hold on third place against a Bulls team that has lost as many consecutive games as an octopus has arms. (That’s eight, buddy.)

The season series sits tied at one apiece. When they last met, the Knicks beat the Bulls 128-116 on November 2, 2025. Jalen Brunson led New York with 31 points. Josh Giddey paced Chicago with 23.

The Bulls are planning a massive offseason bender to forget this campaign. They rank 23rd in offensive rating at 114 and 26th in defensive rating at 118.1. They can score a bit, averaging 116.4 points per game, which puts them 11th in the league, but no team sees them on the schedule and says, Uh-oh, better double-knot my Nikes.

Aussie hair model Josh Giddey leads the brigade, averaging 18.4 points per game and spreading 8.5 assists. Matas “Line Drawing Face” Buzelis averages 15 points per game and shoots 36% from three. Their starting five will likely be Giddey, Anfernee Simons (20.1 PPG), Isaac Okoro (9.1 PPG), Buzelis, and Jalen Smith (10.2 RPG). Last night, with Simons out, our old pal Guerschon Yabusele was in the starting lineup. As I said, good times in Chicago!

On Chi-Town’s injury report, Simons is day-to-day with a wrist injury. Zach Collins is out for the season for the Bulls with a toe problem, as is Noa Essengue with a shoulder injury.

Prediction


ESPN gives the Knicks an 82% chance to win. Oh, they’d better. Last night, the Knicks opened the game strong, then looked dead in the water for two quarters until Jose Alvarado injected life into them. Is Jose your new favorite Knick, yet? Or do you still cling to Bridges like a weird old Teddy? (Bear, Ruxpin, Pendergrass—whatever you’re into.)

Chicago also played at home last night, in a 16-point loss to Detroit that would have been uglier if not for a 34-point fourth quarter. We doubt the Bulls are even playing for pride at this point, so the Knicks’ bench should take care of business and let the starters cool their heels. Knicks by a dozen.

Game Details


Date: Sunday, February 22, 2026
Time: 8 PM ET
Place: United Center, Chicago, IL
TV: MSG
Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

* Should be one more, but the Cup final was just an acid flashback.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...game-preview-knicks-at-bulls-february-22-2026
 
Knicks 105, Bulls 99: Scenes from a clutch KAT finish

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Last night in NYC, the Knicks (37*-21) found another gear to steal one from Houston, while the Bulls (24-34) dropped their eighth straight against Detroit. With both teams on the second night of a back-to-back, we expected fatigue to be a factor. What we didn’t expect was Karl-Anthony Towns (28 PTS, 11 RBS, 5-9 3PT) borrowing the Captain Clutch cape and fending off a late Chicago push. Knicks win, 105–99.

Screenshot-2026-02-22-224803.png

Like bricks? You would’ve loved the start of this one. The Bulls shot 2-0f-11 from the field, while the Knicks missed five of their first six long-range attempts but took a brief 9-3 lead. From there, the Bulls owned the glass, rebounding at nearly a 2:1 clip. New Bull Guerschon Yabusele (11 PTS, 13 RBS!) crashed the glass and connected from deep, playing like someone eager to impress a team he should have worked harder to impress when he was cashing their checks. Another new Bull, Nick Richards (9 PTS, 14 RBS), scored seven points and grabbed three boards in his first seven minutes. For the visitors, Towns scored twice from deep and on an aggressive drive, but then fouled Isaac Okoro (12 PTS) after the Bull had already released his layup. So it goes. The Knicks were losing 27–25 after one.

During the game, I monitor the NBA app for any noteworthy updates to share with you. I’d be derelict in my duties not to pass on this nugget:

IMG_9439.jpeg

Chicago opened the second period with more fire and desire, extending the lead on buckets from Tre Jones and Okoro and steady work inside from Jalen Smith (12 PTS). The Knicks, meanwhile, drifted through one-and-dones and sleepy turnovers. For some reason, Coach Brown—watching the same fatigued team we saw—chose not to play a fresh Tyler Kolek or Mohamed Diawara in the first half. Brown gave time to Ariel Hukporti (4 PTS, 5 RBS) and Jeremy Sochan (2 PTs, 3 RBS, 11 MIN) in the frontcourt, but the backcourt sure looked like they’d appreciate a respite, too.

Knicks win. Play Diawara next time, assholes.

Joe Flynn (@chinajoeflynn.bsky.social) 2026-02-23T03:28:14.189Z

Towns kept our heroes close with a tip-in, free throws, and a pair of threes to lead all scorers with 17 points by halftime. Great stuff—but there’s always some peccadillo. When KAT committed another offensive foul, the generally even-keeled Mike Breen sounded annoyed to see one . . . more . . . bonehead . . . foul. Later in the period, Breen groused about Karl complaining about another non-call, positing that the big man might fare better with the refs if he didn’t protest every . . . single . . . time. The sentiment is mutual, Mike.

