New York Daily News' Basketball News https://www.nydailynews.com Breaking US news, local New York news coverage, sports, entertainment news, celebrity gossip, autos, videos and photos at nydailynews.com Thu, 16 May 2024 02:00:24 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://www.nydailynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/cropped-DailyNewsCamera-7.webp?w=32 New York Daily News' Basketball News https://www.nydailynews.com 32 32 208786248 Jayson Tatum scores 25 to lead Celtics past Cavaliers 113-98 and into 3rd consecutive East finals https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/celtics-cavaliers-jayson-tatum-eastern-conference-finals-nba-playoffs/ Thu, 16 May 2024 02:00:24 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7700767 By Kyle Hightower

Jayson Tatum had 25 points and 10 rebounds, and the Boston Celtics beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 113-98 on Wednesday night to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the third straight season.

Al Horford added 22 points, 15 rebounds and six of Boston’s 19 3-pointers to post their third consecutive win of the series and earn a 4-1 win. The Celtics will now await the winner of the matchup between the New York Knicks and Indiana Pacers. New York leads that series 3-2.

The Cavaliers played extremely short-handed without All-Star Donovan Mitchell (calf), center Jarrett Allen (rib) and key reserve Caris LeVert (knee).

Cleveland stayed close through the first three quarters and pulled within 88-85 early in the fourth. Boston then went on a 13-2 run to take a 101-87 lead with 6:44 to play.

Evan Mobley scored a playoff career-high 33 points and had seven rebounds. Marcus Morris Sr. had five 3-pointers and finished with 25 points.

Cleveland now enters a summer of uncertainty with the futures of Mitchell and coach J.B. Bickerstaff squarely in the spotlight.

Mitchell has been everything for the Cavs in his second postseason for Cleveland. He earned his fifth All-Star appearance in the regular season. He averaged 29.6 points in these playoffs but didn’t play in either of the final two games.

The end of Mitchell’s tenure in Cleveland could potentially come in the same TD Garden arena where LeBron James played his last game with the Cavs before leaving for Miami in 2010.

Mitchell is eligible to sign a contract extension but has not given any indication he’s eager to stay or leave Cleveland.

Bickerstaff is completing his fourth full season as Cleveland’s coach. Including the 11 games he coached after taking over for John Beilein during the 2019-20 season, Bickerstaff is 170-159 with two playoff appearances.

Much like they did in Game 4 without Mitchell, the Cavs used the 3-point line to keep pace with the Celtics, making 8 of 19 in the opening 24 minutes.

Cleveland started the second quarter by connecting on 4 of 5 attempts from beyond the arc to nudge ahead 46-40. The Cavs also got solid minutes off the bench from Marcus Morris Sr., who scored 14 points in his first 12 minutes of action.

But Boston rallied and closed with an 18-6 run to take a 58-52 lead into halftime.

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7700767 2024-05-15T22:00:24+00:00 2024-05-15T22:00:24+00:00
Kristian Winfield: Knicks’ Tom Thibodeau continues to put Coach of the Year ballot to shame https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/knicks-tom-thibodeau-playoffs-pacers-josh-hart/ Wed, 15 May 2024 21:56:21 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7700314 It’s funny when you think about it.

Tom Thibodeau finished fifth among his peers in Coach of the Year voting, an award rightfully claimed by Oklahoma City Thunder coach Mark Daigneault, who captained the youngest team ever to both win 55 games in a season and secure to the No. 1 seed in either the Eastern or Western Conferences in NBA history.

Daigneault ran away with the league honor, taking home 89 of the 99 first-place votes to create 315 points worth of separation between himself and the runner-up, Orlando Magic head coach Jamahl Mosley.

Mosley had an admirable season, leading Paolo Banchero and a Magic team with just one player over age 29 to the East’s No. 5 seed.

So did both Chris Finch, who coached Anthony Edwards and the Minnesota Timberwolves to one game shy of the West’s No. 1 seed, and Joe Mazzulla, whose loaded Boston Celtics finished seven games better than the West’s No. 1 seed and 14 games better than the next-best Eastern Conference team.

