Game Recap
NEW YORK – The New York Knicks won the game. Barely.
But the first 12 minutes? Same old mess.
Against a depleted Golden State Warriors group missing half the roster including Stephen Curry the Knicks sleepwalked through the opening quarter and found themselves staring at a 35-21 deficit before the crowd had finished its first beer.
Fourteen down. To a team dressed like a G League call-up night.
Head coach Mike Brown didn’t bother sugarcoating it afterward.
“We have to figure out individually, collectively, how we can start games better,” Brown said. “I’m not talking about the outcome. Win or loss. I’m talking about the start. Focus. Physicality. They need to feel us early.”
Right now? Nobody’s feeling anything from the Knicks in the first quarter.
Over the last five games, New York sits at minus-40 in opening periods. That stretch includes a brutal March 11 night against the tanking Utah Jazz, when the Knicks trailed by 15 after the first 12 minutes.
That’s not a trend. That’s a flare gun.
Why Are the Knicks Starting So Slow?
The starting five has been under the microscope for months now:
- Jalen Brunson
- Mikal Bridges
- OG Anunoby
- Josh Hart
- Karl-Anthony Towns
On paper? Length, scoring, defense, rebounding. The whole buffet.
On the floor early in games? Clunky. Slow reads in pick-and-roll coverage. Missed rotations. Half-speed offense that turns into late-clock Brunson bailouts.
And yeah, fans remember this movie.
Last spring under Tom Thibodeau, the lineup issues dragged deep into the playoffs before any real changes came not until midway through the Eastern Conference Finals, when the adjustment came way too late to matter.
Different coach now. Same questions.
Mike Brown Will Tinker Late – Just Not Yet
Brown isn’t married to the lineup in crunch time. That much is clear.
During the win over Golden State, he yanked Bridges late and rolled with Jordan Clarkson, who came off the bench firing.
Clarkson dropped 14 points on 6-of-11 shooting, attacking switches and keeping the offense alive when things stalled.
Bench sparked the run. Crowd woke up. Knicks escaped, 110-107.
But Brown still isn’t ready to blow up the starting unit.
“If I feel the need, I will,” Brown said. “I’m not thinking about that right now. We’ve started different people. It’s been collective the last seven, eight games.”
Translation: the problem isn’t just one guy.
Can This Starting Group Actually Work?
That’s the real question hovering over New York’s season.
The Knicks want to run with the East’s heavy hitters the rising Detroit Pistons and a reloaded Boston Celtics squad that just welcomed Jayson Tatum back into the lineup.
You can’t do that spotting teams double-digit leads every night.
Not in the playoffs. Hell, not in March.
The Knicks keep digging early holes and spending the rest of the night climbing out. Sometimes Brunson saves them. Sometimes the bench lights a spark.
But it’s a dangerous way to live.
And if those first quarters keep looking like this?
Mike Brown may not have a choice.
The lineup card will change.