OG Anunoby 'felt good' in return from injury to help Knicks dominate Jazz

The Knicks' starting lineup is finally at full strength.

OG Anunoby returned to the floor on Friday against the Jazz, his first game since injuring his hamstring on Nov. 14. The forward missed nine games just when he was putting up some of the best numbers of his career. 

But Anunoby picked up where he left off, scoring 11 points and assisting one in 23 minutes on Friday night. As with any game Anunoby plays, his impact goes far beyond the stat sheet. The first defensive possession for the Knicks, Anunoby forced a bad pass from Jazz forward Svi Mykhailiuk, one of many stops by the Knicks as they got off to a 23-0 start, the best in NBA history since play-by-play has been recorded (1997-98), en route to a 146-112 rout. 

"I didn't really notice it. We were just playing. Someone told us later," Anunoby said. "I didn't even notice they didn't score; we were just getting stops and going. So felt pretty good just playing the way we try to play all the time."

That good feeling extended to Anunoby's health. He said he felt good after the game and that he missed playing with his teammates and playing for the fans. But he did not have a good time being unable to play. In those few weeks of missing action, Anunoby described his time recovering as "not fun" but still tried to help his teammates however he could. 

"Just try to help in any way possible," Anunoby said. "Be supportive, talk to my teammates, tell them what I'm seeing, and still help."

Part of that support is watching film and pointing out little things his teammates are not doing or what teams are doing to the Knicks and trying to get them to incorporate it.

Anunoby's 23 minutes was good, but head coach Mike Brown was hoping to extend his forward even longer, but the score dictated he empty his bench. Brown did allow Anunoby to play with the reserves as the rest sat on the bench, watching for most of the fourth quarter. 

"It was tough because you always wonder... you get a big lead, you don’t want anybody to get hurt. But we needed to get OG some game minutes to work on his conditioning," Brown explained. "He looked good for the time he was out there. I would have loved to get him 25-26 minutes, but 22-23 worked good enough, especially with the way we had the lead tonight."

Anunoby says he'll need just a couple of game to feel like he's in game shape, and he'll definitely need his conditioning when the Knicks welcome a physical Magic team to the Garden on Sunday. 

Knicks revert to 2024 starting lineup in OG Anunoby's return, throttle Jazz 146-112

The Knicks welcomed back OG Anunoby on Friday night after the wing missed three weeks with a hamstring injury, but the situation that he found himself returning to was not the one that he'd left. In his stead, Josh Hart had re-entered the starting lineup and recaptured his old magic while the Knicks had won six of their last eight games. When it was announced that Anunoby would be returning, there were plenty of questions surrounding who would start and how seamlessly the pieces would all fit together.

For one night, the answer was a resounding "Just right," as the Knicks were challenged in a 146-112 win over the Utah Jazz at Madison Square Garden.

Before Anunoby's injury, the 28-year-old wing was thriving in new head coach Mike Brown's system. Anunoby was averaging 15.8 points, 5.6 rebounds, 2.2 assists, and 1.9 steals per game while shooting 47.6% from the field and 39.2% from beyond the arc. He was playing elite defense on the wing and, through 12 games, seemed on track to be selected to his first career All-Star game.

But not all of his teammates were enjoying as much success.

The beginning of the year had not been kind to Josh Hart. When the season began, there were a few questions surrounding the man who seemingly never left the floor under the previous head coach, Tom Thibodeau. With a new sheriff in town, it was announced that Mitchell Robinson would enter the starting lineup, pushing Karl-Anthony Towns to the power forward role and moving Josh Hart to the bench. Then, in training camp, Hart aggravated a nerve injury in the ring finger of his shooting hand, which causes his finger to swell and go numb, obviously impacting his shooting and ball-handling. Hart decided to delay surgery until after the season, but the results were not good early in the year.

