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Tag: jalen brunson

  • Jalen Brunson’s status looms large for slumping Knicks vs Suns

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    Just five minutes into a road matchup against the Sacramento Kings, the struggling New York Knicks lost Jalen Brunson to an ankle injury. Eventually, he was ruled out for the remainder of the game with an ankle sprain.

    The next-day diagnosis would suggest the Knicks weren’t losing Brunson to a long-term setback, but a positive injury update couldn’t erase the fact that a poor effort in Sacramento led to a 112-101 loss against a team the Knicks knew they should’ve defeated.

    Since the start of 2026, the Knicks are 2-6. They went from in-season champions to being in a slump. Without Brunson against the Golden State Warriors on January 15, the Knicks were dominated with a 126-113 loss. That was their second loss in a row.

    Could Jalen Brunson Return to the Lineup?

    There’s a chance. On Friday night, the Knicks’ initial injury report listed Brunson as questionable to play on Saturday night against the Phoenix Suns.

    Brunson will likely have to go through his morning shootaround and pregame warmup routine before deciding on his final status for the evening. Obviously, the All-Star will push to play, but the Knicks can’t further risk his health. He’s too important, and they aren’t strong enough without him.

    The Knicks didn’t have to play without the MVP-caliber guard much this year. Brunson missed two games in mid-November, and the Knicks split those matchups with a win and a loss. There was a lone absence on December 23, and that’s it before Brunson’s recent ankle injury.

    In 37 games this season, Brunson has averaged 28.2 points, 6.1 assists, and 2.7 rebounds. He is shooting 48 percent from the field and 38 percent from three.

    The Knicks will get clarity on Brunson’s final playing status soon enough. The Knicks and the Suns are set for a 7:30 PM ET tip-off on Saturday night. New York is looking to climb out of a two-game skid, while Phoenix is in a similar boat.

    For all the latest NBA news and rumors, head over to Newsweek Sports.

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  • Losing streak is now 6: Atlanta Hawks fall to New York Knicks 128-125

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    The score was tied at 121 with less than two minutes to play when New York Knicks All-Star guard Jalen Brunson (34 points) squared up Atlanta Hawks All-Star guard Trae Young (9 points and 10 assists) and nailed a jump shot to put the Knicks ahead by two points. He did the same thing at the end of the first quarter to give his team a 33-27 lead. Young returned the favor and made a pair of free throws to tie the game before the Hawks regained the lead 125-124.

    Onyeka Okongwu (above) led the Hawks with 31 points and 14 rebounds during the loss to the Knicks on Saturday night.
    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The game had been a back-and-forth affair throughout, and after the Knicks were back in front 126-125 courtesy of free throws from OG Anunoby 15 points and 10 rebounds), Atlanta had the ball and 15.6 seconds to seize the day. Following a turnover and two more Anunoby free throws, Atlanta had the ball back, but this time they were down by three points with 7.3 seconds to play.

    They missed. They lost. Again. The 128-125 loss was the sixth consecutive loss for the Hawks. After the game, Hawks head coach Quin Snyder said his team fought hard.

    “I thought our whole team competed,” Snyder said. “We just have to fight and we fought.”

    “I thought our whole team competed,” Hawks head coach Quin Snyder (above) said. “We just have to fight and we fought.”
    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The Knicks (now 22-9 overall) and Hawks (15-18), not necessarily rivals, are more like interested parties due to the large number of New Yorkers now residing in Atlanta. The teams experienced 10 lead changes during the first quarter of Saturday night’s game.

    Residing on opposite ends of the Eastern Conference standings, the Knicks were nipping at the heels of the Detroit Pistons, a team that has defeated the Hawks twice this season and has the best record in the East. The Hawks, on the other hand, had lost their last five games and were looking for a spark of any kind.

    Atlanta was out-rebounded for the sixth consecutive game on Saturday. The Knicks had twice as many offensive rebounds during the game. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Rebounding has been an issue for Atlanta during its losing streak, and the first quarter ended with the team losing another rebounding battle. Early in the second quarter, the Knicks were ahead 21-11 on the boards. Knicks big man Karl-Anthony Towns (36 points and 15 rebounds) had five of those rebounds to go along with eight points. One of those offensive rebounds led to a dunk by Knicks forward Mikail Bridges (14 points and 8 assists) for a 45-37 lead. Moments earlier, Bridges dunked on a fastbreak to bring the largely pro-Knicks crowd to its feet. A Bridges three-pointer would give New York its largest lead of the first half, 59-49, with 3:30 to play before halftime.

