Knicks wing OG Anunoby (left ankle sprain) is probable to play in Game 2 against the Hawks on Monday, New York Post’s Stefan Bondy reports (via Twitter). According to head coach Mike Brown, the two-way wing went through practice on Sunday.
Anunoby left Game 1 in the second half after aggravating a preexisting ankle injury but was able to return to play. He finished the game with 18 points and eight rebounds while playing 38 minutes in the win.
“He came over to the bench and asked me if I could do (the spiritual healing) for his ankle; then he sat over there for a second, came back in the game and finished the game,” said teammate Jordan Clarkson, according to SNY’s Ian Begley. “Like I said, we need him on the floor so whatever I gotta do to keep it going… sprinkle a little magic on him.”
Anunoby has proven himself worthy of the Knicks’ investment in him, and nights like Saturday illustrate why, according to Begley (Twitter video link).
We have more from the Knicks:
- Hawks head coach Quin Snyder called Karl-Anthony Towns a mismatch for his team’s big man rotation, Kristian Winfield writes for the New York Daily News. “It’s a little bit of pick your poison, you know,” Snyder said. “How do you handle him on the post with a mismatch? Do you just guard him? How do you handle pick and roll? How do you handle him and Brunson on pick a roll? I think for us to be prepared for all those situations, you can adjust every time down the court.” Onyeka Okongwu did a solid job of guarding Towns in the first half, despite giving up a good amount of size, but Towns eventually overwhelmed the team, which is thin at center after the loss of Jock Landale, finishing the game with 25 points, eight rebounds, and three blocks. Mike Vaccaro of the New York Post called it “the full KAT experience.”
- While Snyder struggled to figure out how to contain Towns, his approach to containing Mitchell Robinson by resorting to Hack-A-Mitch limited the crucial reserve to just 15 minutes, Peter Sblendorio writes for the Daily News. Robinson went 1-for-4 from the free throw line, and, crucially, didn’t record an offensive rebound. Robinson played 60 games this season and failed to get on the offensive glass just twice.
- Despite heavily investing in defensive-minded wings, the Knicks relied on 6’4″ Josh Hart to take the primary defensive assignment on Hawks star Jalen Johnson in Game 1. Hart limited Johnson as effectively in Saturday’s win as he did during their final regular season matchup, Steve Popper writes for Newsday (subscriber link). “One of the things Jalen is really good at is the pick-and-roll game and he does a great job rejecting screens and making it hard to anybody playing the pick-and-roll game,” Brown said. “So we just wanted to see if we can cause a little confusion. Just as much as putting Josh on Jalen, it’s OG on Okongwu … You’re not gonna stop those two guys, they’re gonna do what they do, but you hope to temper them a little bit or at least have a chance to control it a little bit.”

I picked the Cavs, Knicks, Pistons, Magic as my top 4. Beginning of year. Of course all healthy. Magic have taken all year to get healthy lols. But man they look ready now.
I told you Pistons needed another big right.
Magic out rebounded Pistons 45–39.
Magic had more points in the paint than pistons
54–34.
You feeling me now …..
I have the Cavs over Pistons. But Pistons might not get by Magic. Cade is the man. Magic stopped everyone else.
Hawks are another team that needs a big. Towns should go off on this team. Knicks should just feed him all day. Knicks D is what won gm1. Just keep it up guys.