In the first 10 games of the season, Hart averaged 8.4 points, 6.2 rebounds, 3.7 assists, and 0.8 steals in 23.8 minutes per night. He was shooting 44.4% from the field (33.3% from deep) with a 51% effective field goal rate. On top of his offensive struggles, he was posting an uncharacteristically poor 116.1 defensive rating and a 10.1 Player Impact Estimate, which is kind of like basketball's version of WAR (Wins Above Replacement). He seemed frustrated by his performance and his role, and there was some worry that he might not fit into Mike Brown’s new system as well as he had under Thibodeau.

Still, the Knicks were 7-3 in those games. Mitchell Robinson was proving to be perhaps the best offensive rebounder in the league, and the new offensive system that stressed ball movement and a drive-and-kick philosophy had led to strong starts for Anunoby and Bridges. It seemed like this was the way things would continue, until Anunoby hurt his hamstring just five minutes into an NBA Cup game against the Miami Heat on November 14th.

That game proved to be a turning point for Hart. The 30-year-old was asked to play more minutes with Jalen Brunson already out with an ankle injury, and Anunoby leaving the game. But Hart responded, putting up a triple-double with 12 points, 11 rebounds, and 10 assists as the Knicks won 140-132.

Over his next nine games, including that NBA Cup performance, Hart averaged 15.7 points, 9.4 rebounds, 6.4 assists, and 1.8 steals in 34.3 minutes per game. He shot 55.3% from the field (45% from deep) with a 65% effective field goal rate. His defensive rating also improved to 113.7, and his Player Impact Estimate was up to 14.6.

His performance did not go unnoticed as head coach Mike Brown blamed himself for Hart’s poor start: “I’ll take the hit on that…The tough part was, even backing up further, [Hart] didn’t really play in the preseason; he didn’t even really practice in the preseason. So, for me, I was behind the eight ball and was really trying to figure out how to incorporate him with what we’re trying to do. It just took time, and he was extremely patient with the process…His sacrifice was unbelievable because when I took him out, he just sat. When I called his number, he went out and played. But more importantly, his belief in the process, even if he thought I was wrong, was awesome.”

That belief wasn't only rewarded with improved performance but with a return to the starting lineup. Hart started the last five games coming into Friday's contest, and Coach Brown credited his coaching staff with helping him adjust: “You know, I had reasons why I started the other way [with Hart coming off the bench],” explained Brown after Wednesday’s win against the Hornets. “But my staff, I think all of them, were like, ‘Hey, these are the reasons why it would be better.’ And the reality of it is, I just listened to my staff. I said, Okay, if I’m the only one thinking that other way may be better at that time, then maybe I’m wrong.”

Given all of that, when Anunoby was cleared to play tonight, Coach Brown made the decision to start Hart alongside him, pushing Robinson to the bench and using the starting lineup that the Knicks had used for most of the 2024-25 season. While some of that could have been impacted by the fact that Robinson himself doesn't seem to be 100% healthy, it was also a nod to how well Hart had been playing and how much he means to the team.

For one night, against a poor Jazz team, the new/old starting lineup worked. The Knicks led 23-0 to start the game and never looked back.

Neither Hart nor Anunoby was particularly impactful on the offensive end in that first quarter. Hart scored two points but grabbed three rebounds and dished out one assist, while Anunoby posted three points with no other stats. More importantly, the offense clearly flowed well, and both players were solid defensively. Anunoby would go on to finish with 11 points, one assist, and no rebounds in 23 rusty minutes. Still, he was back out on the court, and that's what mattered most.

"It felt good," Anunoby said after the game about being back on the court. "Missed playing with my teammates. Missed the fans. I missed it, it was really fun playing."

Hart finished with eight points, six rebounds, six assists, and a steal in 28 minutes. Most of the Knicks' starters sat for the fourth quarter, with not a single starter playing in the final eight minutes of the game.

