Game Recap: The crowd inside Wells Fargo Center sounded confused by the end of it. Half boos. Half Knicks chants. A whole lotta panic.
And yeah, the Sixers are cooked unless something wild happens fast.
Jalen Brunson shook off an ugly first half, caught fire when the game tightened up, then slammed the door on Philadelphia in the fourth as the Knicks rolled to a 109-94 win Friday night, pushing New York one step from another Eastern Conference finals trip.
Brunson dropped 33. Same story, different night.
The Sixers had the building rocking early. Paul George looked aggressive out of the gate. Joel Embiid gutted through the ankle and hip issues. Philly led by 12 at one point and finally looked alive in the series.
Didn’t matter.
New York defended like maniacs over the final 15 minutes. Brunson started hunting switches. Josh Hart crashed everything in sight. Mikal Bridges hit cold-blooded midrange buckets. Then the Nova guys buried Philly right in front of those old Villanova championship banners hanging overhead.
That part had to sting.
Jalen Brunson Does the Superstar Thing Again
Slow start? Didn’t last long
Brunson opened the night 2-for-8 and looked a little sped up against Philadelphia’s traps and hard hedges. By the fourth quarter he was back doing Brunson stuff, shoulder bumps, footwork, hesitation dribbles, defenders spinning the wrong way.
Bucket getter behavior.
He finished with 33 points on 11-of-22 shooting and controlled the game late without forcing much. The killer sequence came midway through the fourth after Philly had cut it to four.
Hart scored. Bridges scored. Then Brunson walked into a top-of-the-key three and splashed it clean for a 95-86 lead while Knicks fans lost their minds behind the bench.
Ballgame.
Mike Brown, in his first postseason run coaching New York after replacing Tom Thibodeau, basically admitted Brunson keeps everybody sane.
“I’m Linus. Jalen’s my blanket,” Brown said afterward.
Honestly? Fair quote. Brunson has been New York’s bailout button all spring.
The Nova Knicks Took Philly’s Heart
Villanova reunion turns nasty for Sixers
This series keeps turning into a Villanova alumni showcase with a side of violence.
Bridges poured in 23 points and kept punishing smaller defenders in the mid-post. Hart added another junkyard double-double,12 points, 11 rebounds, loose balls everywhere, talking trash after half the possessions.
And when Quentin Grimes hit back-to-back threes early in the fourth to trim the Knicks lead to 88-84, it felt like Philly finally had a pulse.
Nope.
Hart and Bridges answered immediately. Brunson followed with the dagger triple. A 9-0 burst and the Sixers never recovered.
That’s what contenders do. Quick strike. No drama.
What Happened to Paul George?
First-quarter explosion, then absolute silence
George scored 15 in the opening quarter and looked ready to carry Philly for a night. Then the Knicks clamped the perimeter and he vanished.
Seriously vanished.
After the first quarter, George went scoreless and missed his final nine shots. Didn’t get to the free-throw line once. Tyrese Maxey didn’t either. That’s malpractice against a Knicks defense already loading the paint against Embiid.
New York’s physicality changed everything. Bridges crowded George’s handle. Hart bodied wings on switches. Mitchell Robinson erased second chances around the rim.
The Sixers generated almost no downhill pressure late. Too much standing around. Too many bailout jumpers.
Nick Nurse kept searching for answers. Never really found one.
Joel Embiid Returned, But Philly Still Looks Stuck
Can the Sixers realistically come back?
Embiid returned after missing Game 2 with a sprained ankle and sore hip, finishing with 18 points while clearly laboring through stretches. He battled. Nobody can question that.
But the version Philly got Friday wasn’t the monster who flipped the Celtics series earlier in the postseason.
The burst wasn’t there consistently. Knicks defenders crowded him on catches. Double teams came fast. Sometimes he settled. Sometimes he just looked exhausted.
Nick Nurse said Embiid “gave us everything he could.”
Probably true.
Problem is, New York has more healthy bodies, more two-way wings and way more confidence right now.
Coming back from 3-0? Against this defense? Against Brunson playing like a top-five playoff guard? Good luck.
Knicks Winning Without OG Anunoby Is Scary
Depth showing up at the perfect time
OG Anunoby missed the game with a strained right hamstring, and somehow the Knicks still looked deeper and more connected late.
That should terrify the East.
Landry Shamet, who barely registered this postseason before Friday, came off the bench firing and dropped 15 huge points. His third-quarter three stretched the lead and kept momentum from flipping completely.
Meanwhile the Knicks continue stacking wins with defense, offensive rebounding and fourth-quarter execution. They’ve now won six straight playoff games and look more comfortable every round.
Brown even admitted afterward he’s starting to see championship potential in this group.
Hard to laugh that off anymore.
The Crowd Was Pure Chaos
Knicks fans took over Philly again
Joel Embiid begged Sixers fans before the series not to sell tickets to Knicks fans.
Yeah. That didn’t work.
Spike Lee showed up. Ben Stiller too. Timothée Chalamet got up applauding Knicks buckets like he was courtside at MSG. Every big New York run turned the arena into a split crowd full of cheers, boos and some very Philly middle fingers.
By the fourth quarter, it sounded more nervous than hostile.
That’s never a good sign in May.
What’s Next?
Game 4 shifts back to Philadelphia on Sunday, and the Sixers are staring at elimination. Nobody in NBA history has come back from a 3-0 deficit in a playoff series.
The Knicks? They’re one win away from back-to-back conference finals appearances and suddenly looking like a real problem for Boston, Cleveland or anybody else left standing in the East.
Brunson keeps cooking. Hart keeps flying around like a lunatic. Bridges keeps punishing mismatches.
And Philly keeps running out of answers.