The Knicks were riding high the last few weeks to the tune of nine wins in 10 games, thanks to crisp offense and improved defense. However, the Knicks have now lost two of their last three games, including an OT loss on Tuesday night at home against the 13-win Pacers.
New York's defensive turnaround was key to the Knicks' recent winning ways and the lack thereof was the reason they lost to Indiana.
“Tonight it wasn’t there, at least not at the level that it has been," head coach
Mike Brown said of the team's defense after the loss.
And he's not wrong. The Pacers shot 51.5 percent from the field, including 40 percent from three, in the 137-34 victory. The Knicks could not defend the three-point line or stay in front of any ball-handler for the majority of the four-plus quarters.
While the Knicks kept up offensively, allowing the lowly Pacers to hang with them allowed their Eastern Conference rival to build confidence. That confidence was mentioned a few times by multiple players after the loss.
"Defensively, they had a rhythm early and they kept their confidence," Jalen Brunson said. "Kept the rhythm throughout the entire game."
"We started off the first couple of minutes, we started playing well, but then we let them get a little comfortable," Josh Hart added.
“We didn’t do a great job of getting into their airspace," Brown punctuated. "We did do a little better job in the second half, but by then they were confident.”
The Knicks took a 33-32 lead after the first frame, but red flags were all over the opening quarter. The Pacers shot 50 percent from the field and were 7 of 16 from three (44 percent). That continued in the second quarter as Indiana shot 52 percent and 44 percent from long distance to go into halftime only down 69-63.
"They had tough shots and they made threes and on the other side, we didn't make enough threes to combat the amount of shots they were hitting from the three," Karl-Anthony Towns said. "We didn't reach that standard of defense that we have shown in recent and it came back to bite us today."
That defensive standard has been present for the Knicks of late.
On Sunday, the Knicks held the Celtics to just 37 percent shooting and a minuscule 17 percent from three in the win. In the previous seven games, New York held their opponents to 101 points or less five times (all wins). The Knicks were without OG Anunoby (toe) and Mitchell Robinson (injury management) on Tuesday, but Brunson didn't see their absence as an excuse for the lack of defense. Instead, the All-Star guard pointed to what he and his teammates lacked.
"[We need to] just be a little bit more physical. They were in the rhythm," he said. "Pick up our intensity on the ball with our physicality and stuff like that, and off-ball, they're moving really freely tonight, and they were in the rhythm all night."
But despite the lack of defense, the Knicks had their opportunities to claim victory.
In regulation, the Knicks had chances to take the lead, especially Brunson -- who had a game-high 40 points -- shot poorly in crunch time, going 2 of 7 from the field in the fourth quarter, including missing shots he usually makes in the final few minutes. And even on the final possession, Landry Shamet had an open three-point attempt for the win in the waning seconds, but missed.
"Down the stretch, lack of execution. We gotta make sure at the end of the game, fourth quarter overtime is a little bit different," Hart said. "You can't just run fast, but you got to be able to slow it down and execute, and call plays and get guys in good situations, and areas to be successful. I feel like that's what we're kind of lacking."
"[The Pacers] did a great job offensively. We tried to, you know, tighten up as the game went along, which we did, but it just wasn't quite enough to get it done," Brown said. "We had plenty of opportunity down the stretch to get it done, but when you give a team life from the beginning like we did, it's gonna be hard."
New York doesn't have much time to dwell on the loss as they'll travel to Philadelphia to take on the 76ers on the second of a back-to-back on Wednesday.