Norman Powell, a man determined to impose his will, delivered a team-high 19 points and 3 assists. And alongside him, Davion Mitchell — precise, efficient, purposeful — added 18 points on 7-for-12 shooting, including two from beyond the arc, with 5 assists to round out a stellar performance.
For the Knicks, young Miles McBride stood tall. Twenty-five points, five three-pointers, and the unmistakable swagger of a player refusing to concede. Yet even his brilliance could not alter the outcome. The Knicks fall to 8–5, while the Heat climb to 8–6.
But there is more — the cruel hand of misfortune. OG Anunoby, the defensive anchor, felled by a hamstring injury, now sidelined for at least two weeks. A punishing blow for a team already searching for answers.
And once again, let it be stated with clarity: the best play on the floor did not belong to a Knick. When the game hung in the balance, when the moment demanded greatness, Karl-Anthony Towns had two opportunities to seize it… and both fell short.
A wild finish, electrifying in its chaos, but in the end, the New York Knicks come up short against the seventh-place Miami Heat. Such is the relentless, unforgiving nature of sport.
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