The New York Knicks looked dead for about a quarter and a half Sunday night. Down 21 in the second. Defense leaking. Crowd restless.
Then Jalen Brunson grabbed the game by the collar.
Brunson poured in 30 points with nine dimes, bullied switches in the pick-and-roll and dragged New York all the way back for a 110–107 win over the injury-riddled Golden State Warriors.
And the Knicks? Automatic at the line. Twenty-two makes. Twenty-three tries. Cold blood.
OG Anunoby iced it with a pair from the stripe with 6.2 seconds left. Garden exhale.
Meanwhile Golden State missing half its rotation dropped its fifth straight.
Key Performances
Brunson Took Over Late
Brunson looked calm the whole time, even when the scoreboard screamed otherwise.
He diced up the Warriors’ pick-and-roll coverage, got downhill, then started cooking in the midrange. A couple pull-ups. A pocket pass to Karl-Anthony Towns. Another foul drawn.
Classic Brunson fourth quarter stuff.
Towns Cleaned the Glass
Karl-Anthony Towns didn’t light the scoreboard on fire, but the double-double mattered.
17 points. 12 rebounds.
A couple second-chance buckets during the Knicks’ third-quarter push flipped the energy inside MSG.
Anunoby Closed the Door
OG Anunoby finished with 14 points. Nothing flashy.
But those last two free throws? Ice-water veins.
Game.
Why the Warriors Ran Out of Gas
Golden State rolled into New York basically held together with tape.
No Stephen Curry. No Jimmy Butler III. No De’Anthony Melton.
And the injury list didn’t stop there Draymond Green, Seth Curry and Al Horford also sidelined.
Credit the kids, though. They fought.
Podziemski Kept Them Alive
Brandin Podziemski dropped 25 and played fearless, pushing tempo and bombing threes.
For a while it looked like he might steal one at the Garden.
Then Brunson went Brunson.
Thunder 116, Timberwolves 103
OKC’s Win Streak Hits Eight
The Oklahoma City Thunder keep stacking wins.
Eight straight now after a 116–103 home victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander wasn’t even blazing early just steady. Then he flipped the switch in the fourth.
Ten points in the final period. Game tilted.
Holmgren and the Bench Delivered
Chet Holmgren finished with 21. Isaiah Joe drilled 20. Alex Caruso added 17 doing a little of everything.
And Isaiah Hartenstein cleaned up inside with 12 rebounds.
Wolves’ Offense Looked Stuck
Julius Randle carried Minnesota with 32.
But Anthony Edwards never found rhythm 19 points on 6-for-17 shooting. Lots of contested pull-ups. OKC’s perimeter defense clamped the airspace.
Bench guard Ayo Dosunmu gave Minnesota 18, but the Wolves still dropped their fourth in five games.
Mavericks 130, Cavaliers 120
Rookie Flagg Stuffed the Box Score
The Dallas Mavericks badly needed a win.
Enter the rookie.
Cooper Flagg went nuts in Cleveland 27 points, 10 assists and Dallas rolled past the Cleveland Cavaliers 130–120.
Dallas Jumped Them Early
The Mavs built a 111–90 cushion in the fourth and never really sweated.
Naji Marshall added 25. P. J. Washington chipped in 20 and 11 boards.
And rookie John Poulakidis logged the first 10 points of his NBA career.
Dallas had lost nine of its previous ten. So yeah they’ll take it.
Mitchell Tried to Keep Pace
Donovan Mitchell posted 26 points and 11 assists.
Max Strus looked sharp in his return from foot surgery 24 points, 6-of-7 from deep.
Evan Mobley added 18 points, 11 boards and four blocks.
Still not enough.
Raptors 119, Pistons 108
Ingram Torched Detroit
Brandon Ingram caught fire and never cooled off.
Thirty-four points as the Toronto Raptors knocked off the Detroit Pistons 119–108.
Detroit’s seven-game head-to-head streak in the series? Gone.
Toronto’s Big Three Produced
RJ Barrett poured in 27.
Jakob Poeltl owned the glass 21 points and a season-best 18 rebounds.
Scottie Barnes flirted with a triple-double: 14 points, 10 boards, eight assists, three blocks.
