Game Recap: OKLAHOMA CITY The score says 111-100. The tape says something else.
The Knicks hung around, scrapped, even looked like they might make it a game into the fourth. Then the legs went. Then the bodies went. And yeah then Deuce went.
Miles “Deuce” McBride, back after a two-month grind through a sports hernia recovery, lasted barely a half Sunday night before grabbing at his groin and heading straight to the locker room. That was it. Again.
And just like that, whatever margin for error New York had? Gone.
“I haven’t talked to medical yet… it’s tough,” Mike Brown said after. Short, clipped. You could hear it. “He’s worked his tail off to be back.”
Meanwhile, Oklahoma City did what Oklahoma City does. Pressured the ball, turned misses into sprints, and slowly not even a haymaker, more like steady body shots pulled away in the second half.
The Injury That Changed Everything
What happened to Deuce McBride?
It wasn’t subtle.
Third quarter. Loose ball. McBride dives classic Deuce, no hesitation and crashes into Lu Dort. Hits the floor, stays there a beat too long. Then the grab. Groin area.
You’ve seen that movie before.
He limped off. Didn’t come back. Finished with 0 points in 11 minutes, 0-for-3 from the field. But the box score kinda lies here. Knicks felt him when he was out there.
Brown didn’t sugarcoat it.
“One of our best on-ball defenders… especially pick-and-roll,” he said. “Quick, strong, gets over screens. He gives us a nice punch.”
And that punch disappeared right when New York needed it most.
Why did the Knicks fade late?
Short answer? Bodies. Depth. Fouls. Then no McBride.
Longer answer the Knicks’ perimeter defense cracked once Deuce was out. That’s where Oklahoma City lives. Ball handlers turning the corner, forcing rotations, kicking to shooters. Rinse, repeat.
Jalen Brunson kept probing, kept trying to manufacture something. But the spacing got tighter. The bench didn’t have the same juice. And the Thunder smelled it.
Brown pointed at the foul trouble too. Said they were “a little shorthanded.” That’s putting it mildly.
By the time the fourth rolled around, it felt like New York was just trying to hold the line. OKC was already gone.
Key Performances
Jalen Brunson keeps grinding
Didn’t quit. Didn’t have much help either once rotations tightened. Tried to control tempo, pick spots. But without McBride as a release valve or defensive stopper, everything got heavier.
Afterward, he kept it simple.
“He’ll be back,” Brunson said. “He works too hard.”
Thunder’s formula travels
No fireworks headline here just system ball. Pressure defense, smart rotations, timely scoring runs. The kind of game that adds up over 48 minutes.
They didn’t need a miracle. Just consistency. Got it.
Rotation Questions Still Linger
Why hasn’t Mike Brown changed the starting lineup?
Fans keep asking. Brown keeps holding the line.
“Consistency,” he said. That’s the word he keeps going back to.
He’ll tweak the eighth, ninth guys. Mix and match bench units. But the starters? He’s riding with them.
“More important… to keep that starting group together,” Brown said.
Fair. But nights like this when depth gets tested that decision gets louder.
Injury Watch: What’s Next?
McBride is the big one now. Again.
Two months out. One half back. Now this.
Knicks have about two weeks left in the regular season. Not much runway. And no guarantee this is minor especially given the history with the sports hernia.
Landry Shamet, meanwhile, missed his fourth straight but is at least traveling. Brown said he’s “progressing,” which in late March could mean anything from “close” to “not yet.”
The Bigger Picture
This wasn’t just a loss. It felt like one.
Knicks needed rhythm heading into April. Needed bodies. Needed something stable.
Instead? Another injury scare. Another rotation shuffle coming. Another night where the fourth quarter got away from them.
And yeah if McBride misses time again, that “nice punch” Brown keeps talking about?
They’re gonna need to find it somewhere else. Fast.