At the end of the day, it was one game against one of the weaker teams in the NBA, but it seems that the Knicks are preparing for life with both Hart and Anunoby in the starting five yet again. As a whole, that lineup was the eighth most effective five-man lineup, based on net rating, of any lineup the Knicks used for at least 60 minutes last season. There were only 12 qualified lineups. That lineup also had the third-worst defensive rating.

Yet, coming into Friday's game, that same lineup had played 40 minutes together this season and had the fourth-highest net rating of the nine qualified Knicks lineups. It also had the fourth-best defensive rating.

Perhaps in a new system, this five-man lineup could have new life. It seems like we'll get a chance to find out.

Knicks use record-setting first quarter, 47-point third quarter to blow out Jazz, 146-112

The Knicks opened the game on a record-setting run and used a 47-point third quarter to blow out the Utah Jazz, 146-112, on Friday night at MSG.

It's New York's best home start (12-1) since 1992-1993 and the most points they've scored in a game since 1980.

Here are the takeaways...

-- OG Anunoby returned to the court for the first time since suffering a hamstring injury on Nov. 14 and immediately made an impact, forcing a turnover on Utah's first possession. Fellow starters Karl-Anthony Towns, Josh Hart, Jalen Brunson, and Mikal Bridges all scored (in order) and soon after, Miles McBride, off the bench for Anunoby, drilled a three-pointer to put the Knicks up 16-0, forcing a Jazz timeout. The lead grew to 23 points before Keyonte George scored with 5:27 remaining in the first quarter, drawing a continuation foul against Bridges and completing the three-point play.

The 23-0 start became the largest game-opening run without an opponent point in the PxP era (1997-98), per the NBA.

-- Anunoby got his first bucket on a fade-away, and-one jumper with about a minute left and Brunson capped off the dominant quarter with a step-back three-pointer with 1.6 seconds remaining. The Knicks took a commanding 41-13 lead, their largest lead after the first quarter since the 1996-1997 season. They held Utah to 17 percent shooting, with three of their four makes coming from beyond the arc. 

-- Towns got going in the second with an offensive rebound followed by a three-pointer on the next possession. George, Kyle Filipowski, and veteran Kevin Love began to get the Jazz back in the game, but McBride caught fire with three straight three-pointers to push the lead to 29 points.  

New York led at halftime, 68-47, despite losing the second quarter (34-27) as Lauri Markkanen heated up before the break. The Knicks shot 51 percent in the first half and won the rebound battle by six. McBride led the way with 16 points (5-for-7 on threes), while Brunson had 13, and Towns and Bridges scored 10 each. Bridges' scoring came on 5-for-5 shooting in the first quarter, but he barely played in the second quarter after picking up his third foul. 

-- Towns made two straight three-pointers to open the third quarter and then Brunson decided it was his turn, hitting two straight threes to push the lead back up to 27 points. McBride's huge night continued, as he buried his sixth and seventh three-pointers (connecting on 27 of his last 41 attempts) to make it a 100-67 game with 3:28 remaining in the quarter. Brunson kept the three-point barrage going, making two more before hitting his free throws to give him 32 points through three quarters.

The Knicks blew it open with 47 points in the third, their most points in any quarter this season, to go up 115-77.

-- Mike Brown emptied the bench in the fourth quarter, but allowed Anunoby to keep playing and shake off any rust. He checked out with 7:15 left, playing a total of 23 minutes in his first game back. He scored 11 points on 4-for-8 shooting with an assist and two turnovers. 

Brunson finished with a game-high 33 points on 9-for-17 shooting, including a perfect 9-for-9 at the foul line. Towns had 18 points and nine rebounds, while Clarkson had 16 points off the bench. All 12 Knicks who played scored. Overall, New York made 21 three-pointers, shooting 50 percent from deep as a team.

Game MVP: Miles McBride

McBride heard elongated "Deuce" chants from the Garden crowd all night long. He scored 22 points in 22 minutes, going 7-for-10 from three-point land with three rebounds and two assists. 