That team is the Knicks — Thibodeau’s Knicks — who miraculously claimed the second seed in the East despite a barrage of injuries and a pair of mid-season trades.

If Thibodeau’s regular-season success in the face of adversity doesn’t reinforce his status as a top-three coach of the year candidate snub, consider what he’s done in the playoffs, as he’s positioned these Knicks one game shy of their first trip to the Eastern Conference Finals since 2000.

There is no reason Thibodeau should not have finished top-three in Coach of the Year honors. He has turned water into wine, pushing a depleted, injury-riddled Knicks roster beyond its limits to put it on pace for one of the best single seasons in franchise history.

It’s no wonder the Knicks, reportedly, are preparing to offer Thibodeau a long-term — and lucrative — contract extension to stay at Madison Square Garden.

After all, Thibodeau powered the Knicks to the No. 2 seed despite a wave of injuries that would have wrecked a number of seasons elsewhere.

In fact, the Knicks have taken a 3-2 series lead over the Indiana Pacers in the second round of the playoffs despite missing four key rotation players to injury entering a pivotal Game 6 in Indiana on Friday.

  • Mitchell Robinson suffered a stress fracture in his left ankle on Dec. 8, costing him three-and-a-half months of regular-season action, then returned with a handful of games remaining on the schedule, only to end his season on another stress reaction in the same ankle in Game 1 against the Pacers
  • Three-time All-Star Julius Randle — who averaged 24 points, nine rebounds and five assists per game in the first half of the season — ended his year on a dislocated right shoulder in a an. 27 matchup against the Miami Heat
  • That was also the last game OG Anunoby played before discovering inflammation in his right elbow. Anunoby ultimately underwent a minor procedure that sidelined him for a month-and-a-half. He  then aggravated the elbow injury within three games into his return to action and missed another stretch of games after the All-Star break
  • And Bojan Bogdanovic’s season ended on a gruesome ankle injury in the first round against the Philadelphia 76ers

Now it’s Anunoby with not an elbow, but a hamstring keeping him off the floor, yet Thibodeau’s Knicks have decisively outplayed a Pacers team they would have already advanced beyond had Andrew Nesmith, who entered the fourth quarter of Game 3 with zero points on six shot attempts, not cashed-in on a buzzer-beating, 30-foot heave for the win in Indiana.

Thibodeau finished with two first-place votes for Coach of the Year, 14 second-place votes and seven third-place selections for the highest single-season coaching honor in the sport.

He also finished first in an anonymous poll among players asked to name the coach, aside from their own, they would least like to play for.

Thibodeau’s players, several of which are enjoying career years in New York, stuck up for their coach, and Josh Hart did it again, defending his coach from criticism suggesting culpability for the injuries plaguing the Knicks in the playoffs.

If anything, Thibodeau pushed the Knicks forward in spite of the missing bodies, and while he might not have any end-of-the-season hardware, or finalist status, to tout, he is captaining a Knicks team perpetually defying the odds, relentlessly moving forward toward the best season it’s seen this century.

“You expect ignorance when people have no idea what goes on in this building,” said Josh Hart. “At the end of the day,  people are going to say things for clicks. People are going to say things that make them feel like they stuck it to him. But at the end of the day, they are not in this building, they are not in that locker room. Whatever they say doesn’t mean anything. Put any of those guys in this position and see what they do.”

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7700314 2024-05-15T17:56:21+00:00 2024-05-15T17:56:35+00:00
Bronny James focused on forming own identity, not playing with dad LeBron James in NBA: ‘I haven’t done anything yet’ https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/bronny-james-lebron-james-nba-draft-combine/ Wed, 15 May 2024 16:16:18 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7699316 Bronny James wants to show the world he’s more than LeBron James’ son.

The 19-year-old said as much during a rare media address at this week’s NBA Draft combine in Chicago, telling a horde of reporters that playing professionally with his superstar father is not a priority.