    The Knicks would be up by 16 points by the time Hawks head coach Quin Snyder called a timeout at the 8:19 mark of the third quarter. The Hawks were out of sync on defense. At this point in the game, the Knicks had more offensive rebounds, total rebounds, and steals.

    Atlanta’s best players, Jalen Johnson and Young, got off to slow starts. Combined, they had six first-half points. When Young was subbed out of the game at the 6:55 mark of the third quarter, he looked dejected and sat slumped on the end of the Hawks’ bench. When Young returned to the game with two minutes remaining in the quarter, he quickly took the ball to the basket, scored, and was fouled. The successful free throw may have only been Young’s fifth point of the game, but it brought Atlanta within six points of the Knicks.

    Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (above, with the ball) came into the game on Saturday, averaging nearly 30 points per game.
    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The fourth quarter had the Knicks, particularly Towns, at the free-throw line often. When he wasn’t at the line, he was nailing long three-pointers like the two he made to help give the Knicks a 112-100 lead with 7:41 to play.

    Hawks’ undersized center Onyeka Okongwu (31 points and 14 rebounds) played one of his most complete games with 25 points and 13 rebounds. The same could be said for Nikeil Alexander-Walker, who came off the bench on Saturday to provide instant offense whenever the Hawks needed it. His three-pointer with five minutes to play pulled Atlanta within three points of the Knicks at 114-111.

    The Hawks will face another quality opponent and a much bigger test when they travel west to Oklahoma City to take on the Thunder on Monday, December 29. It will be the first time the two teams will play this season, and an annual homecoming for Young.

    Atlanta will return to State Farm Arena to host the Minnesota Timberwolves and Atlanta native Anthony Edwards on New Year’s Eve. The game will have a special 3 p.m. tipoff.

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Sixers Eastern Conference preview: Will the Mikal Bridges trade make the Knicks a championship-caliber team?

    Sixers Eastern Conference preview: Will the Mikal Bridges trade make the Knicks a championship-caliber team?

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    With much of the Sixers’ 2024-25 roster locked in more than a month removed from the start of a franchise-altering free agency, the time has come to evaluate their opposition in the Eastern Conference: of last season’s playoff teams in the East, which ones pose the biggest threats to the Sixers, and how do the teams match up with this new-look team?

    Up second is the team who eliminated the Sixers from last year’s playoffs: the New York Knicks.


    Sixers Eastern Conference preview: The Celtics aren’t going anywhere


    The Knicks fell to the Indiana Pacers in the second round of the playoffs last year after being absolutely devastated by injuries. Julius Randle missed the last multiple months of the regular season and the entire playoffs while OG Anunoby and Mitchell Robinson missed plenty of time in both the regular season and the playoffs and Bojan Bogdanovic went down during the first round. By the time the team was eliminated, Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart were both hurt as well.

    Committing to their brand of collecting former Villanova Wildcats, the Knicks traded Bogdanovic along with five first-round picks, one first-round pick swap and more — an absolutely gigantic collection of assets — to the Brooklyn Nets to acquire Mikal Bridges.

    Despite Bridges being in the fold, the team prioritized Anunoby over starting center Isaiah Hartenstein in free agency. Anunoby returned on a massive five-year deal, but Hartenstein departed for the Oklahoma City Thunder.

    But the most significant move the Knicks made for their long-term health might have been convincing Brunson to sign a four-year extension at a rate considerably below his market value, which should enable them to eventually ink Bridges to a long-term deal along with Brunson and Anunoby, with the potential for Randle to stick around as well if he and the team can find a reasonable number to compromise at.