With New York flailing in Q2, Jalen Brunson (19 PTS, 9 AST, 1-6 3PT) returned and settled the offense with a couple of midrange jumpers. Josh Hart (11 PTS, 9 RBS, 5 ASTS) began to turn up his effort, and Landry Shamet’s (16 PTS) two late threes briefly drew New York even, but free throws gave Chicago a 53-52 lead at the break.

landry cookin from long range 🎯

9 PTS | 3 3PM pic.twitter.com/k6K0VJXVJy

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) February 23, 2026

By intermission, both teams had shot 43%, yet Chicago was winning from deep (39% to 36%) and in the paint (18–14). The Knicks held a narrow rebounding edge, 27–25, and turnovers were even at six apiece.

After a rest, New York came out with more energy, going on a 13-6 run to start the half. They got threes from Hart, Mikal Bridges, Brunson, and Shamet and built a 13-point lead. Chicago clawed back behind second chances from Yabusele and outside shooting from Smith and Okoro. Late in the quarter, sophomore Matas Buzelis scored on a drive, drained a three, and converted at the line to tighten the differential. The Knicks were up 83–78 heading into the fourth.

Through three quarters, Josh Giddey was mostly a non-factor, with a few assists, rebounds, and a steal. Early in the final frame, things got sloppy, and Chicago got a jolt from a different guard. Collin Sexton, quiet in limited minutes thus far, hit a couple of threes to cut the gap to two points with 4:30 to go, and Richards was a problem inside. Coach Brown sent in Brunson, Bridges, Hart, OG Anunoby, and Huk, but two one-and-done possessions resulted in Chicago taking a one-point lead with three minutes left. Their coach, Billy Donovan, relied heavily on the Giddy-Buzelis tandem and, for a brief moment, it seemed like it might work.

Here’s Karl showing great second effort.

Karl-Anthony Towns follows up his own miss with a MEAN JAM 💥pic.twitter.com/zV6eRAkHjS

— Knicks Nation (@KnicksNationCP) February 23, 2026

On a Bulls inbounds, KAT committed another maddening foul, but redeemed himself with a big clutch performance. After that mistake, he scored on a go-ahead triple and a charging layup, plus grabbed a timely rebound. Thanks to his efforts, the good guys had a four-point lead when he stepped to the charity stripe with a minute left. To the delight of viewers back in the snowy Empire State, the United Center shook with “Let’s Go Knicks!” chants. That must rankle the ghosts of the 90’s Bulls, no?

On Chicago’s next possession. Giddey quickly drove into Anunoby (9 PTS, 9 RBS, 2 STL, 1 BLK) for his second field goal of the night, plus a free-throw. Following his miss, the Knicks got the ball over midcourt and found Bridges (11 PTS, 5 ASTS, 2 STL, 1 BLK) in the corner for a game-sealing triple.

BANG. pic.twitter.com/temu4YqD4N

— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) February 23, 2026

After the game, Breen interviewed KAT, the player of the game (Brown also named Towns DPOG). Nothing awkward about the interview at all! Mike’s a consummate pro, and Karl deserved the spotlight for preserving this win. And who knows—maybe this is a sign of Towns turning a corner after a rocky season. Better hope so. If the Knicks want to reach the Finals, they’re gonna need him.

This is two consecutive fourth quarters where Karl-Anthony Towns has gotten on decision-making hot streaks, which is big time. Consequential moments where he's caught a rhythm making the right read play after play and doing so in a very aggressive way.

Fred Katz (@fredkatz.bsky.social) 2026-02-23T03:20:18.315Z

Up Next


New York heads to Cleveland for a Tuesday night tilt with a hot Cavaliers club. Safe travels, Knickerbockers.

Box Score

* Should be one more, but someone accidentally deleted the NBA Cup Final from the records.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...-105-bulls-99-scenes-from-a-clutch-kat-finish
 
The Knicks are a a good team. Stop acting like they aren’t

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NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 21: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks looks on during the game against the Houston Rockets on February 21, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

This hasn’t been the dream season we envisioned entering the year. If you came from the future and told everyone the Knicks would be the No. 3 seed and considerably behind the No. 1 seed in late February, I’d imagine near-universal disappointment. That’s fine, that’s reasonable.

