ATLANTA - For five months or so, there was an open debate over Karl-Anthony Towns’ role on this Knicks team.
Towns’ shot attempts, his post-ups, his pick-and-roll opportunities and his body language were scrutinized nightly.
Some felt he wasn’t getting enough shots. Others thought the Knicks didn’t know how to use him. Many ex-players in the media felt Towns needed to be more aggressive. Others saw Towns and Jalen Brunson as a bad fit.
But after Thursday night – after Towns dominated long stretches of this Hawks series – it may be time to mute the conversation.
“He’s played phenomenal,” Brunson said of his running mate. “The way we’ve been able to trust each other, all of us obviously including him, it’s been great.”
The shift for Towns and the Knicks started after Game 3. With the team trailing, 2-1, Mike Brown and his staff tweaked the offense “to find more ways to put our guys in their strengths while getting to it quickly.”
That started with getting the ball to Towns at the top of the floor. He had 10 assists in Game 4 and kept finding his teammates for the rest of the series. In the Knicks’ last three wins, Towns averaged 8.7 assists per game. He also averaged 11.6 rebounds and recorded triple-doubles in two of those three games.
Perhaps just as impressive, the Knicks outscored Atlanta by 62 points with Towns on the floor in Games 4, 5 and 6.
“I thought KAT was amazing,” Josh Hart said when asked about New York’s defense in Game 6. “To start the game blitzing, protecting the rim, he had some big blocks, his energy was huge for us. I just think the physicality, the attention to detail, focus on the gameplan, I think all those are at a very high level.”
Towns seems to be playing at a high level on both sides of the ball at the ideal time for New York.
His season started with more questions than answers. In late October, Towns gave a less-than-enthusiastic answer to a question about his role in Brown’s offense.
“Honestly, I don’t know. I don’t know,” Towns said then. “But we’re figuring it out. That’s it, but, honestly, I don’t know.”
Now, a little over six months later, Towns seems to know exactly what to do.
“I never doubted my ability,” Towns said after Game 6. “I never doubted the work I put in. It’s just – you gotta adjust, you gotta adjust. Especially (with) a lot of new things being thrown at you, you’re being asked to do a lot more things – some things that (haven’t) consistently been asked of me in my career so. It’s one thing anyone who knows me, who's followed my career, I’m willing to sacrifice and do whatever it takes for the team to win.
“And I think this year I’ve shown that again. Whatever the team needs me to do, the player the team needs me to be, I’ll step up to the plate, step up to the challenge.”
TACTICAL ADVANTAGE
Brown thanked his entire staff after the series. In his postgame press conference, Brown referenced nearly all of his staff by name to thank them for their work during the series.
“I’m the one sitting up here, but those guys were phenomenal getting us prepared for the series, and they were phenomenal throughout the course of the series,” Brown said.
Brown noted that the Knicks made some offensive adjustments after Game 3 against the Hawks.
Once the Knicks implemented those adjustments, they outscored the Hawks by 96 points.
“We had to change (the offense), because every possession was a grind those first three games, especially down the stretch. And so we had to find more ways to put our guys in their strengths while getting to it quickly, while still having options,” Brown said. “I’m not a guy that likes to call every play. I want our guys to be able to read where the advantage is quickly throughout the course of the action. And Atlanta forced us to find a way to do that and feel pretty good about where we’re at right now.”
As noted above, part of the adjustment was getting the ball in Towns’ hands on specific spots on the floor.
“You ask for the opportunities and they obliged and I’ve gotta repay that trust and that opportunity,” Towns said. “I just want to do whatever – I always talk to ya’ll about impact of winning. I got more opportunities to do that and I wanted to make sure I didn't not take advantage of the opportunities I was given.”
I don’t know if there were any offensive adjustments for OG Anunoby, but he was clearly the most valuable Knick of the series.
Anunoby averaged 21 points on 61 percent shooting in this series. He hit 56.6 percent of his 30 three-point attempts and averaged 8.6 rebounds and 1.8 steals. The Knicks outscored the Hawks by 84 points in Anunoby's 115 minutes vs. Atlanta. In Game 6, Anunoby’s 14 first-quarter points prevented the Hawks from establishing a lead. He finished with four steals, seven rebounds and a block.
“OG was phenomenal. He played 27 minutes, had 29 points on 14 field-goal attempts and rebounded his behind off,” Brown said.
The Knicks’ other wing, Mikal Bridges, also played well on Thursday. After struggling earlier in the series, Bridges put up 24 points on 10-for-12 shooting and defended at a high level.
“That’s our guy,” Hart said. “Whenever he comes out aggressive, that adds another dimension to this team. And he’s someone that we count on, someone that we need to make a run. Great to see him be aggressive, picking his sorts and those kinds of things. Defensively, he brought it this whole series.”
Hart also brought it defensively for the whole series. He defended CJ McCollum for long stretches in the last four games. McCollum shot 40 percent and had 14 turnovers over the Hawks’ last four games.
“After Game 1 and Game 2, (when) he kind of went off and kind of took over the game, that’s the matchup that I wanted going into Game 3 and after,” Hart said. “I had some conversations with the coaches about not taking me off him and those kinds of things.”