“I would be happy about getting to the league instead of me thinking about playing with my dad, but that’s not my mindset right now at all,” Bronny said Tuesday. “I’m just trying to put in the work and see where it takes me from there.”

LeBron James attended the combine on Wednesday as Bronny participated in his second scrimmage of the scouting event.

Bronny declared for the NBA Draft last month but also maintained his college eligibility, leaving his options open after a cardiac arrest last summer delayed the start of his freshman season at USC by a month.

The guard, who underwent surgery last year to treat a congenital heart defect, was reportedly cleared this week to play in the NBA.

“It was a tough time for sure, but all this work that I’ve put in, it just really built me into someone that will never give up,” Bronny said of the health issue. “It paid off because I put in the work after that situation and I’m back to where I want to be.”

Considered a first-round prospect before last year’s medical scare, Bronny averaged 4.8 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists over 25 games, including six starts, with USC. He acknowledged Tuesday that his heart problem was a setback but said he doesn’t use it as an excuse.

At the combine, Bronny measured at 6-1 ½, recorded the sixth-best max vertical leap at 40.5 inches, went 19-of-25 in the 3-point star drill and scored four points on 2-of-8 shooting in his initial scrimmage Tuesday.

It has long been considered a dream of LeBron James, the NBA’s all-time leading scorer and a four-time champion, to play with his son. James, who averaged 25.7 points, 7.3 rebounds and 8.3 assists per game in 2023-24 in his 21st NBA season, wields a 2024-25 player option with the Los Angeles Lakers.

“This is a serious business, and I don’t feel like there would be a thought of, ‘I’m just drafting this kid just because I’m gonna get his dad.’ I don’t think a GM would really allow that,” Bronny said. “I think I’ve put in the work and I’d get drafted because of not only the player but the person that I am.”

Bronny entered the NCAA transfer portal last month. That means he could play at a different school in 2024-25 if he decides to forgo the draft, which is set to take place June 26 at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center.

The teenager, who did not conduct interviews during his freshman season, spoke to reporters for nearly 20 minutes at the combine. He expressed gratitude for his health and his situation.

“I just want to have people know my name is Bronny James and not being identified as just LeBron James’ son,” Bronny said.

“Everything that follows my dad, people just try to link me with that and all the greatness that he’s achieved. I haven’t done anything yet, so I feel like there needs to be that divide between Bronny and LeBron.”

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7699316 2024-05-15T12:16:18+00:00 2024-05-15T16:56:43+00:00
Nets to retire Vince Carter’s No. 15 jersey at Barclays Center next season https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/nets-retire-vince-carter-jersey-barclays-center/ Wed, 15 May 2024 14:39:01 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7698868 The Nets will honor one of their best players in franchise history next season by raising Vince Carter’s No. 15 jersey into the rafters at Barclays Center, the team announced on Wednesday.

Carter’s jersey retirement, which some felt was long overdue, was teased on Brooklyn’s social media accounts Tuesday in the form of a 14-second audio clip from his game-winning 3-pointer against the Toronto Raptors on Jan. 8, 2006. He finished that game with 42 points. He once said that shot against the Raptors was one of the greatest moments of his career.

Carter, a former fifth overall pick out of North Carolina in 1998, wound up playing an NBA-record 22 seasons with Toronto, New Jersey, Orlando, Phoenix, Dallas, Memphis, Sacramento and Atlanta. He was voted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2024 in April.

“It’s pretty dope, man, because it’s forever up there,” Carter said in a short video shared on the Nets’ social media accounts on Wednesday. It’s Nets [No.] 15, Carter. Can’t use it again. Doesn’t get any better than that.”

Carter’s jersey will be hung in the rafters next to Jason Kidd’s, another Hall of Famer who he shared a backcourt with for four seasons in New Jersey. Kidd’s No. 5 jersey was retired at Barclays Center on Oct. 17, 2013.

