Game Recap: Not flashy. Not pretty. Winning stuff.
NEW YORK: This wasn’t about Karl-Anthony Towns cooking dudes for 40. Not that kind of night. This was screens. Hits. Re-screens. The grunt work.
And yeah, the Knicks will take that every time.
Because somewhere along the way took long enough, honestly Towns started playing like a big man who actually enjoys making life easier for his guards. Not just hunting his own numbers. Not floating. Not settling.
He’s leaning into it now. And the offense? Looks different. Feels real.
The Numbers Don’t Lie Towns Is Wrecking Defenses Without Shooting
Since Feb. 1, nobody in the league has squeezed more juice out of a screen than Towns. Not Nikola Jokic. Not Bam. Nobody.
We’re talking 1.24 points per direct screen. Best in the league among guys with real volume. Over 150 screens. This isn’t noise.
And it shows up on tape. Brunson turns the corner clean. Alvarado snakes into the lane space everywhere. Defenders stuck on Towns’ hip like they hit glue.
The Knicks ran 400+ on-ball screens with him in that stretch. That’s not a wrinkle. That’s identity.
So Yeah… The Knicks Offense Might Actually Be Sustainable
For months, it felt like New York was winging it. Brunson hero ball. Random hot nights. Not enough structure.
Now? There’s a pulse.
Three Knicks duos landed in the top 10 for points per screen since February:
- Towns + Jose Alvarado
- Towns + Jalen Brunson
- Brunson + Mitchell Robinson
That’s not coincidence. That’s system finally sticking.
And look it’s not always pretty. Josh Hart still out there doing chaos cardio. Alvarado might pick your pocket or brick three straight. But the bones of this offense? Solid.
Why Did It Take So Long for Towns to Buy In?
Good question.
Part of it was the adjustment to Mike Brown. Different reads. Different spacing rules. Less freelancing. More responsibility without the ball.
Part of it? Towns himself.
He’s always been a bucket getter first. That doesn’t vanish overnight. Asking him to screen, roll, re-screen, and not touch the ball every trip? That’s a mindset shift.
But lately and you can see it he’s embracing the boring stuff. The hits. The angles. The timing.
And yeah, it’s boring… until Brunson walks into another uncontested pull-up.
Turning Point: The Alvarado Connection Came Out of Nowhere
Let’s talk about the weird part.
Jose Alvarado shows up and immediately starts spamming the Towns pick-and-roll like it’s 2K.
116 screens together already. In basically no time.
And it works. Like, really works.
They’re generating 1.31 points per direct screen. That’s elite. Second-best among top duos.
Alvarado’s not overthinking it either. He’s feeding Towns early, keeping him engaged, then flipping the script and using those same screens to get downhill.
Annoying guard energy meets big-man skill. Defenses hate that combo.
What About Brunson and Towns Shouldn’t That Be the Main Event?
Here’s the thing it should be.
Towns has only set 179 screens for Brunson in that same stretch. That number feels low. Like… weirdly low.
Because when they do run it? It cooks.
1.24 points per direct screen. Top-tier production. Brunson in space is already a problem. Add Towns flattening defenders at the point of attack? That’s barbecue chicken.
So yeah if you’re Mike Brown, you probably look at that and go: why aren’t we spamming this more?
Can This Hold Up in the Playoffs?
That’s the whole bet.
Come April, nobody cares about regular-season flair. It’s halfcourt execution. It’s who can create clean looks when everything bogs down.
This is where Towns matters.
Not the step-back threes. Not the highlight stuff. The screens. The contact. The discipline.
If he keeps playing like this setting tone, not just chasing stats the Knicks have something they didn’t earlier this year:
Structure. Repeatable offense. Answers.
And yeah, pressure’s coming. It always does in New York.
But Brunson looks ready. Towns? Finally acting like it.