Cade Did His Part
Cade Cunningham dropped 33 with nine assists for Detroit.
Tobias Harris added 21.
Jalen Duren worked inside for 20 points and 11 rebounds.
But the Raptors’ scoring runs in the second half blew it open.
76ers 109, Trail Blazers 103
Grimes Catches Fire
The Philadelphia 76ers rode a heater from Quentin Grimes.
Season-high 31 points.
Buckets everywhere corner threes, transition pull-ups, a couple tough finishes.
Philadelphia beat the Portland Trail Blazers 109–103 and grabbed its third win in four games.
Young Pieces Showing Life
Justin Edwards added 21.
Rookie V. J. Edgecombe filled the stat sheet with 18 points and 12 rebounds.
And Andre Drummond vacuumed up 17 boards.
Avdija’s Big Night Came With Turnovers
Deni Avdija finished with 25 points and nine assists.
But seven turnovers hurt. Portland coughed it up 19 times in the opener of a five-game road swing.
Jerami Grant added 20 while rookie big Donovan Clingan posted 11 points and 15 rebounds.
Bucks 134, Pacers 123
Giannis and the Bucks Let It Fly
The Milwaukee Bucks rained threes and ran past the Indiana Pacers 134–123.
Twenty-three triples. Season high.
Giannis Stuffed the Stat Sheet
Giannis Antetokounmpo went for 31 points, 14 rebounds and eight assists. Bulldozer mode.
Meanwhile Bobby Portis erupted off the bench for 29.
Ryan Rollins chipped in 20 and seven assists.
Pacers Missing Siakam Again
Indiana still without Pascal Siakam (knee) and it showed.
Aaron Nesmith scored 32.
Jay Huff added 16.
Jarace Walker finished with 14, eight boards and six assists.
Still, Milwaukee has now beaten Indiana five straight.
Kings 116, Jazz 111
DeRozan Turned Back the Clock
Vintage night from DeMar DeRozan.
Forty-one points. Eleven assists. Surgical midrange work all evening as the Sacramento Kings held off the Utah Jazz 116–111.
Kings Supporting Cast Showed Up
Precious Achiuwa logged 20 points and 11 rebounds.
Killian Hayes added 16 points and eight assists.
Reserves Nique Clifford and Daeqwon Plowden chipped in 10 apiece.
Sacramento has now won four of its last five.
Rookie Williams Put On a Show
Cody Williams went off for a career-high 34 plus seven rebounds and seven assists.
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Game Recap: PHILADELPHIA – The scoreboard said 116-93. The message was louder.
Detroit walked into Philly and handled business, then grabbed the East’s top seed on the way out. Been a while – 2007, to be exact. Different era. Same franchise flex.
Tobias Harris set the tone early against his old team, cool 19. No forcing it. Just buckets. And Daniss Jenkins? Kid ran the show like a vet – 16 points, 14 dimes, slicing up a shaky Sixers pick-and-roll defense that never quite found its footing.
The game teased drama for a half. Pistons up 10 after one. Sixers punched back, tied it in the second. Then… yeah, that was it.
Detroit closed the half on a 15-4 burst. Ball zipped. Philly’s rotations? Late. Sometimes nonexistent. By the third, it was a runway. Lead ballooned to 26 and nobody in a blue jersey had answers.
And just like that, No. 1 seed secured. Central Division already in the bag. Twelve wins in the last 15. They’re not sneaking up on anyone anymore.
Key Performances
Tobias Harris keeps it simple
No revenge-game theatrics. Just steady scoring, smart cuts, a couple tough finishes through contact. Looked comfortable. Looked… at peace, honestly.
Daniss Jenkins runs the show
Fourteen assists jumps off the page. But it was the control. Tempo, spacing, getting guys into spots. He had Philly chasing shadows most of the night.
Jalen Duren battles through it
Questionable with an illness, still gave them 16 and 7. Active on the glass, punished switches inside. Old-school big man work.
Ausar Thompson fills gaps
Fourteen points, timely buckets. The kind that stop runs before they start. Glue stuff.
What happened to the Sixers?
Short answer: no Joel Embiid, no resistance.