“I think about coming into the league, trying to be the best player you can be,” Carter said. “And then you go through a trade, and you get a new life. Especially playing with Jason Kidd, who is a Hall of Famer, legend, up in the stands as well.

“And I heard a story from Gary Sussman talking about how J Kidd, after I hit that shot in Toronto, he felt that I was a guy he can trust. And he would jump in the foxhole against anybody at any time. So, for me to get that opportunity again to be a part of the franchise, to be a go-to guy was a breath of fresh air. And it was fun to play with that guy because he made the game easy for me as well.”

Carter, 47, currently serves as a basketball analyst for YES Network. Known by the nickname “Vinsanity” because of his generational athleticism, he averaged 23.6 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.7 assists per game during his stint with the Nets from 2004-09 while shooting 44.7% from the field and 37% from 3-point range.

The 6-6 guard finished his career as an eight-time All-Star and was named to an All-NBA team twice. He won NBA Rookie of the Year in 1999 and retired with 25,728 career points, which ranks 21st all-time in NBA history.

“Congratulations on having your number retired next to my No. 5,” said Kidd, who currently serves as head coach of the Mavericks. “We got 5 and 15. You made the game so easy, maybe too easy. But again, congratulations. You’ve had an incredible career. I think you played for 40 years, somewhere around there. Well deserved, but understanding you were one of my best teammates in New Jersey and, again, made the game easy. You made me look good, so thank you, congratulations.”

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7698868 2024-05-15T10:39:01+00:00 2024-05-15T11:21:55+00:00
Mike Lupica: When it comes to great playoff Knicks, doesn’t get better than Jalen Brunson https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/jalen-brunson-knicks-playoffs-pacers-lupica/ Wed, 15 May 2024 14:28:26 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7698865 Jalen Brunson didn’t just carry the Knicks again on Tuesday night, it was even more than that because he’s more than that now, it feels as if he’s carrying the whole idea of what they’re trying to do and where they’re trying to go, which means to Boston. Now Brunson gets two days off before he and his teammates head back to Indianapolis and try to finish the job against the Pacers. So the next two nights will be nights when he doesn’t need to score 40, again; when he catches his breath in the greatest basketball postseason the city has ever seen, by any great Knick, in an era, however and whenever this all ends.

Eleven games for him so far in this postseason. Five dazzling performances of 40 points or more. In the history of the NBA here are the guys who have done more than that in a single year: Michael Jordan, LeBron James, Jerry West, Allen Iverson. That is the historic company Brunson now keeps.

That is the kind of 11 that No.11 has rolled so far.

“[Brunson] is an incredible player,” his coach Tom Thibodeau said after Game 5, Thibodeau’s Knicks having gotten up again after getting knocked down the way they were in Game 4 in Indy.

The Knicks were absolutely as much of a team as they’ve ever been on Tuesday night. But then, they are as much of a team as the Knicks have had since 2000, the last time any Knicks team made it as far as the Eastern Conference finals. Only this feels bigger than that, and better, and louder and more important to Knicks fans because of everything that has happened since then, so much of it bad.

You saw how many guys stepped up in Game 5, the ‘Nova Knicks and Isaiah Hartenstein and Deuce McBride and a guy Thibs had forgotten named Alec Burks because everybody had forgotten Burks. Once again, though, it was all sidebar as we all saw what Brunson is like when he has his legs underneath him, when Atlas doesn’t shrug, Brunson putting 44 more points into the books and making another memory for himself and the Garden and once again making you ask this question about No. 11:

How could the Mavericks been so wrong about this guy?

Brunson clearly was not himself in the two games the Knicks lost to the Pacers in Indianapolis when the Pacers squared the series. He was a step slow, at least, had no lift, missed shots he had been making since the start of the series against the 76ers. By then Brunson had set the bar so high for himself, in this playoff series in the NBA when the only more important player has been Nikola Jokic, the MVP of the league again, that when he scored 26 and 29 in those games it was as if he’d barely shown up.

Thibodeau: “I just love how there’s never any excuse-making for him.”