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks will stay at home and face off against the Orlando Magic on Sunday, Dec. 7 at 12:00 p.m.

Devils shut out for second straight game after 3-0 loss to Golden Knights

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Shea Theodore had a goal and an assist, Akira Schmid got a shutout against his former team, and the Vegas Golden Knights beat the New Jersey Devils 3-0 on Friday night.

Tomas Hertl and Ivan Barbashev also scored and Jack Eichel had two assists for Vegas, which has won three straight after a four-game skid (0-2-2). Schmid, who spent three seasons with New Jersey before being traded to Vegas on June 29, 2024, finished with 24 saves to get his third career shutout — second this season.

Jacob Markstrom had 24 saves for the Devils, who were shut out for the second straight game and finished a winless four-game homestand (0-4-0). New Jersey lost 3-0 to Dallas on Wednesday night.

The Devils shuffled all four lines and got off to a slow start as they were outshot 13-5 in the first period.

Theodore got the Golden Knights on the scoreboard with 13 seconds left in the opening period, scoring from the right circle after a pass from Eichel.

New Jersey then outshot Vegas 11-7 in a scoreless second period.

There were no penalties until Vegas’ Brandon Saad was sent off for tripping at 2:16 of the third period. The Devils had only one shot on goal during the advantage.

New Jersey got another power play nearly 10 minutes later when Noah Hanifin was called for delay of game for sending the puck over the glass, but the Devils were held without a shot on goal.

The Golden Knights got their first power play 5 seconds after their penalty expired as New Jersey’s Nico Hischier was whistled for hooking. Hertl took advantage as he tipped Mitch Marner’s one-timer past Markstrom with 4:26 remaining for his team-leading 12th of the season.

With Hischier in the penalty box again, Barbashev scored on the rebound of Eichel’s shot from center point that hit the left post with 1:24 left.

Up next

Golden Knights: At New York Rangers on Sunday night.

Devils: At Boston on Saturday night.

Mets' Ronny Mauricio homers in 2025 winter ball debut

Mets youngster Ronny Mauricio made his 2025 Dominican winter league debut with LIDOM on Friday night and showed off his power.

In his second at-bat of the game, Mauricio took a 1-2 low-and-in fastball and launched it an estimated 401 feet to give his team -- Tigres del Licey-- a 3-0 lead.

 

Mauricio, who was the team's DH, finished 1-for-5 with two strikeouts, but that blast was a welcome sight for the young infielder and the Mets.

The 24-year-old is playing in winter ball for the first time since he suffered a knee injury that required surgery in 2023, which wiped out Mauricio's 2024. This past season, Mauricio showed flashes but was not consistent enough at the plate to warrant everyday playing time, especially when the team was in the midst of a playoff spot.

Mauricio finished the year slashing .226/.293/.369 with an OPS of .662 to go along with six home runs and driving in 10 RBI across 61 games.

With the roster in flux, Mauricio will look to try and make a roster spot this spring, but he'll have to beat out Brett Baty, who had a bounceback 2025. There's also a chance Mauricio will get traded this offseason. His performance at winter ball this year could go a long way for teams to take a chance at the once-touted prospect.

Blake Griffin on Clippers: 'I'm just disappointed… I'm disappointed for Chris Paul'

Chris Paul and Blake Griffin were teammates for six years — the best on-court six years in Clippers history. The Lob City Clippers won 50+ games five of those seasons and were a legitimate title contender in a few of those years, a team undone by injuries, meltdowns, and one ugly ownership change in the middle of that run. Griffin was one of many CP3 teammates over the years who occasionally chaffed at the point guard's in-your-face leadership style, but there was mutual respect, and together (with DeAndre Ayton and others) they turned the Clippers from a laughingstock of a franchise into one that had to be respected.

Griffin was famously and unceremoniously traded by the Clippers six months after signing a max extension with the team. Those ice-cold Clippers were back this week with their awkward decision to send Chris Paul home and away from the team during a road trip — and to do it in the middle of the night.