    Roster changes

    How exactly will the Knicks look different next year, aside from Randle regaining full health? Here is what Knicks President Leon Rose was up to in a busy offseason:

    Added: Mikal Bridges (trade), Keita Bates-Diop (trade), Pacome Dadiet (No. 25 overall pick in NBA Draft), Tyler Kolek (No. 34 overall pick in NBA Draft), Cam Payne (free agency)

    Retained: OG Anunoby, Precious Achiuwa

    Extended: Jalen Brunson (four years, $156.5 million)

    Lost: Isaiah Hartenstein, Bojan Bogdanovic, Alec Burks, Shake Milton, Mamadi Diakite

    Perhaps the biggest question surrounding the Knicks at this point is how a returning Randle will fit alongside not just Bridges, but the full-fledged superstar version of Brunson that has taken the league by storm. Randle is an extremely ball-dominant player — and, to be fair, he has become a formidable offensive force — but he is not nearly the scorer or creator that Brunson is. In the era of the NBA’s punitive second apron, would the Knicks be better off simply not paying Randle when they already have multiple high-level offensive players?

    The most concerning departure, clearly, is that of Hartenstein, who established himself as a quality starting center thanks to excellent rebounding and rim protection, pristine touch around the rim and some impressive passing chops. Not only did the Knicks lose a terrific player who was integral to their success last year, but they now find their center depth to be shaky. Robinson is a good player when healthy, but is constantly battling injuries and is not quite as good as Hartenstein. The team was able to bring Achiuwa back to be the team’s backup center. 

    Depth chart projection

    The Knicks have seven players on their roster who are without question starting-caliber players. Bringing Donte DiVincenzo and Josh Hart off the bench is an unbelievable luxury, blossoming youngster Miles “Deuce” McBride is well on his way to reaching that status, and Achiuwa is a viable backup center. Former Sixer Cam Payne is a perfectly reasonable 10th man for any team, and gives the Knicks some additional ball-handling that they may need as McBride continues to grow as a creator. 

    PG SG SF PF C
    Jalen Brunson Mikal Bridges OG Anunoby Julius Randle Mitchell Robinson
    Miles McBride Donte DiVincenzo Keita Bates-Diop Josh Hart Precious Achiuwa
    Cam Payne Jericho Sims

    On a team full of quality rotation players, though, the center rotation sticks out like a sore thumb. Robinson has only played at least 70 games once in his career and has played fewer than 60 games in half of his professional seasons. Achiuwa has enough athleticism and defensive versatility to be an acceptable backup center in the regular season, but might be optimized as a change-of-pace sort of player like he was against the Sixers in the first round last year. Jericho Sims has continually failed to leave his mark and prove he is a rotation-caliber center.

    Matching up with the Sixers

    The Sixers and Knicks meeting in the playoffs again feels very realistic, perhaps in a second-round matchup where the winner goes on to face the Celtics in the Eastern Conference Finals. It is surely a series that everybody would love to see again, particularly with Bridges and Paul George now added to the mix.

    But when teams prepare for a playoff series, their primary objective is often limiting the other team’s best player. So to me, the most intriguing storylines here are Brunson and Embiid, two superstars separated by nearly a foot and almost 100 pounds who each find ways to torment opposing defenses.

    The Knicks could be particularly vulnerable against Embiid moving forward, as Hartenstein was a major part of their schemes against the former NBA MVP. Robinson can do a stellar job against Embiid for moments at a time because of his incredible length, but he is far too foul-happy to be trusted in a big-minute role against someone as adept at inciting whistles as Embiid. They do have the requisite perimeter defenders to at least contain George and Tyrese Maxey, which is not something most teams can say.

    Meanwhile, the Sixers have added more pieces capable of being thrown at Brunson this summer. Kelly Oubre Jr. was outstanding while defending the Knicks’ All-Star point guard for the first two games of last season’s playoff series, but Brunson got the better of him later on (though at times Oubre stood his ground and Brunson simply made difficult shots). Caleb Martin is a tenable option against Brunson, and George might even be for moments at a time if his legs are fresh. If Randle does resume in his role with some sort of significant offensive workload, though, his bruising nature at the power forward position could also cause issues for a Sixers team lacking muscle at the four.

    The Knicks seem like a much safer bet to win a ton of regular season games than the Sixers, in part because of their continuity and in part because they are less reliant on players with overly extensive injury histories. But if these two teams were to meet in a playoff series while at full strength… get your popcorn ready.