And when it was over on Tuesday night, the opposing coach, Rick Carlisle, whose defense once again watched Brunson go wherever he wanted to go on offense whenever he wanted to, said this:

“Their level of fight was greater than our own.”

It mattered, of course, and mightily. But what mattered more and mattered the most was this: Thibodeau had Brunson and Carlisle did not, on a night at the Garden when Brunson scored 32 of his 44 in the paint. A guard who is listed at 6-2 and doesn’t really look 6-2 once again played like a giant of his sport and continued to make April and May of 2024 a basketball time that will be remembered whether the Pacers come all the way back, or whether the Knicks got knocked off in the round after this. And maybe the very best part of it all is that Brunson is still just 27 years old. There is no reason to think he might only just be getting started.

May 15, 2024: Brun' win away!
Back page for May 15, 2024: Jalen scores 44 as Knicks crush Pacers in Game 5 to move within victory of Eastern Conference Finals. After struggling in Games 3 and 4 in Indiana, Jalen Brunson erupts for 44 points in Knicks' Game 5 win over Pacers in front of a raucous Garden crowd on Tuesday night. With road win on Friday, Knicks will go to East finals.
New York Daily News
Back page for May 15, 2024: Jalen scores 44 as Knicks crush Pacers in Game 5 to move within victory of Eastern Conference Finals. After struggling in Games 3 and 4 in Indiana, Jalen Brunson erupts for 44 points in Knicks’ Game 5 win over Pacers in front of a raucous Garden crowd on Tuesday night. With road win on Friday, Knicks will go to East finals.

Brunson runs the show and owns this Garden the way Clyde Frazier owned his. But Clyde, the best all-around Knick of them all, had all those Hall of Famers with him, Willis Reed and Dave DeBusschere and Bill Bradley and, later, Earl (The Pearl) Monroe. As admirable as these Knicks are, all that fight in them that Carlisle talked about, they right now are starting one player who started the first game of their regular season, and that is Brunson.

Julius Randle is hurt and Mitchell Robinson is hurt and RJ Barrett and Quentin Grimes are long gone. OG Anunoby, such a huge difference-maker for them after the Knicks got him in a trade with Toronto, is hurt again. But the way the Knicks looked without him on Tuesday night in Game 5, there are plenty Knick fans I know who are perfectly willing to take their chances with the Celtics, if it comes to that, if Anunoby gets healthy and looks the way he did, at both ends of the court, the way he did when the Knicks first got him.

But as much as Thibodeau has gotten from the other ‘Nova Knicks especially — Josh Hart, Donte DiVincenzo — this is all about Brunson, the son or Rick Brunson, an old Knick, the kid who grew up, as Jeff Van Gundy told me one time, “dribbling the ball up and down the hallway at the Garden.” He has gone from that to this, No. 11 rolling this kind of 11 and looking like a Knick who has taken his place with the best they’ve ever had. You hear a lot about a puncher’s chance in sports. Brunson is that for these Knicks.

He took two minutes off in Game 5, the Pacers started to come back, Brunson came back and all of a sudden the Knicks went off on a 9-0 rip, and were going to win again. Now he gets these two days off to catch his breath. We all do.

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7698865 2024-05-15T10:28:26+00:00 2024-05-15T18:50:44+00:00
Jalen Brunson punctuates 44-point Game 5 masterpiece with ankle-breaker on Aaron Nesmith https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/jalen-brunson-44-point-game-5-ankle-breaker-aaron-nesmith/ Wed, 15 May 2024 14:12:36 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7698295 Aaron Nesmith fell, but the bucket didn’t.

It’s Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals between the Knicks and Indiana Pacers, the 8:54 mark of the fourth quarter to be precise, and Jalen Brunson, in this moment, decides to turn on the jets.

Brunson, who has 36 points at this juncture of the game, has fully debunked the notion that Nesmith, a 6-6, 215-pound defensive pest for the Pacers, has his number.

