Karl-Anthony Towns scored 31 of his 39 points in the Knicks’ win against the Heat in the first half, and in doing so, provided a reminder of his ability to function as the team’s top offensive option with Jalen Brunson currently out with an ankle sprain, writes Jared Schwartz of the New York Post.
Towns had a relatively quiet second half against the Heat’s swarming double teams, but his first-half heroics set the tone for the team to capitalize against Miami’s defense. At the same time, his willingness to step back allowed reserves Landry Shamet, Jordan Clarkson, and Josh Hart to lead the way against a defense tilted to stop Towns.
“I wanted to do my best to pick up the offense that [Brunson] gives our team,” Towns said. “And in the first half, I did a good job of that. In the second half, I wasn’t trying to force it. I’ve had those days, so I was just letting the game come to me and Landry Shamet is a big reason [for that].”
We have more from the Knicks:
- Shamet racked up a career-high 36 points as he helped the Knicks take down the Heat for the team’s first win of the NBA Cup. His increased prominence in the rotation is a reward for being willing to fight for a roster spot on a non-guaranteed deal this fall, Schwartz writes. “This is where I wanted to be,” Shamet said. “With the year we had last year, this group of guys, this locker room, this city, these fans, all of it, I only wanted to be here, to be honest. I’m glad it worked out.” Shamet has started three games and seems to be head coach Mike Brown‘s preferred starter when Mitchell Robinson is out. “Is he shooting the pull-up, which he can make, or is he getting to the rim and dunking on you?” Brown said. “You could see that on film last year, and so I was definitely a fan of his.”
- Brown was disappointed with the Knicks’ lack of focus against the Magic on Wednesday, telling reporters that the team was too focused on the referees and not enough on the game, Schwartz writes in a separate article. “The thing that I was most disappointed in was in the first half, everything that happened on the court, we blamed the officials,” Brown said. “And that was disappointing to see because we were the culprits of a lot of stuff that happened out on the floor.” The Knicks cut down on the complaining last game, and Towns has mentioned before that not getting distracted by perceived bad calls is a point of emphasis for him.
- Brown and Towns credited assistant coach Rick Brunson with Towns’ success in the win against the Heat, Schwartz writes. “Rick Brunson was the first one to say it,” Brown said. “He was like, ‘Hey, keep playing through KAT. Keep playing through KAT. Keep playing through KAT.”
In the 2024-25 season Brunson led team in FA at 18.5.Towns at 17, Bridges at 14.4, OG at 14, Hart at 10.
Brunson was the leading scorer cause he went to FT line. A lost art in today’s NBA. He went to FT line more than any Knick. That should not be imo. Towns should be leading Knicks in FA. And Bridges hardly ever goes to FT line.
Knicks need Bridges to be more aggressive more selfish. To be around 22 pts a game. That helps Towns and Brunson be more effective. Bridges has to step up on offense this year. I was hoping Browns offense will do that.
Knicks have a 5gm road trip coming. With Magic their toughest game. Good opportunity for the bench to show up. They have been playing well. Except for Yabu. Time to play Monsieur Yabusele …. NYK
Agreed on Bridges. He’s been playing fantastic, no complaints, but more aggressiveness with the ball is the next step for him. Bridges FTA/36 with NYK: 1.4; with BRK: 4.7. He’s shown he can do it.
This yr so far. Brunson avg — 21 FGA n 6.6 FTA
Towns avg — 16 FGA n 6.6 FTA
Bridges avg — 12 FGA n 1.7 FTA
I like to see Bridges at 15 FGA n 6 FTA ……
I know Jalen and KAT will get theirs. Bridges has to get his lol.