Monday, March 9, 2026

Will the Real Knicks Please Stand Up?

 



The New York Knicks continue to play basketball like a team with two personalities.

One night they look like contenders. The next, like Sunday in Los Angeles, they look like a team still searching for itself.

The Los Angeles Lakers beat them 110–97 without LeBron James, which tells you plenty. Luka Dončić scored 35 points and controlled the game, while Austin Reaves added 25. The Lakers never trailed.

The Knicks made a run late, cutting a 23-point deficit to 10 when the Lakers went cold for six minutes in the fourth. But the Knicks did what inconsistent teams do: they wasted the opportunity.

They shot 8-for-34 from three and turned the ball over eight times in the fourth quarter.

Karl-Anthony Towns did his part with 25 points and 16 rebounds. Jalen Brunson scored 24, including 10 late.

And Mikal Bridges?
Twenty-seven minutes. Zero points.

That’s the Knicks in one stat line.

They started this trip by beating Denver. Two games later they can’t make a shot in Los Angeles against a team missing its biggest star.

Championship teams have bad nights. But they usually know who they are.

Right now the Knicks don’t.

History says inconsistent teams rarely win titles. The Houston Rockets in 1995 pulled it off behind Hakeem Olajuwon. The Dallas Mavericks did it in 2011 with Dirk Nowitzki.

But those teams found themselves when it mattered.

The Knicks are still looking for the real one.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Same Old Ending: Knicks Fall Short Again Against Thunder, 103–100

 


NEW YORK — The Knicks had the champs on the ropes for a moment Wednesday night. Naturally, it didn’t last.

The Oklahoma City Thunder walked into Madison Square Garden and walked out with a 103–100 win, the kind that looks competitive in the box score but leaves Knicks fans with that familiar hollow feeling. Close enough to convince yourself things are improving, far enough away to remind you how the story usually ends.

Chet Holmgren led the Thunder with 28 points and eight rebounds, tying a career high with six three-pointers. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander added 26 points, while Lu Dort chipped in 16 as Oklahoma City won its fourth straight. When the defending champions needed a bucket or a stop, they found one. When the Knicks needed the same, they found the rim.

New York had its chances. Plenty of them, actually.

Jalen Brunson finished with 16 points and a season-high 15 assists, but his shooting line — 5-for-18 — tells most of the story. OG Anunoby also scored 16, and Karl-Anthony Towns put up a respectable 17 points and 17 rebounds. Solid numbers. Hardworking numbers. The kind that look good until the final score reminds everyone that “solid” rarely beats “championship caliber.”

The Garden crowd got a brief taste of hope in the third quarter, which in Knicks history usually means the setup for disappointment. Down 63–48 midway through the period, New York exploded for a 24–9 run to claw back into the game. Brunson drilled a three-pointer that caught a friendly bounce to tie it, and Mikal Bridges buried another from deep with 1.2 seconds left in the quarter to give the Knicks an 80–77 lead.

For a moment, the building felt alive.

Then reality returned.

The Thunder calmly regained control early in the fourth quarter and spent the rest of the night doing what championship teams do: protecting a small lead like it was federal gold reserves. No panic, no mistakes, no dramatic collapses.

The Knicks, meanwhile, had the final possession with a chance to tie. Brunson missed a three. Anunoby missed another. Game over. Another night of “almost.”

Holmgren had set the tone long before that ending. The 7-foot-1 forward came out firing, scoring 14 points in the first quarter alone and knocking down four three-pointers. Oklahoma City built an early 44–31 lead before briefly forgetting how to score for five minutes, which is usually the only way teams let the Knicks hang around.

Holmgren eventually ended the drought with back-to-back threes late in the half, sending the Thunder to the locker room up 50–40.

There was also the usual bit of Garden drama. Early in the first quarter, the Knicks believed Gilgeous-Alexander should have been called for his third foul after crashing into Brunson. Instead, head coach Mike Brown picked up a technical while arguing the call, marking his first as Knicks coach. A fitting introduction to the experience of trying to beat a contender while hoping the officiating gods might blink first.

They didn’t.

The loss snapped New York’s three-game winning streak and served as a reminder of the thin margin separating hopeful playoff teams from actual champions. The Knicks, for all their effort, remain a team that fights, scrambles, rallies — and eventually comes up one possession short.

Two wins kept them from the NBA Finals last season. Nights like this make that distance feel much longer.

At some point, “close” stops being encouraging.

For Knicks fans, that realization arrived a long time ago.