On this possession, Brunson recovers a defensive rebound, and Nesmith backpedals as the Knicks’ star guard advances the ball.

Brunson reaches half court with the ball in his right hand and accelerates into a hesitation crossover left to throw Nesmith off-balance.

What happens next brings Madison Square Garden to its feet, and Nesmith, in comical fashion, to a knee.

Brunson goes behind the back, and Nesmith reaches for the ball, only to first come up empty, and then touch earth, a game of live-action Twister played on The Garden’s hardwood floors.

Then Brunson darts by his downed opponent and hoists a floater over Pacers forward Pascal Siakam.

Unlike his other 17 made shots in a 44-point, 35-attempt masterpiece on Tuesday night, however, the ball does not go through the net on this shot.

Instead, it bounces off of three different parts of the rim, plus the backboard, before Pacers forward Isaiah Jackson saves the day, tapping the ball off the iron and earning a goaltending violation — count the bucket — even though Brunson’s shot would have otherwise missed, and thus undone the assault performed Nesmith’s ankles.

Because if you don’t make the shot, no matter how nasty the crossover, then the crossover itself never happened.

“I missed a layup, and I got bailed out by him touching the ball on the rim,” Brunson recalled after the game. “It doesn’t count.”

The crowd sure counted it, erupting for one of Brunson’s signature playoff moments at The Garden, where the Knicks seized a 3-2 series lead via a 30-point victory and now have a chance to close the Pacers in six — or seven — courtesy of Brunson’s surgical disassembly of Nesmith on Tuesday night.

The NBA counted the bucket, too: it’s listed as a driving floating jump shot from one foot away from the rim, one of nine made shots on 17 attempts Brunson took with Nesmith as his primary defender in Game 5.

Brunson shot just 16-of-43 from the field for 44 points in Games 3 and 4 combined after Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle made the defensive adjustment to move away from the sticky 6-3 Andrew Nembhard as Brunson’s primary defensive matchup to Nesmith, who has a glaring size and strength advantage defending the point of attack.

Brunson diagnosed the situation, then prescribed more buckets. Now, the Knicks are one win away from their first Eastern Conference Finals appearance since 2000.

“[Jalen] just being Jalen,” starting Knicks center Isaiah Hartenstein said with a smile at his locker after the Game 5 win. “I think he’s mentally really strong. I think him coming back, him —  as crazy as it sounds — him not forcing anything, and he was still, when they doubled, he got off the ball. He made the right reads, I’m always confident when I have Jalen on the court.”

And it’s the same thing the All-NBA hopeful executed to lead the Knicks to victory in the first round against the Philadelphia 76ers.

The Sixers continued a regular-season trend of using 6-8 wings Kelly Oubre Jr. and Nic Batum both to alter Brunson’s shot motion and throw him out of rhythm guarding him the full 94-foot length of the court.

Brunson shot just 16-of-55 for 46 points in Games 1 and 2 against the Sixers.

He then torched them for 41.8 points on 53.6% shooting from the field to close Philadelphia in six games on its own home floor.

Brunson just shredded the Pacer defense, and Nesmith specifically, after a pair of games where Nesmith appeared a dominant defender for this matchup, only for his ankles to be reduced to ash in a moment sure to live on in Garden lore, even if Brunson won’t count it.

“He’ll always figure it out. … He’s a really smart player,” Hartenstein continued. “So I feel like he’ll always figure out how to adjust, and it’s our job to make his life easier by being more physical and getting easier looks.”

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7698295 2024-05-15T10:12:36+00:00 2024-05-15T10:12:36+00:00
With Pacers on the ropes, Knicks fans believe team will reach first Eastern Conference Finals since 2000 https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/pacers-knicks-fans-reaction-playoffs-madison-square-garden-jalen-brunson/ Wed, 15 May 2024 13:49:51 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7687544 The Madison Square Garden faithful had plenty to cheer about during the Knicks’ Game 5 blowout win against the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday night.

