The Knicks play the Hawks in Manhatlanta tonight, with flocks of New Yorkers expected to take over.
Don’t get it twisted—Knicks fans in town or not, the folks better get that dub and return home with a 2-2 balance at the very worst, or else.
Here’s the latest from around NYK world.
Mike Brown
On the late-game execution in Game 2:
“We didn’t execute well enough offensively. Starting with me, I didn’t mix it up enough offensively going down the stretch. And then we didn’t mix it up as well as we could have defensively. So there were a few things down the stretch we could’ve done better.”
On the never-ending playoff adjustments:
“First of all, anything’s open to discussion offensively, defensively. Maybe changing this defensively. Maybe changing that offensively. I’m comfortable with all of our guys playing, no matter who the five is out there. But at the end of the day, just like offensively and defensively, I mean we changed both of those things halfway through the year. Anything can happen, and when you’re in the playoffs, everything should be on the table. But I do feel comfortable with what we’ve had.”
On responding to Game 2 on the road:
“They hit us in the mouth the second half [of Game 2], not just the fourth quarter, but the second half, and we have to respond. And like I said, at the end of the day, I don’t know if there are many teams that have gone 16-0 on their run to a championship. So you’ve got to figure out how to win on the road if you expect to be who you want to be anyway.”
On facing adversity:
“I don’t know how much of adversity it is. I guess it’s a little bit when you lose. When you lose, you tend to feel it. Like I said before, that’s why it’s good to go through it during the year so you can continue to have belief in the ability to bounce back because you’ve been there and done it. And it’s a little easier to handle when you lose. … So anytime you struggle, especially if you have a resilient group, it could be a good thing. Our group is resilient.”
On the Game 2 lineup struggles:
“We weren’t good tonight. But we had opportunities where our starters were in and we were up eight to 10, and Atlanta closed it. So I wouldn’t say that specific lineup caused it.”
On officiating and physicality:
“I’m still trying to figure out what’s a bump and what’s not a bump. You see a guy like CJ, he gets a drive and if you chest him, it’s a foul. And I even asked the officials about it — Jalen’s driving and he’s getting the same bump. Now, he’s not as light or as quick as CJ, so the speed might not be the same, but when he’s going, he’s getting hit and he’s getting knocked away from the bucket. So, trying to figure that out a little bit better is something I need to do. But I thought Jalen got to his spots. I thought he could have gotten to the free-throw line a couple more times that sometimes [he didn’t] throughout the course of the game, especially with how aggressive he is. But it is what it is.”
On Game 2 defensive breakdowns:
“You gotta give Atlanta credit. We didn’t execute our defense the way that we could have. Or the way we should have, or the way that we have been doing throughout the first six quarters [of the series].”
On Towns’ aggressiveness:
“KAT’s a great player. He’s got to impose his will on the game. If he was a young guy, I would need to say something to him. But as a veteran guy, I don’t need to tell him to be aggressive.”
Josh Hart
On Brunson’s need to step up his defensive game himself:
“We can talk to him. We can do those kinds of things, let him know where to force the ball. But at the end of the day, he has to take pride in it. Just knowing him, I’m sure watching the film, he was probably frustrated at some of the spots CJ was able to get to. … I know the kind of guy he is, the kind of character he is. He’ll be better defensively for us.”
On the team needing to help Brunson defensively:
“Defensively, we need him to get stops. And we need to make sure we have his back and are talking to him when he’s on those isolations on CJ or whoever it is. We can talk to him. We can do those kinds of things to let him know where to force the ball or those kinds of things. But at the end of the day, he has to take pride in it. I think that’s just knowing him and watching the film, he was frustrated at some of those spots that CJ was able to get to and those kinds of things. I know the kind of guy he is and character he is and he’ll be better defensively for us.”
On the lack of physicality in Game 2:
“I feel like we didn’t have that physicality that we did Game 1 and in the first half [of Game 2]. I think that was the biggest thing. When you lose that physicality, then you allow them to kinda move at their own pace, kinda dictate their offense instead of you dictating it. Just gotta make sure we’re physical, have attention to detail and focus for a full 48.”
On stayed playoff-focused:
“That’s why being focused and having attention to detail is so big in the playoffs, because sometimes, it goes away from plays — and it just goes into schemes, it goes into personnel. You gotta be able to react on the fly. When you’re locked in, you have that attention to detail, you’re able to do that pretty seamlessly.”
Jalen Brunson
On succumbing to CJ McCollum:
“He was in a great rhythm. I’ve got to disrupt it, make him play on his heels, make him react to me defensively. He was just in a rhythm.”
Mikal Bridges
On the need for helping Brunson defensively:
“You’ve got four guys that [are] behind him, that [are] gonna help him. Just know [the] personnel, who we guard and how we guard them, and then do your best to stay in front. You’ve got help behind you.”