What’s not reasonable is the way some people act after every single loss. Losing sucks, there’s no question about it, but you don’t need to write a thinkpiece about the entire organization after an off night. It’s an 82-game season, you’re not going undefeated. I think most people understand that, but then you also get takes like this on social media after the team’s disheartening loss against the Pistons on Thursday.

"I cannot wait till we get to the summer so they could blow this team the f*** up… Has there ever been a more unlikeable 'good' team in NBA history?"@JCMacriNBA condemns the Knicks effort after their 3rd loss of the season to the Detroit Pistons, bringing their total margin… pic.twitter.com/ExtPJ3aHPH

— Knicks Film School (@KnickFilmSkool) February 20, 2026

If you’re ever on social media, especially when one of these games are going on, you see the same tropes.

“This team doesn’t care”, “They’re soft.”, “They’re pathetic.”

This is especially the narrative after all the Pistons games. I understand it’s a different Pistons team than last year, but we also have to remember the regular season doesn’t tell the whole story. There’s also a misrepresentation of how Thursday’s game went. While the Knicks absolutely got punked in the first two meetings, they overall played with a good amount of intensity on Thursday. You know why the score was lopsided? The No. 3 3pt shooting team in basketball couldn’t buy one, while the worst wide-open shooting team in basketball once again shot over 40%.

The sky is not falling because the Pistons seem to have our number. There’s no guarantee that, assuming the Knicks stay in the 2 or 3-seed, the Pistons would even be the matchup in the Eastern Conference Finals! People saying that these three matchups are the reason they have no chance to come out of the East are being dishonest.

Different sects of the fanbase have different criticisms of the team. Some blame Jalen Brunson’s isocentric playstyle, which prevents guys like Mikal Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns from getting in rhythm. Some blame Mike Brown’s coaching style for not getting Towns the ball and treating him more like Domantas Sabonis. Some get on Josh Hart for the bad stretches when he misses an assignment off-ball defensively, and his reluctance to shoot. And then, of course, there’s criticism of Bridges and Towns for being soft.

Are some of these criticisms warranted? Sure! The Knicks are far from perfect, but they’re still a damn good basketball team. But some of these narratives are silly, especially the small, small sect that calls Brunson a ballhog and shows misleading on-off numbers.

Exhibit A of Jalen Brunson refusing to be a point guard pic.twitter.com/7JmpkazwPc

— YG_BK (@ygeasymoney) February 20, 2026

But honestly, the most frustrating part about this stuff is glorifying the past. And no, I’m not talking about the 1990s or the 2013 Knicks, I’m talking about the recent teams. There was an unironic tweet during the 11-game skid that the 2021 Knicks, because of the defense and physicality, would beat this team in a playoff series.

(Speaking of the 11-game skid, this is possibly the worst tweet I‘ve ever seen.)

Watching the Knicks these last two seasons has been as bad as watching them during the 2021-22 season & the beginning of the 2022-23 season

— sam 🫥 (@lbf_mas) January 16, 2026

Nostalgia is a real virus. That 2021 team was the first playoff team for an entire generation of Knicks fans, but they were tremendously flawed. Once the Hawks learned to turn Julius Randle’s water off, it was over. Do we really think that team would be able to score enough in the playoffs and lock up Brunson and KAT? Seriously?

The more sensible nostalgia acts are coming from the 2023-25 teams. The Knicks played with a certain level of grit then, but people forget how things went for those teams.

The 2023 Knicks were an inspiring group that was genuinely ten-deep. The problem? The team’s second-best playoff performer was 23-year-old Quentin Grimes. Randle, RJ Barrett, and Immanuel Quickley were terrible against the Heat.

The 2024 Knicks might’ve been the most fun team to root for, and that’s what this boils down to. You love to root for the undermanned underdog with likable players and personalities, who play with a certain level of nastiness. But that team had a ceiling; their second option was Donte DiVincenzo. Now, if you want to talk about the January 2024 Knicks, I’m listening. They were special. But you were never getting that team again, not with the CBA forcing Isaiah Hartenstein to OKC.

There’s also a lot of comparing Tom Thibodeau to Mike Brown, some reasonable, some not. But let’s not act like the same people who are yearning for Thibs weren’t the ones begging for him to be fired midseason last year.

The Cavs fired JB Bickerstaff despite leading the team to the playoffs for three straight seasons, and now they’re 32-5 under Kenny Atkinson. Meanwhile, Knicks fans say we can’t fire Thibs because “we were bad before he got here”😂 pic.twitter.com/xW37HBTdAn

— DockNYK (@DockNYK) January 15, 2025
But remember alot of Knicks fans celebrated thibs being fired in the offseason and wanted to act like Mike Brown was the reincarnation of Pat Riley pic.twitter.com/GlEdq4ZlFn

— DockNYK (@DockNYK) January 20, 2026

And that’s my point. There has always been something to complain about. In 2021, they couldn’t score. In 2023, they had no offense aside from Brunson in the playoffs. In 2024, a similar story. Then, when you add the offensive firepower, the pendulum swings the other way.