They cheered after each of Isaiah Hartenstein’s 12 offensive rebounds. They roared even louder as Jalen Brunson cruised to another 40-point performance. And they exited MSG with all the confidence in the world that their hometown Knicks are well on their way to the first Eastern Conference Finals since 2000.

“The fans, it’s freaking nuts,” said Mani Bajwa. “They scare me and I’m on the same side.”

Bajwa, and his friend Sulaiman Rahman, were two of 20,000 plus in attendance for Tuesday’s revenge win after witnessing an awful Mother’s Day embarrassment that took place in Indiana Sunday. The ugly loss is already a distant memory, though.

Bajwa, who has fallen in love with the Knicks and the area since moving to New York City last winter, believes the Pacers have run out of luck. And another game in a hostile an environment isn’t enough to force a Game 7.

“Oh, they’re closing it out next game,” Bajwa said with confidence before exiting the arena.

And his confidence on why the Knicks will advance? No. 11 in orange and blue.

“He might be the best player in the playoffs,” Bajwa said about Brunson. “Everyone talks about SGA [Shai Gilgeous-Alexander] and Ant [Anthony Edwards] but Brunson is carrying this team.”

That’s the tone around The Garden. Whether it’ll take a gutsy road win or a Game 7 win at home, Knicks fans feel the Brunson-led team can’t lose as long as the star is on his game.

Twenty-three-year-old college student Rafael Nadal — yes the same name as the Spanish tennis legend — isn’t certain on how many games it’ll take, but he knows the first Eastern Conference Finals berth of his lifetime is approaching.

Knicks fan Rafael Nadal (l.) waving Knicks flag during Tuesday's Game 6. (Photo Courtesy of Victoria Nadal).
Knicks fan Rafael Nadal (l.) waving Knicks flag during Tuesday’s Game 6. (Photo Courtesy of Victoria Nadal).

“Who knows,” Rafael said when asked if the Knicks can wrap the series up in six games. “I have faith. I know they can close it down. I know we don’t have OG [Anunoby]… but we got this. I feel like the rotation is better. Alec Burks is getting more minutes. He’s getting some confidence. If we really want to, we got this.”

Rafael enjoyed the Game 6 victory with his father and younger sister, Victoria. He came straight to MSG in his cap and gown after graduating from nearby NYU. Game 6 was obviously a game he couldn’t miss with the colors of orange and blue flowing through his bloodstream.

“My dad is a Knicks fan. My grandpa was a Knicks fan. My great grandfather was a Knicks fans as well,” he said.

“And as a result, our whole entire family are Knicks fans,” Victoria added.

While enjoying a comfortable second-half lead, Rafael reminisced on the good — and mostly not so good — times of being a young Knicks fan.

“I got to see the Melo days, which were great. I got to see the Porzingis days, which were … OK,” he said. “But overall it’s been suffering for the past few years.”

He mentioned the immediate shift that began in the front office after the Julius Randle signing in 2019 and the subsequent deals that followed. But there’s one that saved the franchise and actually instilled hope in a city dying for another postseason run.

“And when Jalen Brunson came in,” Rafael said with a smile. “When you start seeing the leadership. It’s not only him being a guard. It’s him being a leader and really carrying his players forward. It makes everyone so much happier. It’s been such an enjoyable experience. Its been such a great way that I can actually bond with my dad.”

Brunson followed up the Game 4 dud by converting on 18-of-35 shots on Tuesday. The MSG hardwood was his dance floor. The Pacers sent different matchups at him, but to no avail. Aaron Nesmith had success on the Knicks All-Star Sunday, but ended up on the floor while trying to guard Brunson in the fourth quarter Tuesday.

The play ended with Brunson being awarded two points on a goaltending violation. But it still left Queens teacher John Torres in awe.

“He’s the heart and soul. He’s having a good night, there’s a good chance the Knicks are going to have a good night,” said John, 35, who attended Game 5 with his twin brother, Jimmy.

