Following the Knicks' narrow win over the Nets on Friday night, coach Mike Brown and the players spoke after the game...
Handling Nets' physicality
The Nets made it a point to be physical with the Knicks on Friday night. And, for a good portion of the evening, it seemed to give them the advantage.
New York could not get going offensively, and Brooklyn was beating them on the glass and the 50-50 balls. And it was a constant approach by the Nets and Brown said it affected the team's play.
"They were extremely physical from the beginning of the game and it impacted us," he said. "[Nets coach] Jordi Fernandez outcoached me, they outplayed us in a lot of areas. We were just able to find a way to get a win."
Although the Knicks came away with the 93-92 win, it wasn't pretty. They had to overcome a double-digit deficit early and then almost blew their 14-point lead in the fourth quarter. Brown pointed at the season-high 22 turnovers and the lack of three-point defense. The Nets shot 37 percent from three but had a lot of open looks.
Despite that, the Knicks found a way to win, led by Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns as they retook the lead late and held on.
"They’re an NBA team and they’re a really great team. Great talent, great coaching staff. There was no part of me that thought this would be an easy game," Towns said of the game's physicality. "We had to meet them and exceed the physicality. They brought it today. They wanted to win the game. It was a team effort to find a way to win."
The Nets' physicality came to a boiling point in the second quarter. After Mitchell Robinson took some hard fouls -- even ones that were not called -- in the previous possessions, he went up for an alley-oop when he was fouled hard by Nolan Traore.
Robinson stood over Traore when Danny Wolf tried to get the Knicks big man away. Some pointing and shoving ensued -- and some technical fouls were assessed -- but cooler heads prevailed. That moment seemed to wake up the Knicks, as they closed the first half on a run that cut their first-half deficit to just six.
Robinson was asked about the moment after the game.
"I'm not going to speak on it right now," he said. "It is what it is. I'm not talking about that s--t."
When asked about the physicality, Robinson responded in kind.
"[When it gets physical] You get physical back. That's how it's going to be," Robinson answered. "You got to stand on business."
"You got to protect yourself, especially when something like that happens," Towns said of the Robinson scuffle. "We need him. We need him on this team, we need him available and healthy."
Nolan Traore fouls Mitchell Robinson and a dust-up ensues.
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) March 21, 2026
The foul is ruled a common foul, and the Nets' Ziaire Williams and Robinson were each hit with a technical foul. pic.twitter.com/qlOUnVBLHR
KAT's personal reasons
Entering Friday's game, the Knicks updated their injury report to include Towns. He was questionable for the game against the Nets for personal reasons.
Towns wound up playing and was a big reason why they pulled off the win. He spoke to the MSG broadcast from the Barclays Center floor after the win and alluded to his father's health.
He was asked about his pregame status in the locker room after the game.
"I wasn’t going to play. My pops was adamant...he wanted me to play," Towns said without going into too much detail. "I said I would. I showed up just to play. I’m going to head right back out and go be with him again on the road to recovery."
It's unclear whether Towns will be available for the Knicks' next game, but he'll have the day off Saturday but New York hosts the Wizards on Sunday night.
Combatting slow starts
The Knicks have a starting problem.
The last few games, they've gotten off to bad starts against bad teams. Although they've been able to overcome them, Friday was one shot away from their worst loss of the season.
It was a topic for Brown and the players after the win.
“They brought the fight to us. They came out and wanted to prove a point. Our approach has to be better," Robinson said. "We can’t just look at their record and just say, ‘Alright, we’re gonna whip their ass.’ We’ve just gotta be better all together, and until we figure that part out, it’s gonna be a long rollercoaster.”
"Just got to come out better. Just got to be better as a team," Mikal Bridges said. " It’s mentally, I think. Just got to be mentally ready when the game starts."
On Friday, Brown called an early timeout in the first quarter and he just didn't like what he saw with the ball security.
"We were real lackadaisical with the basketball," Brown explained. "We had 13 turnovers at halftime….I know as of late, for the most part, we’ve been pretty good in that area. We ended the game with 22. It’s not a good ingredient to have when you’re trying to get a road win, no matter who you’re playing.
"If your approach is not what it is, and the other team feels it, anybody can get beat at any time at any level. I said before the game, Brooklyn went into Detroit and beat Detroit. We know we have to play better. I believe in our guys. I believe our guys will play better."