Game Recap: HOUSTON 111-94. That was the score. The vibe was worse.
The Knicks got run off the floor Tuesday night, spotted the Rockets a double-digit lead before folks found their seats, and never climbed back in. Not once. Houston punched first, kept swinging, and New York just… absorbed it.
And now Josh Hart’s tossing around “must-win” for the second night of a back-to-back in Memphis. April basketball. “Must-win.” That’s where this is.
“We’re not trending upwards,” Hart said, flat. “We got to figure it out.”
Yeah. No kidding.
The Knicks have gone 25 days without beating a team over .500. That streak’s got legs now. Ugly ones.
How Did It Get Away So Fast?
First Quarter: Lights Out, Knicks Still in the Tunnel
It was 12-1 before you blinked. Then 22-5. Felt like a scrimmage where one team forgot the playbook.
New York couldn’t get into anything no rhythm, no clean looks, no pace. Houston switched, swarmed, and basically told Jalen Brunson: beat length all night. He didn’t.
Meanwhile? Kevin Durant jogging into open pull-ups like it’s a Sunday run. Knicks going under screens on KD that’s coaching malpractice or just guys not locked in. Pick one.
Mike Brown burned two timeouts in seven minutes. Seven.
Score after one: 37-21. Ballgame already leaning hard.
Key Performances
Jalen Brunson Never Found Air
12 points. 5-for-14. Three turnovers. Looked gassed, rushed, annoyed take your pick.
Houston loaded up on him, blitzed the pick-and-roll, crowded his handle. He couldn’t turn the corner, couldn’t create the usual paint touches. When Brunson gets stuck, the whole offense turns into late-clock chucking. That’s what this was.
“They did whatever they wanted,” he said after. Not wrong.
Karl-Anthony Towns: Numbers Without Bite
22 points on 7-for-17. Fine on paper. Didn’t tilt the game at all.
No consistent pressure on the rim. No punishing mismatches. Some decent stretches, then long disappearances. You need more than “solid” when your guard’s getting bottled up.
Rockets Cooking And KD Doing KD Things
Durant dropped 27, easy money. No sweat, no drama. Just rise, fire, bucket.
Houston shot 54 percent. Hit 43 percent from deep. Ball popped, shooters spaced, Knicks rotations late every time. Looked like a team that knew exactly what it wanted versus one guessing.
The Brief Tease (That Went Nowhere)
Second Quarter Push… Then Flatline
Jose Alvarado brought juice. Hit shots. Got into guys. Knicks cut it to four for a minute there crowd got quiet, bench had life.
And then… gone.
Houston answered with a quick run, pushed it back near 20, and by halftime it was 63-50. Felt bigger. Looked bigger. Was bigger.
Turning Point
That early second-quarter push was the window. Knicks had momentum, Rockets wobbling for a second.
Didn’t capitalize. Missed open threes Hart, McBride, same story. 10-for-34 from deep overall. A lot of those clean looks. Bricks.
Houston comes back, strings together stops, KD hits a couple daggers, and that’s it. Door slammed.
Why Do the Knicks Keep Struggling vs Winning Teams?
Short answer: they can’t handle size and speed on the perimeter right now.
Long answer? Teams with length are blowing up their pick-and-roll game. They switch, they recover, they make Brunson work for every inch. Knicks don’t have a reliable Plan B when that happens.
The ball sticks. The spacing shrinks. Shooters hesitate. Defense slips because they’re already on their heels.
And defensively? Slow rotations, late contests, bad angles. Rockets got whatever look they wanted corner threes, straight-line drives, midrange freebies for KD. Pick-and-roll coverage was a mess.
“We were poor defensively,” Brown said. “They didn’t feel us at all.”
That part’s obvious.
Big Picture: Still Third… For Now
Knicks are 48-28. Still sitting third in the East. But it’s getting tight.
They walked out of Toyota Center just a half-game up on Cleveland. Playoffs creeping. Margin shrinking. Confidence? Not exactly booming.
Three straight losses now. Five straight against winning teams.
That’s not contender behavior. That’s first-round exit energy.
So… Is Memphis Really a “Must-Win”?
Yeah. It is. Even if it sounds dramatic.
The Grizzlies are beat up and deep in the tank at 25-50. On paper, easy bounce-back spot. Back-to-back or not.
But with how the Knicks are playing? Nothing feels automatic.
Lose that one, and this thing starts to wobble in a real way seeding, confidence, all of it.
Hart didn’t sugarcoat it.
“Sense of desperation. Willing to sacrifice. To win.”
Sounds good. Now do it.