Tyrese Maxey tried – 23 points, some tough pull-ups. Paul George added 20, still scoring in bunches since returning from that 25-game suspension. VJ Edgecombe chipped in 19. Fine numbers. Empty calories.
Without Embiid anchoring the middle, Detroit lived in the paint and sprayed out for clean looks. Philly’s defensive rating for the night? Ugly. Rotations late, closeouts soft. Looked like a team on tired legs in the second half of a back-to-back. Because they were.
Turning Point
End of the second quarter. Tie game. Crowd into it.
Then Detroit rips off that 15-4 run.
Couple transition buckets. A corner three. Jenkins picking them apart again. Suddenly it’s double digits, and the building goes quiet. Sixers never got it back under control.
How are the Pistons doing this without Cade?
That’s the scary part.
Cade Cunningham’s been out with a collapsed lung, and Detroit just keeps stacking wins — 8-2 without him now. Different guys stepping up every night. Ball movement’s cleaner. Defense travels.
It’s not fluky. It’s structure. It’s depth. And yeah, some guys playing way above their scouting report.
What it means heading into the playoffs
Top seed. Home court through the East. Statement made.
But. And this matters. Playoff basketball slows down. Possessions get tight. That’s where you miss a guy like Cade who can go get you a bucket when everything breaks.
Still, Detroit’s earned this. They’ve been the most consistent team in the conference down the stretch. No gimmicks. Just solid hoops.
Philly? They’ll regroup. They’ve been hot lately, eight wins in 11 before this. But everything runs through Embiid. Without him, the margin for error disappears fast.
Five straight for the Houston Rockets. Not all pretty, not all against killers. But they count.
They handled business again this week, capping it with a solid win over the New York Knicks – the only opponent in this stretch that actually punches back. Before that? A tour through the league’s basement: Utah Jazz, Milwaukee Bucks, New Orleans Pelicans, Memphis Grizzlies. Records tell the story. Not exactly a gauntlet.
And yeah, you can poke holes. Schedule luck. Tanking teams. Empty calories.
But. You still have to show up. Still have to stack wins. And lately, Houston has.
Key Performances
Tari Eason’s Night-to-Night Impact
Here’s the part that actually matters.
Tari Eason has been everywhere. Loose balls, deflections, corner threes, random putbacks that swing momentum. That chaos energy? Back.
Over the five-game run: 13.8 points, 6.4 boards, flirting with a steal a night. More importantly, he’s hitting shots again. Near 50 percent from the floor. Around 37 percent from deep. Letting it fly, too – over five attempts a game.
And it looks different. Confident. No hesitation. Catch, rise, fire. Either it’s wet or it’s not, but he’s not second-guessing.
Half his shots are coming from three right now. That’s not an accident. That’s a role.
Why the Shot Matters
Because we’ve seen the other version.
Early in the season, Eason came out hot – borderline ridiculous efficiency. Looked like a stretch forward overnight. Then the crash hit. Hard. Shots rimmed out. Defenders stopped caring. Sagged off. Dared him.
And for a while? They were right.
That midseason stretch got ugly. Under 36 percent from the field, sub-30 from deep over a long chunk. That’s when guys either keep shooting… or disappear.
Eason didn’t fully disappear. But the swagger dipped.
Now it’s back.
Turning Point
The Knicks Test
If you wanted proof this isn’t just stat-padding, go back to the Knicks game.
Eason went 6-of-10. Hit 3-of-6 from deep. Played real minutes against a team that actually defends, rotates, closes out with purpose.
No gimmicks. No wide-open charity looks. He earned those.
And Houston needed it. The Knicks made runs. Physical game. Half-court possessions that drag. That’s where fake shooting dies.
Eason held up.
Bigger Question: Is This Sustainable?
That’s the whole conversation now.
Nobody expects him to be a 40-percent sniper overnight. But 36–37 percent on real volume? That plays. That changes lineups. That keeps him on the floor in crunch time instead of being a situational energy guy.
And it unlocks stuff. Driving lanes open. Pick-and-roll spacing improves. Suddenly you can’t just park a defender in the paint when he’s out there.
What About the Defense?