CJ McCollum
On whether or not he liked the Brunson matchup:
“What do you think? Yeah.”
On the Garden boos and the villain narrative:
“It’s just fans booing you or cheering you on. It’s really not that serious. I think when you look at it that way, it’s just a game. It’s fun to compete at the highest level. It’s fun to be recognized by people, but I don’t play for Spike Lee’s approval. I don’t play for Knicks fans’ approval. I don’t play for anybody’s approval. I play for my family, myself and God, so it’s just a game, at the end of the day.”
Onyeka Okongwu
On McCollum’s impact in Game 2:
“Happy for him, he shut that Knicks crowd up.”
On what to expect from the Game 3 atmosphere in Atlanta:
“Very, very loud. Obviously, you know, Knicks fans are gonna be there as well, but I know ATL faithful will be there as well. Excited for [Thursday] night.”
Iman Shumpert
On Mike Brown’s future if the Knicks fail in the playoffs:
“It’s over with. I know how that sounds, but I’m just going off of the Knicks organization. It’s been over with for people who have been going in the proper direction all the time. It’s been going great for some players, and they had to leave. I just know that the organization puts pressure on itself every year, and then to be so close and to have a team that we all feel like should be successful in the playoffs, built for success in the playoffs … I could totally see it happening right away.”
Stephon Marbury
On Mike Brown’s adjustments for Game 3:
“It’s gonna come down to strategy with Mike Brown. It’s gonna come down to structure and strategy with Mike Brown — and I believe he’s going to make the adjustments.”
On Atlanta’s screening action:
“You know that they’re running a high pick and roll. It’s really like a brush screen, just so you can switch. And it’s slow. Like, it’s like stand there, touch his body, drag him down. And now you’ve gotta switch. And it’s embarrassing if you don’t switch, ‘cause you on the court, on the island, by yourself in the NBA. So you standing there like, ‘Damn.’ I could literally walk real slow and just grab you like, ‘it’s time,’ and that’s the switch. Now, you’ve gotta stomp your feet, slap the ground, and just get ready every time.”
On defensive coverage adjustments:
“Jalen will have to get over the screen on C.J.’s hip and push him downhill, then whoever’s man is creating the switch, they’ll stay in the help position to make C.J. pass the ball. Then, the wing man will cheat over to the middle, and the [Knicks’] corner man will have two men: [Atlanta’s] wing man and the corner man. If Jalen blitzes the screen, now if C.J. goes to drive and the help defender is in the blue position, Jalen can switch back to his man. He can switch to the other guy. And that’s how you kill it. Now we’re gonna watch, and we’re gonna see if they’re gonna make that adjustment. Because [Atlanta is] gonna run the same play. They’re gonna do it old-school and make us adjust.”
On Brunson’s need for adjustments:
“I feel like Jalen Brunson has to play like Allen Iverson and John Stockton. He has to find the balance. I don’t think it’s a hard transition for him because he’s smart, and he’s astute, and because he’s smart and astute, he’s aware of what happened. Right now, this is the first four years of him being the man where he’s making decisions and he’s going on the court. He’s playing at the highest level and everything is in his hand. And he’s got all of the support. We are going to support him because we believe him and we trust him. We believe that. I believe that.”
On Towns’ need for demanding the ball more:
“KAT’s not going to get plays drawn up in this system with Coach Brown. He has to assert himself. He has to demand — he has to demand the ball come his way, man. It’s different when you demand something. When you command it, now it’s like, ‘OK, that’s what we’re doing. We’re going there.’ When he puts his hand up and demands the ball, everybody knows to throw it.”
On what to expect from Brunson in Game 3:
“What he takes from [Game 2] and how he grows from that night — that’s him. That’s going to be the truth and true honesty in the next game. It’s not about playing harder or scoring more or not missing any shots. That’s not it. It’s evaluating how they play him. How am I going to play defensively? Am I going to submit and say, look, this is where I need help at? Am I thinking about knowing that I have a weakness right now and now everyone sees it? Everybody in the gym knew it. The whole world sees I can’t defend C.J. McCollum, and I’m gonna have to guard him in the next game. How are we gonna prep? And how are you gonna prepare to play against him?”
Patrick Ewing
On believing he’d dominate in the current NBA:
“I try not to compare my era to this era or eras in the past. I know whatever era I played in, I’d be dominant. I was one of the big men who could shoot, but I didn’t shoot a lot of 3s. Michael [Jordan] and I always joke about – He’s like, ‘Man, but you can’t dribble.’ I said – ‘All I need is two dribbles. Two dribbles. That’s it. Two dribbles, I can get from the free-throw line to the hole. So, it doesn’t make a difference what era I’m in. I think I can still dominate.”