Game Recap: CHARLOTTE So much for the heater.
The Knicks rolled in riding seven straight. Rolled out looking like they’d never boxed out in their lives. Hornets 114, Knicks 103. And yeah, it wasn’t that close once the fourth quarter hit and the building got loud.
Charlotte owned the boards 43–24. That’s not a typo. That’s a beatdown. Extra possessions, second-chance buckets, loose balls all of it went one way. New York kept reaching, kept reacting, kept getting beat to the punch.
Head coach Mike Brown didn’t sugarcoat it.
“They just kicked our behinds on the glass,” he said, and honestly, that was the clean version.
The Hornets played like they’d had two days’ rest and a point to prove. The Knicks? Looked gassed. A step slow everywhere. Rotations late. Tags soft. Closeouts half-hearted. You get the picture.
Why did the Knicks get bullied inside?
No bodies, no fight
Brown went straight at the problem effort and physicality. Or the lack of both.
“We didn’t put bodies on bodies. We didn’t hit first.”
That’s coach-speak for: you got punked.
Karl-Anthony Towns grabbed three rebounds. Three. For a starting five. That’ll get you cooked in any gym, let alone on the road in March. Mitchell Robinson tried to patch it up with nine off the bench, but it wasn’t nearly enough.
Josh Hart? Seven boards. Fine number for most wings. Not for him. He’s usually vacuuming everything in sight. Not tonight.
Charlotte just kept crashing. Kept sending two, sometimes three to the glass. New York never adjusted. Coaching staff will wear some of that, sure. Players more.
Pick-and-roll defense? A mess
Hornets set the tone, Knicks never matched it
And it wasn’t just the glass.
“Our pick-and-roll defense wasn’t good,” Brown said. Understatement.
Charlotte set bone-rattling screens all night. The kind that make guards think twice about fighting over. The Knicks didn’t communicate it, didn’t peel, didn’t protect the back line. Result: downhill drives, spray-outs, easy reads.
LaMelo Ball pushed the tempo like he had somewhere to be. Grab-and-go, hit-ahead passes, quick drag screens boom, you’re already scrambling. That’s how you give up rhythm threes and paint touches in the same possession.
Hart saw it the same way.
“They played like they were shot out of a cannon,” he said. “We were a step slower.”
That’s it. That’s the game.
Key Performances
Jalen Brunson kept it respectable
Brunson did his usual: 26 points, 13 dimes. Controlled pace when he could, hit tough mid-range stuff, kept them within shouting distance through three.
But he didn’t have help.
Where was Karl-Anthony Towns?
Eight shots. That’s all. And he spent most of the fourth watching.
Some of that is matchup. Some of that is flow. Some of that… you can’t have from an All-Star when the game’s slipping. Knicks needed a bucket-getter. Didn’t get one.
Hornets’ depth showed up
Multiple ball-handlers, fresh legs, waves of pressure. It wasn’t just LaMelo. Secondary creators kept the offense humming. Bench sparked the run late third into early fourth that stretch broke it open.
Turning Point
Late third, early fourth game flipped
Knicks cut it to single digits late in the third. Felt like one push and they might steal it ugly.
Then Charlotte ripped off a run offensive boards, kick-out threes, one leak-out dunk that brought the house down. Momentum gone. Knicks never recovered.
You could see it in their shoulders. Slumped. Quiet. Done.
Eastern Conference seeding just got real
What does this mean for the Celtics race?
Bad timing.
The Knicks drop to 48–26. The Celtics sit just ahead after their own statement win over the Thunder. Margin for error? Basically gone.
New York probably needs a 6–2 finish to have a real shot at the No. 2 seed. And that’s assuming Boston stumbles a bit. Not a bet you love.
And yeah, this matters. Home court in a potential second-round series? That’s everything when you’re talking Knicks-Celtics. Crowd, whistles, role players all of it swings.
What’s next and can they fix it?
Oklahoma City on Sunday. On the road. Against the champs. Good luck if you rebound like this again.
If the Knicks don’t clean up the glass and tighten the pick-and-roll defense, it won’t just be one loss. It’ll snowball. Fast.
Brown knows it. Players know it.
Now we see if they respond or if this is the start of a late-season wobble nobody in New York wants to talk about.