Still there. Always has been.
Eason’s bread is defense. Hands everywhere. Jumps passing lanes. Switches across positions. The Rockets’ perimeter activity spikes when he’s locked in. That hasn’t changed.
The swing skill was always the jumper.
Where Do the Rockets Actually Stand?
Let’s be real.
This five-game streak doesn’t suddenly turn Houston into a contender. The West is loaded. One bad week and you’re back in the play-in mud.
But… momentum matters this late. Rotation clarity matters. And they’re starting to find both.
If Eason is a legit 3-and-D wing – not theoretical, not “maybe next year,” but right now – that’s a different team. Not elite. But annoying. The kind nobody wants in a seven-game series.
What’s Next for Eason?
Contract Pressure Is Coming
He’s headed toward restricted free agency. That’s where this gets tricky.
Talent isn’t the debate. Availability is.
Eason’s played 55 games this season. Before that? 57. Before that? Just 22. That’s a pattern. Front offices notice patterns.
If he stays on the floor and keeps shooting like this, he’s getting paid. And not just by Houston thinking about it – other teams will line up.
Can He Do This in the Playoffs?
That’s the final exam.
Regular season hot streaks are nice. April and May are different. Defenses lock in. Scouts take away your first option, then your second.
If Eason’s still letting it fly and hitting when teams are game-planning specifically for him?
That’s when “nice role player” turns into “we need to keep this guy.”
Right now, though?
He’s cooking again. And for a Rockets team that’s spent months searching for anything steady, that alone is worth riding.
The Oklahoma City Thunder didn’t just beat the Los Angeles Lakers on Thursday night they soul-snatched them. In a 128-85 blowout that felt over by halftime, the Paycom Center crowd got exactly what they wanted: a massive “W” and the return of Nikola Topic.
The Serbian playmaker, back from a 13-game developmental stint with the OKC Blue, logged 12 minutes of fourth-quarter action. It wasn’t a stat-sheet stuffer two points, two boards, two dimes but it didn’t need to be. After the year this kid has had? Just seeing him handle the rock at the NBA level felt like a win for the organization.
The Long Road Back to the Hardwood
From the G League to the Bright Lights
Topic hasn’t seen NBA floor time since late February against Detroit. Back then, he looked a step slow, struggling to find his rhythm while the Thunder’s deep rotation got healthy. Sam Presti and Mark Daigneault did what this franchise does best: they sent him down to the G League to get cooked.
It worked.
In 13 games with the Blue, Topic was a flamethrower. We’re talking 18.4 points and nearly eight assists a night. The most encouraging part? He shot 46.5% from deep. For a guy whose jump shot was the biggest question mark coming out of the draft, those numbers are screaming “NBA ready.”
Why Topic’s Return Matters Now
Look, the Thunder are gearing up for a deep playoff run. They don’t need a 20-year-old rookie to save them. But with five games left in the regular season, Daigneault needs to know what he has in the cupboard. Topic ran the point for the entire fourth quarter against LA, looking like a natural connector. He wasn’t hunting shots; he was moving the defense, punishing switches, and playing with a pace that suggests the game is finally slowing down for him.
Overcoming the Unthinkable
It’s easy to forget that Topic’s path to this 43-point blowout was a nightmare.
The Knee: Tore his ACL right before the 2024 Draft, watching his stock slide to No. 12.
The Health Scare: Just as he was findng his footing this year, a testicular cancer diagnosis sidelined him again.
Hell, most players would’ve written off the season. Instead, Topic made his debut in February against Milwaukee and has been chipping away ever since. That kind of mental toughness is exactly why OKC grabbed him. He’s got ice-water veins and a level of resilience you just can’t teach.
Will He Crack the Playoff Rotation?
Probably not. Let’s be real when the rotations shrink in a week or two, OKC is going to lean on their established core. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams are going to eat the lion’s share of the minutes, and the bench is already crowded with proven spacers.
But this isn’t about May; it’s about the bigger picture. Topic is 6-foot-6 with elite vision. Seeing him hit a bucket and facilitate the offense with zero hesitation against the Lakers proves the G League stint did its job. He’s not a project anymore he’s a piece.