Griffin now works as part of the Amazon Prime NBA coverage, and he was asked Friday for his thoughts on the situation and he called out his former franchise.

"I'm just disappointed. To be honest. I can't think of really another word. Obviously shocked at first. But disappointed. I'm disappointed for Chris Paul.

"But I'm disappointed in the Clippers organization. I mean, Chris Paul is a guy who came to the Clippers, when DeAndre and I were first and second-year guys. He brought a winning culture. He taught us how to operate in the NBA, and how to take every game seriously, how to take your body seriously, that there was no detail that was too small. And we weren't perfect, right? Like, we failed ultimately win a championship. I know that. I'm reminded of it every day. And CP and I didn't always see eye to eye. But I'm disappointed because we got to a franchise that was synonymous with jokes. Right? You heard the Clippers, and you heard the curse. And, again, we didn't win a championship, but we did create a culture and an environment that people respected. You know, every year, you knew the Clippers were gonna be competitive.

"And Chris Paul, for 20 years, has been the same player. He's been about winning. And, you know, re-signed with the Clippers. This was supposed to be his moment, his, you know, coming back to LA. You know, 'I'm giving it one last go.' And for him to not get to walk out on his own terms, from the franchise that he chose to go to to end his career, is extremely disappointing. But I think the biggest reason I'm disappointed is what Chris said: No communication with Ty Lue. And, even more than that, you know, no communication -- I talked to CP Wednesday, I talked to him yesterday, I talked to him today -- no communication with Steve Ballmer. And that's, like, the disappointing thing for me."

Griffin is spot on — the Clippers knew exactly who they were bringing in when they re-signed Chris Paul this summer. His style in the locker room is not some secret around the league, and he's the same guy now that he was when he was here a decade earlier. The guy who calls out everything is going to get annoying to hear on a 6-16 team, and Lue was probably tired of hearing it. The Clippers are also a franchise that has become known for letting its stars have some latitude off the court with team structures, and when the team isn't winning, CP3 is going to call everyone out.

Whatever you think of the reasoning behind the Clippers sending CP3 home, how this team handled it was sloppy. The late-night news break, the lack of communication, it's the kind of thing players and agents remember. It's too much of what the Clippers used to be and not what they have worked to become as an organization under Ballmer.

Griffin is right, it's been disappointing.

Loucks: It's Time For The Wild To Play Hunter Haight

Hunter Haight has been with the team for seven games. He has not played in any of those games. Sometimes having a young guy be with the team on the road trip or any game for that matter, can be a great thing for their development.

Haight, 21, was fantastic in training camp and in the preseason. He impressed the staff so much he made the team out of camp and started the season by playing in the first two games. He was then sent down.

Since being called up, Haight was scratched for five games before he was sent down where he played in an AHL game with the Iowa Wild.

Minnesota called him back up for the road trip and he has been scratched for the last two games. The Wild's fourth line is Liam Ohgren, Ben Jones and Tyler Pitlick.

The three of them have a combined zero points. Ohgren is a minus-3 in 15 games, Pitlick is a minus-2 in 17 games and Jones is a minus-5 in 15 games.

Jones, 26, is a seventh round draft pick and played in 26 games last year for Minnesota and didn't record a point. He had three points last year all taken off because he ran into the goaltender and it was overturned for goalie interference.

In 15 games this year and 43 in his NHL career over three seasons, Jones has zero points. Believe it or not, in 15 games this year Jones has not been on the ice for a single goal for. His expected goals numbers aren't much better.

Jones' on-ice expected goals is 31% which is the second worst on the Wild behind Ohgren. The line as a trio is tied for 22nd worst in the NHL for expected goals against per 60 minutes. They rank 262 out of 284 lines.

