Game Recap: And just like that, the good vibes didn’t last.
The Oklahoma City Thunder handled business Sunday night, beating the New York Knicks 111-100. Not a classic. More of a slow squeeze. They controlled the tempo, made the extra pass, and when the Knicks flirted with a push late third boom, door shut.
But the score took a backseat for a minute. Because Miles McBride finally got back on the floor… and then disappeared again.
Eleven minutes. That’s all.
Miles McBride’s Night Ends the Hard Way
First game back… then another setback?
McBride hadn’t played since February. Hernia surgery. Long rehab. Finally cleared.
And early on? Looked like himself. Moving well, picking up ballhandlers full court, letting a couple threes fly without hesitation. The Knicks have missed that edge that junkyard-dog defense, the willingness to guard up a position and scrap.
Then late third quarter, everything flipped.
Loose ball. Bodies on the floor. McBride dove no hesitation and collided with Lu Dort. Hard contact. The kind you hear more than see.
He stayed down.
Got up slow. Walked it off? Not really. Straight to the locker room. Done for the night.
Afterward, Knicks coach Mike Brown didn’t have much. Said he didn’t know what it was yet. That’s never a great sign.
Why McBride Matters More Than the Box Score
The Knicks’ weird depth puzzle
Here’s the thing the Knicks have been winning without him. A lot.
They came into this one 20-8 in games McBride missed. Even ripped off a seven-game streak before faceplanting in Charlotte on Friday. So yeah, on paper, they’ve survived.
But watch the games. It’s not that clean.
Bench scoring comes and goes. Some nights it’s a spark, some nights it’s a blackout. And their perimeter defense? Can get leaky when rotations stretch too thin.
That’s where McBride fits.
He’s hitting 42% from deep this season on real volume not spot duty, actual green-light stuff. Nearly seven attempts a night. Career highs across the board: 12.9 points, expanded role, more confidence. He’s not just a fill-in anymore. He’s part of the structure.
And when he was forced into starts earlier this year 14 of them he didn’t look overwhelmed. Looked like a guy earning minutes.
Turning Point: Thunder Slam the Door Late Third
OKC’s defense tightened, Knicks stalled
The Knicks were hanging around. Not pretty, but within striking distance.
Then OKC cranked it up.
Perimeter got clamped. Passing lanes disappeared. A couple empty Knicks possessions turned into easy runouts the other way. That’s the Thunder blueprint defense to offense, quick-hit scoring before you can blink.
New York’s offense stalled out into late-clock stuff. Forced looks. Bad spacing. You could feel it slipping.
And once OKC got breathing room, they didn’t give it back.
What’s Next for New York?
Can they afford another injury hit?
That’s the real question now.
The Knicks are already juggling lineups, trying to balance shot creation, spacing, and defense. Lose McBride again even short-term and you’re back to patchwork rotations.
Yes, they’re still top-10 in three-point makes and top-five in efficiency. The shooting is there.
But depth wins in April. Defense travels. And McBride checks both boxes when he’s right.
Right now? Nobody knows if he is.