Make no mistake, this is the best Knicks team since Patrick Ewing was wearing orange and blue. They’re on pace for 52 wins. While they’ve had frustrating losses to Detroit and San Antonio, they’ve beaten Boston, Cleveland, Houston, Toronto, and Denver. They went 0-10 vs the top-three teams last year and 5-14 against teams that won at least 50 games. This year, they’re 7-5 (technically 6-5 but the NBA Cup counts to me, dammit) against teams playing at a 50 or more win pace. It’s a Pistons issue right now, not a crippling league issue.

It’s one thing when the likes of Draymond Green or Charles Barkley use buzzwords to insult this team. They’re outside media personalities who benefit from clicks. It’s disingenuous when it’s our fans doing it, pretending that we aren’t less than six years removed from Mo Harkless starting games with regularity and less than eight years removed from Allonzo Trier being our most promising player.

You know what, maybe I just need to get off social media.

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...are-a-a-good-team-stop-acting-like-they-arent
 
Knicks Bulletin: ‘I understand it’s something that we need to talk about’

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CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - FEBRUARY 22: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks reacts to scoring and not getting a foul during the first half against the Chicago Bulls at the United Center on February 22, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

New York half-baked its play for the greater part of Sunday’s affair…

…but turned up the heat late and did enough to win another game.

Here’s a bunch of stuff said of late by your Knicks superheroes.

Just silly! pic.twitter.com/4XkWtkLlox

— Amarú Moses (@knick888221) February 23, 2026

Mike Brown


On Robinson’s absence on Sunday and his back-to-back management:

“Obviously, he hasn’t played a back-to-back yet. But I’m not talking to our medical staff asking, ‘Is this going to be like this the rest of the year?’”

On Towns’ defensive impact against the Bulls:

“Not only did he get a double-double, he was great for us defensively.”

On Towns’ different opportunities and usage compared to last season:

“I understand it’s something that we need to talk about, and I’m OK talking about it, but until those numbers change, there’s not much for me to say because he’s getting an opportunity. We don’t call a ton of plays. Now, you compare his numbers to last year, [backup center Mitchell Robinson] didn’t play in the regular season. KAT averaged 36, 37 minutes a game. Mitch is playing now. Landry didn’t play last year. He’s playing. We’re trying to get him up to 17 to 22, 23 minutes a game. We’ve got Jose [Alvarado] now. … So when you do that, guys’ minutes are going to go down. Not only are guys’ minutes going to go down, but guys’ field goal attempts are going to go down and all the things that you see impact the game statistically.”

On Yabusele’s fit in New York and lack of minutes:

“The position he’s shown he’s best in in the NBA — the small-ball center spot — we just didn’t have the minutes consistently for him to be there. And then when he was at the 4. For us, because of our centers, the matchups weren’t always there. So we had to pick and choose when he was on the floor and how we were going to play him.

“His skill set is obviously as a small-ball center. And it’s picking and popping. And then it’s spacing the floor. And the way we try to play, we try to move a lot. Cut a lot. And then it’s tough because we have [Karl-Anthony Towns] playing heavy minutes, and we have [Mitchell Robinson] playing heavy minutes. This is a situation in Chicago — and even in Philadelphia [where Yabusele was last season], it was a situation where they were able to find consistent minutes for him. Because he’s a good player. Started for the French national team. We all know what they did. The style of play is a little bit different.”

Karl-Anthony Towns on feeling confident on and off the court and how having expectations is a blessing. @nyknicks | #NewYorkForever | @KarlTowns pic.twitter.com/0lDNA82Hwk

— KNICKS ON MSG (@KnicksMSGN) February 23, 2026

Karl-Anthony Towns


On embracing title-winning expectations:

“I think as a team, it’s a blessing to have expectations and have high standards. It means we’re doing something right. And last year, we did a lot right. The fans are expecting even more from us with an offseason and another season under our belts with experience and unity and understanding each other. So when we get in those spots in the playoffs, we can find ourselves winning the game. For me, personally, my career’s been full of pressure. I’ve always been held to a higher standard than everyone. I understand that criticism comes with that when you’re not succeeding, and rightfully so. My whole career has been based on me getting that ring and winning. I understand more than ever now in my career that winning trumps everything.”