The trio ranks as the worst line in the NHL in expected goals for per 60 minutes. That is 284 out of 284. They have recorded 19 shots as a trio and have allowed 45. They rank dead last in Corsi For %. 284 out of 284. Do they allow shots?

You bet. 78.76 shots against (Corsi) per 60 minutes. Only three lines in the NHL have a worse rating. They also rank dead last in Fenwick and third to last in Fenwick against. 

What is Corsi and Fenwick? 

Corsi counts all shot attempts, including shots on goal, missed shots, and blocked shots. Fenwick is a variation of Corsi that excludes blocked shots, counting only shots on goal, missed shots, and shots that hit the post.

So in conclusion, the data suggests they are one of the worst lines in the NHL when it comes to allowing offense and generating offense.

Meanwhile the Wild's 47th overall pick from the 2022 NHL Draft is sitting in the press box and the Wild's 19th overall pick from the same Draft is playing between two guys who have combined for zero points in 32 games.

Haight scored 20 goals in his rookie season in the AHL. He scored a few in the preseason this year and impressed the Wild. Maybe not enough though considering Jones, Pitlick and Ohgren are still playing.

It doesn't seem to matter what Ohgren or anyone else around him does. He will continue to be sheltered and play limited minutes. Almost every one of his goals and assists in his career have come when he was playing in the top-nine.

At some point, development has to come with opportunity. Whether or not you believe Haight earned his call-up and this opportunity to play, he is here and if the fourth line is going to get caved in every game, it’s hard to justify Haight watching it happen instead of getting those minutes himself to grow.

The Wild have nothing to lose by putting him in but everything to learn. The results below him aren’t changing, but at least he could learn something by being out there.

All data from Money Puck.com.

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Devils vs. Golden Knights Trade Revisited

The New Jersey Devils face the Vegas Golden Knights tonight, marking a reunion for winger Paul Cotter. Cotter was traded to the Devils in June 2024 from the Golden Knights. His fit with the Devils and the impact of the trade on both teams merit analysis.

On June 29, 2024, Cotter and a 2025 third-round pick moved from Vegas to New Jersey in exchange for Alexander Holtz and Akira Schmid.

Cotter was drafted in the fourth round of the 2018 NHL Draft by the Golden Knights.

He played three seasons with the team, recording 138 games, 22 goals, and 23 assists.

With the Devils, Cotter has played 106 games, totaling 18 goals and 10 assists.

Last season, Cotter blended in well with the Devils team. He scored a career-high 16 goals and recorded 22 points in 79 games. He also threw a career-high 245 hits, which is now a Devils franchise record.

This season, Cotter struggled early on, but so has the entire Devils lineup. The team has lost three straight games, and according to head coach Sheldon Keefe, they “were essentially lifeless” in Wednesday’s loss.

For the Golden Knights, Holtz hasn’t panned out the way the team had hoped. This season, in eight games, he has recorded zero points. Last season in 53 games, he recorded 12 points–not quite what the Golden Knights were expecting from the 23-year-old left winger.

Schmid, on the other hand, has performed well this season. Although he played only 5 games last season, he has already started 15 this season.

The goaltender has a .896 save percentage and a 9-2 record.

Entering tonight's matchup, the Golden Knights are 12-6-8 with 32 points. The Devils are 16-10-1 with 33 points. Both teams are closely matched in points. 

The trade benefited both sides, as Cotter has found a fit with the Devils and Schmid with the Golden Knights. 

The puck will drop at 7 PM tonight as both teams look to add another win to their record. 

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Southampton name Tonda Eckert as manager after successful interim spell

  • Under-21 coach has overseen improvement in form

  • ‘We go all in’ for promotion, Eckert says

Southampton have appointed their under-21 coach Tonda Eckert as manager with a contract taking him through to 2027, the Championship club announced on Friday.

The 32-year-old German has changed the team’s fortunes since taking over as interim coach last month following Will Still’s dismissal, guiding them to four wins in five matches.

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