    Follow Adam on Twitter: @SixersAdam

    Follow PhillyVoice on Twitter: @thephillyvoice

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • ‘Unfortunately, They Made Us Fall in Love’

    ‘Unfortunately, They Made Us Fall in Love’

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    Photo: Julia Nikhinson/AP

    It was always going to be an uphill battle. After a Game 6 in which the Knicks lost 116-103 to the Pacers and the pesky heartbeat of the team, Josh Hart, suffered an abdominal injury, the Knicks had their work cut out for them. Before tipoff, ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski dropped a bomb that gave fans more reason to hope: Hart and OG Anunoby, who’d been out since Game 2, were both going to play. It seemed like it could really happen this time.

    Robert Quinn, a newish fan, says he had been a little nervous, but says, “knowing my Knicks? We got this.” But it’s looking grim: Pacers 70, Knicks 55 at the half. Victor Ng, an on-and-off follower of the team since the Patrick Ewing glory days of 1994, had bet on a very specific outcome: Knicks by four points. Now he’s saying, “I think FanDuel took my money.” But he turns philosophical all the same: “Being a fan is being on a rollercoaster. This season, they’re up and down but at least it’s ending up on a high note. So I can’t complain.” Then he adds, “if they can tie, they can win. If they’re not pulling within 8, they’re not coming back.”

    Bella, age 10, usually leans toward hockey, but she’d been pulled toward basketball by the playoff run. “They’re New York, I root for New York, I’m with New York.” She has a message: “to the Knicks, no matter what happens today, you’re an amazing team and we’re supporting you all the way.”

    At Mustang Harry’s, a block south of the Garden, fans are straining to see the TVs through the windows. Rich Templeton, a lifelong fan, has already been to two more bars nearby, Stout and The Triple Crown, and he says this patch of sidewalk was the best vantage point he’s found. “They’re coming back,” he says. “Donte [DiVincenzo] is gonna lead them back. Donte and [Jalen] Brunson. Donte’s got a little spunk to him and he can shoot the 3 ball.” How does he see the night going if the Knicks pull out a comeback victory? “It’s not Philadelphia, so I don’t expect things to be burned or anything, but I think it’ll be a nice lively atmosphere.”

    Tom, an 18-year-old who flew in from Naples, Florida, disagrees: “If they win I think the city’s gonna burn the fuck down. Empire State Building’s going down, and Penn Station is burning to the ground. Simple as that.” He and his two friends have courtside seats, he says, arriving at halftime. They’re optimistic for a comeback but also realists. “It’s always a letdown, as Knicks fans. That’s what makes us loyal fans.”

    Back by the entrance to the Garden, a pair of vendors are hawking NEW YORK VS. EVERYBODY and JALEN MVP BRUNSON shirts. Another seller says of his prices, “If we win, this goes up.”

    Halfway through the fourth quarter, hope is fading. Fans start trickling out of the Garden onto the steps where Michael and his friend Kevin are standing. Michael says he’s walked past the arena on his commute every day for the past ten years. When we ask him whether he and Kevin are Knicks fans, Michael says, “We wish we weren’t after this game.” Kevin adds, “we overcame so much this season … just for it to end it like this.”

    Draco, a content creator and 76ers fan who watched as the Knicks eliminated his team two weeks ago, came up from Philly this morning “just to watch them lose.” He walks over to us, livestreaming from his phone, and also starts interviewing Michael and Kevin. “Y’all have so little faith in your team right now. There’s still six minutes left in the game. And y’all really leaving right now, what’s going on?” But they’re still proud. Michael says, “We grind, we grit, we work hard and I feel like at the end of the day like that’s what matters. We support them. We love them as players and as people you know, we protect them, we take care of our own.”

    Jeff Knight, a 38-year-old who’s been a fan since he was 6, tells me he’d headed for the exit after news spread inside the arena that Brunson had fractured his hand. Another fan, Adam Silvers, had been sitting in section 201, where the injury news spread as people got updates on their phones. When he got word, Silvers thought, “well, that’s the end of that.” He’d spent more than $800 on his tickets.