On the Knicks’ unity and sacrifice:

“That’s why I’m so adamant about our team staying together, having that continuity, having that unity. Nothing deterring us or dividing us on this team. It’s a special team, we have a special group of guys. For us to win, it’s going to take all of us to win a championship. I’m so blessed that I’ve got these guys in this locker room and I’ve got my support system, my family, my fiancée that are pushing me to another level even from last year to do what’s needed for this team to win. Whether that’s to sacrifice more like this year or like in these last two games, if I’m touching the basketball, I got to make the shots. I’m glad I’ve been able to do that for my teammates and we’re able to win these games.”

On not using excuses in dealing with back-to-backs:

“There’s no excuses. We’re professionals. We’ve gotta come out here and do our job. Our fans expect it. The city expects us to play with tenacity. Tonight, I thought we did a good job of not making excuses and getting the job done.”

On his confidence coming from preparation:

“I work hard on my game. I put the time and effort in, and in my mind and my support system, I don’t think anyone’s put more time in their craft than me, and that’s where my confidence has grown from. It’s not from touching the ball in the game. It’s from touching the ball in the empty gym with no light, no fans and my [player development] coach Mark Bryant. So I’m extremely confident in my game. I’m extremely confident mentally that when I do touch the ball, I can do something really special with it. When I touch the basketball, I’ve gotta make these shots, and I’m glad I’ve been able to do that to help us win these two games.”

On dealing with pressure and having a clear goal in mind:

“I think as a team, it’s a blessing to have expectations and high standards. That means we’re doing something right, and last year we did a lot right and fans are expecting a lot from us. For me personally, my career’s been full of pressure, and I’ve always been held to a higher standard than everyone, and I always understood that criticism comes when you’re not succeeding and rightfully so. It’s a special team. We have a special group of guys, and for us to win, it’s gonna take all of us to win a championship.”

Josh Hart playing Benny the Bull in air hockey 😭

(h/t @KnicksBeast) pic.twitter.com/AGRwzKBeUV

— Fullcourtpass (@Fullcourtpass) February 23, 2026

Josh Hart


On navigating the weekend back-to-back:

“An 8:30 game and then traveling for a back-to-back game, I think, is outrageous. But happy we were able to get the win.”

On Bridges’ offensive involvement:

“I guess [he does have high expectations given the outgoing draft picks]. At the end of the day, Kal’s gonna do what he’s gotta do. He’s gonna find his way. Like I said, I think there’s times where we can do a better job of making sure he’s involved offensively and aggressive and get him into his spots, same thing with OG [Anunoby[ and JC [Jordan Clarkson] when he plays — someone like that who can score, we’ve gotta make sure we put him in position to be successful and not just doing it within the flow of the offense.”

On Bridges’ clutch ability:

“With Kal, I’ll let y’all figure that one out. We know what we have in him. We know what he means to the team. And the beauty of him is he can have a terrible game the whole game and make a game-winning play, and I think he’s done that — I wouldn’t say terrible game — but he’s done that plenty of times, making game-winning plays late in the game when we need him. That’s why we got him.”

Jalen Brunson


On Towns seeing shots fall:

“When anyone sees the ball go through the hoop, it gives a level of confidence and makes you feel like you can do anything on the court. Then you shot-fake, they bite, and then you’re able to make plays for yourself or others. For (Towns), it’s a great sign. He’s sticking with it. That’s who he is.”

Gilbert Arenas on the narrative of Karl Anthony Towns being soft:

“I make fun of KAT just cause of the mannerisms and I’m a troll but when it comes to just basketball, PF or C, he has a claim for the last 11 years he has been top two or three in his position every year”

(Via… pic.twitter.com/VdCxM1uD3f

— NBA Courtside (@NBA__Courtside) February 23, 2026

Gilbert Arenas


On pushing back against soft narrative:

“When you look at KAT, he’s just running around and he says things in interviews. You think that’s actually how he plays the game. If you really look at the play, he does play a rugged style of basketball. He does bang. He’s just bang, bang, spin, got you. But he just has a shot. And there’s times where if he has a little guy on him, he shoots it. He has a big guy on him, he shoots it. But he will sit there post up, too a little for a big guy, but he’s smart enough to know, well yeah I have a little guy on me. If I try to bang first he’s going to flop, that’s an offensive foul. Well I can just shoot right over him. So I can’t say he plays the game wrong or right. He plays the game how he sees it in the moment.”

"I still watch it to this day."

–– Carmelo Anthony on "I'm Coming Home"

15 years ago today: pic.twitter.com/jjWA4qPJ5B

— New York Basketball (@NBA_NewYork) February 23, 2026

Source: https://www.postingandtoasting.com/...tand-its-something-that-we-need-to-talk-about
 
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