Game Recap: CHARLOTTE The streak’s gone. And it didn’t slip away quietly.
The Charlotte Hornets jumped New York early, kept the pedal down, and walked out with a 114-103 win Thursday night at Spectrum Center. Seven straight for the Knicks? Done. Meanwhile, Charlotte’s cooking five in a row now.
And yeah, this one felt decided long before the final buzzer. Hornets led by 21 at one point. Knicks made noise late, sure. But it always felt like a tease, not a comeback.
“They played like they were shot out of a cannon,” Josh Hart said after, still shaking his head. “We were a step slow.”
That about sums it up.
Why Did the Knicks Come Out Flat?
Pace punched them in the mouth
No mystery here. Charlotte ran. New York didn’t.
LaMelo Ball grabbed rebounds and just went. No hesitation, no waiting for sets to develop. Push, pitch, spray to shooters. Rinse, repeat. Knicks looked like they were running in mud half the night.
Hart didn’t dodge it.
“They were pushing that pace… not just Melo. Multiple ball-handlers. Anybody could grab and go.”
That’s the part that stung. It wasn’t one guy torching them it was waves.
And defensively? New York kept getting caught in rotation. Late switches. Open corners. Too much scrambling.
Key Performances
Kon Knueppel steals the show
Kid was everywhere. Seriously.
Kon Knueppel dropped 26, pulled down 11 boards, dished eight assists flirting with a triple-double like it was nothing. Oh, and six triples. Clean looks, tough looks, didn’t matter.
History, too. Youngest ever to hit 250 career threes. Not bad for a guy defenses still treat like a role player. That’s gonna change fast.
LaMelo Ball sets the tempo
Didn’t even feel like a huge night, but there he was 22 points, pushing tempo all game, bending the defense. Classic Melo. Head up, hit-ahead passes, deep pull-ups when the defense cheats.
He didn’t force it. That’s the scary part.
Brandon Miller keeps the pressure on
Quiet 21. The kind that sneaks up on you. Hit four from deep, spaced the floor, punished every late closeout. Knicks couldn’t key on just one guy, and that’s the problem.
Jalen Brunson carries the Knicks
Brunson did what he always does 26 points, 13 assists, steady as ever. Kept them afloat when it could’ve gotten ugly early.
But man, he had to work for everything. Charlotte trapped, showed bodies, made him give it up. Others didn’t make enough plays.
Josh Hart does a little of everything and calls it out
Hart filled the stat sheet 16 points, seven dimes, five steals. Hustle plays, deflections, all that.
Didn’t sugarcoat the loss, either. Energy wasn’t there. Said it straight.
Turning Point
Second-quarter avalanche
Game flipped there. Hornets turned a close one into a blowout in a hurry.
Bench sparked it couple threes, a steal, transition bucket. Then the starters came back and kept pouring it on. Knicks couldn’t slow the bleeding.
And once Charlotte got comfortable? They just kept attacking. Free throws piled up 16-of-20 at the line. Knicks? Only nine attempts all night.
That gap matters. A lot.
The Numbers That Hurt New York
- Hornets lived at the line. Knicks didn’t.
- Charlotte shot it clean from deep – multiple guys with four-plus threes.
- Knicks forced 18 turnovers… and still lost by 11. That’s rough.
You win the turnover battle like that, you expect to control the game. Not chase it.
What’s Next for the Knicks?
They drop to 48-26, and yeah, this one stings. Not just the loss the way it looked.
Slow start. Bad energy. Couldn’t match pace. Those are red flags this late in the season.
Next up: Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday. Different animal. Younger legs. Even faster.
If they come out like this again? Could get ugly.