    Rami Evgi, a season-ticket holder for 30 years, says he knew the Knicks were going to lose from the beginning of the game. He left early because he couldn’t bear to see the ugly end. He’d flipped every other playoff ticket he had for the money, but he’d saved game 7 for himself. Even with the loss, he says, it was still the best Knicks season since 1999, when the Knicks lost to the San Antonio Spurs in the finals. This season, he says, was sweet because it was a surprise, “I didn’t even know if they would make the playoffs. If everybody was healthy, nobody could have stopped us.”

    Amber, a brand-new fan at 26, had seen them win in Philadelphia. She too is down, but she’s already relishing the memory: “They’ve done so well, honestly. A lot of the players got injured, but with the few players they have left, they did amazing. We’re sad, but honestly they did a good job.”

    Pat, 35, and Tracy, 36, are New Yorkers who paid $12,000 each for their center-court season tickets. But Tracy is, like her dad, a Celtics fan. “She is happily married to me, I believe,” Pat reassures us, and possibly himself. “She roots for the Knicks unless it’s against the Celtics.” Ever since Julius Randle got hurt in January, “it was always like, agh, the season’s probably not going to be great. But then everyone kept trying their guts out. And unfortunately, they made us fall in love. And then you know, just sucks to see someone try so fucking hard…”

    One of the first Pacers fans to leave the arena, when his team was up 17 with three minutes to go, is a lone guy in a golden-yellow team hoodie. A bunch of random Knicks fans immediately circle him, yelling “get the fuck out of here you bitch-ass” and “fuck the Pacers.” (It was more aggro posturing than actual threat.) The Pacers fan doesn’t seem to mind the taunting — his team was through, after all. A family of six dressed in Pacers jerseys, with three young children plus an infant in Mom’s arms, says they feel “amazing,” barely aware that Knicks fans are screaming at them to go home. Joe and Jack Judson, also Pacers fans, aren’t fazed by being outnumbered. Joe says, “that’s the thing about New York fans, they’re passionate.” The two spent $10,000 per ticket and Joe estimates that the trip cost about $27,000 altogether. Jack, his son, says it’s the best game he’s ever been to. He’s a rising senior at Purdue University in Indiana, and says his buddies back home are “electric.” His phone has been blowing up.

    After the final buzzer — Pacers 130, Knicks 109 — a swarm of mostly young men gather at the top of the escalators to Penn Station at 33rd street. United in their loss, they start chanting “Fuck Trae Young,” a player who is not on the Indiana Pacers nor is even in the playoffs. The animosity is still fresh from when Young’s Atlanta Hawks beat the Knicks in the first round in 2021.

    Silvers is optimistic: “This is probably year one for this core. They probably got three or four years in them. They got a lot of draft picks and a lot of capital. So they can go out and get a pretty big name. And Randle will be healthy and he gives the Knicks 25 and 10 easily every night.” Knight thinks the Knicks should part ways with Randle in the offseason, “based on how the Knicks played without him. Brunson took his game to a different level once Randle was out.” Silvers thinks “maybe they get someone like a Kevin Durant if he thinks MSG is cool enough now.”  Evgi thinks they need “another good guy, not Kevin Durant or Devin Booker, but a surprise, like Hartenstein. Just a good player.”

    Cops are patrolling the area, dispersing the crowds and drawing them down from lampposts. A fan jokes to his friend, “Knicks in 8,” suggesting that this was still their year. The crowd shifts to “fuck Tyrese,” the Pacers star, then “fuck Embiid,” the 76ers star. Anything is worthy of comment — including the entire sport of hockey, as they shift over to yelling “let’s go Rangers.” An altercation with a Knicks fan prompts an officer to shove him back, and several other cops step in to push the crowd away and firmly suggest that they all go home. The last chant before the police disperse them is “fuck the Celtics.” The city does not burn. The price of the T-shirts drops from $20 to $10.

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    Liz Boyd,Britina Cheng

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  • Knicks Game 7 preview: It’s do-or-die time at the Garden

    Knicks Game 7 preview: It’s do-or-die time at the Garden

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    New York Knicks’ Jalen Brunson (11) gestures to fans after making a three-point shot during the second half of Game 5 in an NBA basketball second-round playoff series against the Indiana Pacers, Tuesday, May 14, 2024, in New York. The Knicks won 121-91. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)