Game Recap: So here come the Charlotte Hornets again. Five straight now. And this one? Never really felt in doubt late.
Charlotte rode a flamethrower night from Kon Knueppel and a steady floor game from LaMelo Ball to a 114-103 win over the New York Knicks on Thursday, another step in what’s turning into a full-blown playoff sprint.
Knueppel buried six triples no conscience, no hesitation, just letting it fly. Hornets spaced the floor, pinged the ball around, and every Knicks defensive rotation felt a step slow. By the fourth, you could see it: New York looked gassed, jumpers short, closeouts late.
Meanwhile, Charlotte kept stacking buckets. Simple. Effective. Backbreaking.
Key Performances
Kon Knueppel’s heater night
Twenty-six points. Six threes. And yeah, a couple of those were heat-checks that barely touched net.
The rookie (and let’s just say it steal of the draft chatter is getting louder) punished every lazy switch the Knicks threw at him. You go under? He shoots. You chase? He slips it and relocates. It’s grown-man shot-making already.
LaMelo doing LaMelo things
Ball finished with 22/6/5 and it felt quieter than that, which tells you everything.
He controlled tempo, picked apart the pick-and-roll, and kept Charlotte’s offense humming. No wild hero ball. Just reads, rhythm, and the occasional “how did he see that?” dime.
Five guys in double figures why it matters
And this is the real story. Not just one guy cooking everybody ate.
Charlotte had five players in double digits. Ball movement crisp. Shot profile clean. Corners filled. Knicks couldn’t key in on anything. You take away one option, two more pop up.
Turning Point
Third-quarter punch that stuck
Game was hanging around after halftime. Knicks still within shouting distance.
Then boom Hornets ripped off a run midway through the third. Couple quick threes, a leak-out, Ball pushing pace. Crowd got into it, Knicks lost their defensive shape, and that was basically it.
New York never fully recovered. They’d trim it to single digits, sure. But every time, Charlotte answered. No panic. Just execution.
What’s fueling this Hornets surge?
Let’s not sugarcoat it this team was a mess earlier in the year. Now? Completely different vibe.
Since late January, Charlotte’s won 23 of 29. That’s not a hot streak, that’s a personality shift.
They’re defending the perimeter better, getting into early offense, and the three-point volume is way up. More importantly, they actually look like they believe they belong in this race.
Eastern Conference playoff race where does Charlotte stand?
And yeah, it’s getting crowded.
The Toronto Raptors are holding onto that sixth seed at 40-32. Right behind them? Chaos.
Philadelphia 76ers sit seventh at 40-33, while Charlotte, the Orlando Magic, and the Miami Heat are all locked at 39-34.
So yeah — every game now? Feels like a playoff game. Lose one, you drop two spots. Win one, you’re breathing down the six-seed’s neck.
Around the East
Magic keep pace
Over in Orlando, the Orlando Magic weren’t about to blink.
Paolo Banchero went for 30, and Desmond Bane added 23 in a 121-117 win over the Sacramento Kings.
Same story as Charlotte offense clicking, stars delivering, staying right in that cluster.
Pistons roll without Cade
And then there’s the top of the East. The Detroit Pistons just keep stacking wins.
No Cade Cunningham (still out, scary situation with the lung), no problem.
Jalen Duren dropped 30 and 10, bullying the New Orleans Pelicans inside in a 129-108 win. Kevin Huerter chipped in 22, Daniss Jenkins added 19.
Detroit’s 53-20 now. Four-and-a-half up top. They lose in OT one night, come back and smack somebody the next. That’s a contender’s habit.
Can the Knicks steady themselves?
That’s the other side of this.
New York came in rolling offense humming, vibes good and just got out-executed. Plain and simple.
They didn’t clamp the arc, rotations were late, and the offense stalled when Charlotte switched up coverages. Fixable? Sure. But the margin for error in the East right now? Tiny.
And nights like this can snowball if you’re not careful.