Game Recap: OKLAHOMA CITY – Tie game drifting into the final stretch. Then Shai Gilgeous-Alexander grabbed it by the throat.
Six minutes left, still there for the taking. Next thing you know? Gone. Thunder 111, Knicks 100. Another OKC fourth-quarter surge, another New York headache in this building.
Shai went into closer mode pull-ups, drives, whistles, rinse-repeat. Ten points in the fourth. Ice cold. Meanwhile the Knicks… arguing, scrambling, leaking points in transition. Looked gassed and distracted all at once.
And that was that.
Why did the Knicks unravel late?
Short answer: everything but the refs even if that’s all anyone wanted to talk about after.
Longer answer? Sloppy ball. Missed box-outs. Slow getting back. The stuff contenders don’t survive against elite teams.
New York coughed it up more. Gave up more fast-break points. Lost the second-chance battle. You do that in this building, against this team, and yeah you’re cooked.
Mike Brown said as much after, basically calling out his own locker room for losing focus.
They spent too much time barking at officials. And OKC just kept playing.
The whistle real gripe or deflection?
Look, the numbers jump off the page. Thunder doubled them up at the line, 38-17.
Shai alone? 16 attempts, knocked down 13.
Brown didn’t hold back. Took a swing at the Thunder’s gamesmanship, said they “sell” contact as well as anybody, starting with their MVP. He even picked up a technical in the third got so heated he nearly bumped a ref. That’s not his usual vibe either.
But then he pivoted. Fast.
Said the game wasn’t decided by whistles. Said it was decided by effort plays — turnovers, transition D, rebounding. Hard to argue that part.
Turning Point the 19-9 punch
Game was right there. Knicks hanging around like they always do.
Then OKC hit them with a 19-9 run to close.
No gimmicks. Just execution. Shai carving up defenders, getting downhill, punishing switches. A couple trips to the stripe, a couple midrange daggers. Ballgame.
That’s the difference. One team knows exactly who it is late. The other is still figuring it out.
Key Performances
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander: MVP stuff, again
30 points. 10 in the fourth. Lived at the line, lived in the paint, lived in the Knicks’ heads a little too.
He’s not just scoring he’s dictating. Tempo, spacing, angles. Every possession felt like it bent his way down the stretch.
Josh Hart called it straight: crafty, tough cover, knows how to put defenders in bad spots. No lies there.
Jalen Brunson: buckets, but…
32 points. Got to his spots, hit tough shots, did Brunson things.
But the plus-minus tells a harsher story. Knicks were minus-10 in his fourth-quarter minutes. Some of that isn’t on him. Some of it is.
Either way, Shai won that duel when it mattered.
Supporting cast and hustle gaps
This is where it tilted.
OKC’s role guys did the dirty work extra possessions, loose balls, getting out in transition. Bench sparked little runs that kept the pressure on.
Knicks? Too many empty trips. Too many moments spent looking at officials instead of the ball.
Are the Thunder just a bad matchup for New York?
Six straight losses says yeah, probably.
OKC’s speed, their spacing, that downhill pressure it messes with New York’s defensive rhythm. Forces rotations, creates fouls, opens up kick-outs.
And defensively? They stay attached. Make Brunson work for everything. No easy air.
Also worth noting: the Knicks haven’t won here since 2017. This place has been a house of horrors.
What does this mean for the East race?
Knicks drop to 48-27. That’s two straight losses now.
They’re three games back of Boston for the No. 2 seed, and suddenly looking over their shoulder Cleveland creeping, just a game back in the loss column.
Margins getting tight.
Finals preview? Pump the brakes
Sure, it had the vibe. Two contenders, mostly healthy, playoff intensity.
Miles McBride came back after forever on the shelf 28 games then got banged up again. Landry Shamet still out. OKC basically whole.
But Isaiah Hartenstein said it before tip: way too early for Finals talk. He’s right.
West is loaded. Spurs lurking. East isn’t a cakewalk either. Knicks haven’t even sniffed the Finals since ‘99.
Still… this was a measuring stick. And OKC looked like the team with another gear.
The bottom line
Knicks hung around. Then the Thunder reminded everyone who they are.
Disciplined. Relentless. And when it gets tight?
Give it to Shai and get out of the way.