Game Recap: Not One Night, A Whole Heater
NEW YORK The shot used to be a dare. Leave him. Sag off. Live with it.
Not anymore.
Josh Hart is torching that scouting report right now, and the New York Knicks are cashing in. Six straight wins. Third in the East. Breathing down Boston’s neck with three weeks left. And yeah, the swing factor isn’t just Jalen Brunson doing Brunson things it’s Hart flipping the math from the corners.
Nine straight threes across three games. Read that again. Nine. Straight.
Then came March 17 in Indy. Five-for-five from deep. 33 points. Missed one shot all night. One. The Indiana Pacers threw bodies, late closeouts, half-hearted contests didn’t matter. Dude was cooked in a good way.
And suddenly the Knicks offense? Way less cramped. Way more annoying to guard.
Key Performances
Josh Hart’s Shot Diet Just Changed
This isn’t volume spam either. It’s selective. Corner looks. Kick-outs. Broken plays. The kind defenses used to shrug at.
Now they’re sprinting at him. Flying, actually.
Hart’s sitting at 48% from three in March. That’s not a typo. That’s not sustainable either but it doesn’t have to be. Even league-average changes everything.
Because the second defenders start respecting him, the whole ecosystem shifts. More driving lanes. Cleaner pick-and-rolls. Weakside help gets stuck in no-man’s land.
And Hart? He’s punishing every lazy rotation.
Brunson Sees It Up Close
Brunson didn’t overthink it. Didn’t dress it up.
“He’s been in the gym,” he said. Simple. Direct.
That tracks. Brunson isn’t big on fluff, and he’s not handing out compliments for cardio. He knows what grind looks like. He sees the reps. This didn’t just pop out of nowhere.
Meanwhile Hart, classic deflection:
“I guess I’m just throwing it up there.”
Sure. And defenders are just accidentally late every time.
Turning Point: When Defenses Had to Blink
Why This Changes Everything
For years, teams guarded Hart like a non-shooter. Tag off him. Help off him. Rotate late, if at all.
That’s dead right now.
You close late, it’s three. You close hard, he’s attacking your top foot, getting downhill, making the extra pass. Knicks bench starts barking, crowd wakes up, and suddenly it’s a run.
That’s the chain reaction.
It’s not just makes. It’s decisions. And defenses are making bad ones.
The Bigger Picture Can This Hold in the Playoffs?
What Happens When Teams Game-Plan Him?
Playoff scouting is ruthless. Take away your first option, then your second, then dare the weakest link.
Hart used to be that weak link.
If he’s even a credible threat? Whole script flips.
You can’t overload Brunson. You can’t over-help on drives. You can’t cheat off the corners like it’s 2022. That’s how series swing not stars going nuclear every night, but role guys breaking coverage rules.
Hart’s flirting with that territory.
Playoff Race Check Why Seeding Matters
The Knicks aren’t just vibing here. They’re chasing something real.
They’re a half-game behind the Boston Celtics for the No. 2 seed. That’s not cosmetic. That’s home court in a potential second-round rock fight.
You want Game 7 at the Garden. You just do.
And this streak? It’s built on defense holding up and offense finally breathing more pace, more spacing, less grind-every-possession misery.
The Only Red Flag Health
Can Hart Hold Up?
Here’s the part they don’t say loud.
Hart’s knee isn’t perfect. Right knee, patellofemoral stuff. It’s lingered. He’s missed time already.
And he plays like a guy who invites contact crashing glass, diving, pushing tempo like it’s Game 7 every night in January.
That’s a lot of mileage.
The Knicks need him in April. Not just available functional.
So… Are the Knicks Actually a Threat?
Yeah. If this version of Hart sticks even halfway.
Not because he’s suddenly Steph. Relax.
But because he erases a weakness. And playoff teams hunt weaknesses like blood in the water.
Take that away? Now you’re dealing with Brunson cooking, spacing that makes sense, wings that defend, and a team that doesn’t beat itself much.
That’s not cute anymore.
That’s a problem.