Game Recap: Rockets 111, Knicks 94 Over by the First Timeout
HOUSTON: This thing was cooked early. Like, barely-settled-in-your-seat early.
The Houston Rockets blitzed the New York Knicks 111-94 on Tuesday night, and it wasn’t some back-and-forth that slipped late. Nah. It was 27-10 halfway through the first quarter and already felt like garbage time.
And after the final horn, Josh Hart didn’t sugarcoat it.
“I just think we’re not going in the right direction,” he said. Flat. No spin. “We’re not trending upwards.”
That’s three straight losses now. And the body language? Rough.
Why Do the Knicks Keep Starting Games Like This?
Short answer: they’re getting punched in the mouth. Long answer… same thing, just happening every night.
Another slow start. Another early hole. Another night chasing.
Head coach Mike Brown sounded like a guy who’s said the same thing 15 times already and knows nobody’s fixing it.
“Got down big to start,” he said. “When you do that against a good team, it’s uphill the rest of the way.”
No kidding. Especially when the defense isn’t hitting first.
Defensive Issues? Yeah, Still There
This wasn’t just missed shots or cold shooting. The Knicks couldn’t guard a parked car in the first half.
Houston spammed pick-and-roll. Got whatever they wanted. No resistance, no communication, no edge.
Brown didn’t dance around it.
“They didn’t feel us at all.”
That’s the line. That’s the whole story.
And it stings more because two nights earlier, against the Oklahoma City Thunder, they actually showed some bite before fading late. So it’s there… sometimes. Then it disappears.
Jalen Brunson Says the Quiet Part Out Loud
Jalen Brunson didn’t go full panic mode, but he didn’t protect anyone either.
“Mental lapses… things that shouldn’t be happening in Game 75 or 76.”
That’s not scheme. That’s focus. That’s habits.
And yeah, that’s a problem this late in the season.
Key Performances: Rockets Cruise, Knicks Flatline
Houston Did Whatever It Wanted
No need for hero ball when everything’s this easy. The Rockets spread it out, attacked switches, lived in the lane, then sprayed it out when help came. Clean offense. Simple reads. Bucket getters everywhere.
Meanwhile, New York looked stuck in mud.
Knicks’ Offense Never Found a Rhythm
Down big early, forced into quick shots, rushed possessions. The ball didn’t pop. Too much one-and-done. When they tried to speed up, it got sloppy.
And when you’re not getting stops? That’s how it snowballs.
Turning Point: Blink and It Was 17
That 27-10 start. That’s it. Circle it.
You give a young, confident team like Houston that kind of cushion, they’re going to start feeling themselves. Shots fall. Energy builds. Crowd wakes up.
Game over before it started.
Wait Weren’t the Knicks Supposed to Win the East?
That was the talk, remember?
The Boston Celtics had early uncertainty around Jayson Tatum. The Indiana Pacers were dealing with Tyrese Haliburton’s situation. The Cleveland Cavaliers weren’t exactly scaring anyone after last postseason.
It felt open.
Now? The Knicks are clinging to the 3-seed, and Cleveland’s right there breathing on their neck.
What Happened to That Win Streak?
Yeah, they ripped off seven straight not long ago.
Look closer.
Most of those wins came against teams flirting with the Play-In or already thinking about Cancun. The one time they saw a legit contender the Denver Nuggets back on March 6 they handled business.
Since then? Can’t beat anyone over .500. Five straight losses against winning teams.
That’s not a slump. That’s a warning.
The Pressure Is Real And It’s Coming From the Top
Owner James Dolan said it out loud after the NBA Cup run in December: Finals are the expectation. Title is the goal.
Since then, the Knicks are basically middle-of-the-pack in win percentage.
That’s not contender math.
Why Haven’t They Fixed the Lineup Yet?
Brown floated changes weeks ago. Still hasn’t pulled the trigger.
Sticking with the same starting five, same patterns, same slow starts at some point, that’s a choice.
Or stubbornness.
Or both.
Can the Knicks Still Turn This Around?
They’ve got six games left. That’s it. No more runway.
Hart called the next one a “must-win.” Players usually avoid that word in the regular season.
Not anymore.
Because this doesn’t look like a team ramping up for a playoff run. It looks like one trying to stop a slide before it gets ugly.
And if they don’t fix the defense the effort, the communication, the basic stuff it won’t matter who they draw in the first round.
They’ll be out quick.