Game Recap
So it got out of hand early. The New York Knicks walked into Madison Square Garden and flattened the Washington Wizards, 145-113. Sixth straight. Now 47-25. And yeah, they’re breathing down Boston Celtics for that No. 2 seed.
But garbage time? That’s where it got weird in a good way.
Enter Tyler Kolek. End of the bench, mop-up minutes, game already cooked. Didn’t matter. Kid went 100 percent from the field, drilled all three triples, dropped 11 in a blink. Crowd perked up. Bench lost it. Karl-Anthony Towns was grinning like it was a playoff run.
And here’s the kicker that was his second shift of the day.
Earlier? He hung 42 in the G League with the Westchester Knicks.
Do the math. Fifty-three in a day. Casual.
Key Performances
Tyler Kolek’s Double-Shift Heater
This is the kind of stat line that makes front offices peek at the depth chart a little longer.
Kolek isn’t playing big minutes about 12 a night. Numbers look modest: 4.4 points, 2.8 dimes, change in rebounds. But the shooting pops. Over 43 percent from the field, flirting with 38 from deep. Quick trigger. Confident. Doesn’t look sped up.
Sunday? He looked like a bucket getter who forgot he’s supposed to be the 10th man.
Why the Knicks Keep Rolling
Meanwhile, the Knicks are stacking wins like it’s nothing. Ball popping. Second unit holding leads. Defense hasn’t slipped still clamping the perimeter, forcing ugly possessions.
And when your bench guys are turning garbage time into a show, that says something about the locker room. Energy’s real.
Turning Point (Yeah, Even in a Blowout)
Honestly? There wasn’t one. This thing was cooked by halftime.
But the vibe shift came late. Kolek checking in turned a dead fourth into something worth watching. Garden crowd went from half-asleep to locked in. Teammates standing, yelling, pointing.
That matters. Coaches notice who plays hard when it doesn’t matter. Sometimes that’s how it starts.
The Card Market Angle Why People Are Watching
Now here’s where it gets interesting off the floor.
Kolek’s card market? Still cheap. Like, shockingly cheap for a New York guard who just dropped 53 across two games in one day.
His top sales barely scrape $9K combined.
- A 2024 National Treasures rookie logoman (/5) no auto went for $4,800 back in January
- Another raw copy earlier? Just over $2K
- A Flawless logoman (/2) hit around $2,002
No auto. No grading bump. Still moved.
That’s… aggressive for a guy bouncing between leagues. But also kind of telling.
Budget Plays Where the Value Actually Is
You don’t need to drop four figures here.
There are rookie autos floating around legit patch autos, low serials sitting under $20. Some barely getting bids. One Noir RPA (/15) hanging around five bucks with hours left. Another National Treasures auto (/25) creeping along with minimal action.
That’s lottery ticket pricing.
And yeah, that’s why collectors are circling. Low risk, real upside if the role shifts even a little.
Is This the Payton Pritchard Track?
Let’s not get carried away. He’s not cracking the starting five anytime soon.
But the blueprint’s there.
Payton Pritchard carved this exact lane undersized guard, shoots it, brings energy, stays ready. Took him years. Hit a dip. Then boom Sixth Man of the Year in 2025.
Kolek? Similar size. Similar draft range. Same microwave potential.
Teammates already love him. Josh Hart and Jalen Brunson jokingly call him “the Michael Jordan of Rhode Island.” That’s locker room currency.
And in New York, if you pop even a little? The spotlight finds you fast.
So… What Happens Next?
That’s the question.
Does he stay buried in the rotation? Probably for now.
But if injuries hit, or the schedule tightens, or a random February game needs a spark he’s the guy.
And if he strings together a few nights like this?
Yeah. Those $5 autos won’t stay $5.