Madison Square Garden has a memory. It remembers the great defensive teams, the ones that made every dribble feel like a chore and every possession feel earned. Last night, that memory didn’t match what was on the floor.
The Knicks’ defense, the backbone of their recent surge, vanished when they needed it most. In a 137–134 overtime loss to Indiana, a game with 39 lead changes and no shortage of drama, New York simply could not get the stops that have defined them over the past few weeks. It wasn’t just that they lost. It was how they lost — fast, loose, and far too generous.
Pascal Siakam got wherever he wanted, finishing with 30 points. Andrew Nembhard orchestrated like he owned the place, piling up 24 points and 10 assists. And the Pacers, a team that walked into the Garden with one of the worst road records in the conference, played like a group that had been there all along. Eight players in double figures. Forty-three bench points. Ball movement, cutting, and the kind of offensive freedom that makes defenses look like they’re chasing ghosts.
For a Knicks team that has prided itself on physicality and discipline, this one had to sting.
Jalen Brunson was magnificent again. Forty points, eight assists, five rebounds. He kept them steady, kept them alive, kept dragging them back into it. Josh Hart gave them everything with a triple-double — 15 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists — the kind of stat line that screams effort and heart. Karl-Anthony Towns battled for 22 points and 14 rebounds before fouling out late in overtime. The stars did their jobs.
But defense is a group project, and last night the group came up short.
The Pacers jumped out to nine straight points to open overtime, and that was the game. The Knicks made a furious late push, scoring eight points in the final 20 seconds, but that scramble at the end only underscored the problem. When you’re constantly chasing, constantly trying to erase mistakes, you’re not controlling the game. You’re reacting to it.
This wasn’t supposed to be the night Indiana came in and dictated terms. They entered with just three road wins. They were missing a key big man. They hadn’t beaten New York at the Garden since last year’s playoff series. Everything pointed to the Knicks holding serve at home, where they’ve been one of the best teams in the league.
Instead, the Pacers found rhythm early and never really lost it. They led by four with under two minutes left in regulation. The Knicks did well just to force overtime, with Towns calmly knocking down two free throws with two-tenths of a second remaining. That moment felt like a reprieve. It wasn’t. It was a delay.
When a game turns into a track meet, New York usually prefers to slow it down, make it physical, make every possession count. That identity didn’t show up. Indiana scored 137 points and did it without relying on just one star. They spread the floor, they moved the ball, and they forced New York into a defensive posture that looked unfamiliar and uncomfortable.
The Knicks have built their recent success on being hard to play against. They rebound. They contest. They rotate. They make you work. On this night, the Pacers got clean looks, second chances, and confidence. And once a team like Indiana starts believing, the scoreboard starts climbing in a hurry.
This loss doesn’t erase what the Knicks have been doing. It’s only their second defeat in the past 11 games and just the seventh at home all season. But it’s a reminder that the margin is thin. When the defense slips, even a little, everything else gets harder. Every possession feels heavier. Every mistake costs more.
The Garden expects effort. It expects toughness. It expects that the home team will make opponents uncomfortable. Last night, Indiana looked comfortable. That’s the part that will linger.
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