Game Preview: Knicks Rolling, Pacers Reeling
Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden. One team riding a heater. The other just trying to stop the bleeding.
New York walks in at 44–25 and feeling pretty good about itself three straight wins, defense tightening, ball popping. Indiana? Rough scene. The Pacers limp in at 15–53 and buried at the bottom of the East.
And lately it’s looked worse than the record.
New York already clipped Indiana 101–92 on March 13 in the last meeting. That one wasn’t pretty. The Knicks controlled the glass, slowed the tempo, and basically squeezed the life out of the Pacers by the fourth quarter.
Now they get them again Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ET.
Garden crowd should smell blood.
Why the Knicks Keep Winning
The formula hasn’t been complicated.
Rebounds. Threes. Brunson doing Brunson things.
New York sits fifth in the league in rebounding at 46.2 a night. Karl-Anthony Towns is the main reason nearly a walking double-double at 20 points and 11.9 boards per game. Miss a shot and there’s a good chance he’s snatching it over somebody.
And the Knicks bomb away from deep. They’re knocking down 14.5 triples per game, which matters against Indiana. The Pacers bleed threes opponents average nearly 12 makes a night.
If the Knicks start cooking from outside early, this one could tilt fast.
Jalen Brunson’s heater
The engine lately? Brunson.
The All-Star guard has been torching defenses over the last 10 games 24.1 points a night, lots of late-clock buckets, plenty of pick-and-roll work. When the game slows down he just goes hunting mismatches.
Little guard. Ice-water veins.
And if Indiana switches lazily? Brunson will cook them in the midrange all evening.
Pacers Season Spiraling
Indiana hasn’t just been losing.
They’ve been getting run off the floor.
The Pacers are 0–10 in their last ten games, giving up a brutal 125.4 points per night in that stretch. Defense has been optional. Rotations late. Closeouts soft. Opponents getting whatever look they want.
Even worse they’re 4–32 in games decided by double digits.
That’s not bad luck. That’s teams blowing the doors off.
Injuries wrecked the roster
The lineup Indiana imagined in October? Gone.
Tyrese Haliburton out for the season with an Achilles injury. Pascal Siakam sidelined with a knee issue. Andrew Nembhard dealing with a calf injury. Johnny Furphy already ruled out for the year. Ben Sheppard nursing an ankle problem.
That’s basically half the rotation.
So the Pacers are leaning on young pieces and patchwork lineups. Some nights it’s competitive. Most nights it gets away early.
Players to Watch
Karl-Anthony Towns controlling the paint
If Indiana can’t keep him off the glass, it’ll get ugly.
Towns has been steady all year scoring inside, stepping out for threes, cleaning up misses. Against a Pacers team that struggles rebounding, he could stack boards quickly.
Second chances usually turn into threes for the Knicks. And that’s how runs happen.
Jarace Walker showing flashes
One bright spot in Indiana’s recent stretch: Jarace Walker.
The young forward has averaged 13.8 points and 6.8 rebounds over the last 10 games. Energy guy. Physical. Not afraid to attack bigger players.
Indiana needs that edge. Badly.
Jay Huff giving Indiana minutes
Jay Huff isn’t a star but he’s been serviceable 9.5 points and nearly four rebounds a night. With the Pacers thin up front, he’s logging real minutes.
Problem is the Knicks’ frontcourt is deeper and stronger. Tough matchup.
The Real Question: Can Indiana Keep This Close?
That’s what everyone around this game is wondering.
Because the trends are loud.
New York:
7–3 over the last ten games.
115 points per night.
Defense allowing just 104.
Indiana:
0–10 over the last ten.
Defense collapsing.
Opponents dropping 125 per game.
If the Knicks control the boards and hit their usual threes, the Garden could see another runaway.
But hey weird things happen in March.
Young players get hot. Bench units spark something. A couple early threes and suddenly a game feels different.
Indiana needs that kind of night.
Otherwise?
The Knicks might be walking out with win No. 4 in a row before the fourth quarter even gets tense.