Tuesday’s blowout win was the first playoff game for the Queens natives. Watching their team get revenge on Tyrese Haliburton and the Pacers was the only thing on their minds.

“That’s why we’re here. We knew the Knicks had to show up tonight.”

Getting a win at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Friday’s Game 6 would add to their joy. But even if the series goes seven games, John isn’t worried.

“That’s tough, man. That’s tough,” John said about the Knicks getting a series-clinching Game 6 win. “You gotta go back to Indiana. Hopefully we can close it out there because we got the injuries and that’ll get time for our players to get a little rest.

“But if we got to come back to The Garden, I like the odds of that.”

John said there’s a “good chance” they’ll return for Game 7, if necessary. But Jimmy will have to pick up the tab next time around.

“I bought these seats. He’s gonna have to buy the next one,” John said laughing.

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7687544 2024-05-15T09:49:51+00:00 2024-05-15T10:40:48+00:00
Isaiah Hartenstein’s historic rebounding effort ‘huge’ for Knicks in Game 5 win vs. Pacers https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/isaiah-hartenstein-rebounding-knicks-game-5-pacers/ Wed, 15 May 2024 13:01:52 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7690349 With a historic night on the glass, Knicks center Isaiah Hartenstein rebounded from a pair of quiet games in Indiana.

Hartenstein hauled in 17 rebounds on Tuesday in the Knicks’ 121-91 win in Game 5 of their second-round playoff series with the Pacers, establishing a level of physicality he says he didn’t bring in their losses in Games 3 and 4 on the road.

That lofty rebounding total included 12 offensive boards, tying Hartenstein with Charles Oakley for the most in a single Knicks playoff game. Oakley achieved the feat in 1994.

“I just want to be more physical,” Hartenstein, 26, said after helping the Knicks go up 3-2 in the series. “I feel like the games in Indiana, I wasn’t playing like myself. I wasn’t being physical. I was letting them kind of play how I play, so just coming in, that was the biggest thing I wanted to do: Just be physical. Just play my game.”

Five of Hartenstein’s offensive rebounds came during the first quarter, leading to nine second-chance points that helped the Knicks overcome an early 16-9 deficit.

The Knicks finished with 26 second-chance points compared to the Pacers’ nine.

“I thought Isaiah was phenomenal,” Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said. “It was a great team effort, but Isaiah in particular, those extra possessions were huge for us.”

The 7-foot Hartenstein totaled 13 rebounds over Games 3 and 4. The Knicks lost the rebounding battle in both games.

The 17 rebounds on Tuesday marked Hartenstein’s most in a game this postseason. It was the second time in 11 playoff games that Hartenstein’s rebounding total reached double-figures.

“They killed us on the glass better than they probably have any game all series,” Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton said. “We just didn’t match that intensity level all night. … We’ve just got to do a better job of limiting second-chance opportunities. I think in the first half, they shot 15 more shots than us. How do you win a game when teams are doing that?”

The Knicks ended up taking 29 more shots than the Pacers over the course of the game, slowing down Indiana’s fast-paced offense.

“If we don’t get stops and rebounds, our game is not gonna look good. We’re not gonna be able to get the ball out,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. “All of our playmakers are not going to have opportunities to get the ball and attack.”

A reserve to start the season, Hartenstein continues to find success as a starter in place of fellow center Mitchell Robinson, who recently underwent his second ankle surgery of the year. Robinson is expected to be re-evaluated in six-to-eight weeks.

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Pacers’ blowout loss to Knicks, Caitlin Clark’s struggles in WNBA debut make for rough night for Indiana basketball https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/pacers-loss-knicks-caitlin-clark-wnba-debut-indiana-basketball/ Wed, 15 May 2024 12:48:54 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7687545 It was a rough Tuesday night for Indiana basketball.

The Pacers suffered a 121-91 drubbing by the Knicks in a pivotal Game 5 loss at Madison Square Garden, leaving them one loss away from elimination in their second-round NBA playoff series.

About 130 miles to the northeast, the Indiana Fever dropped their season opener, 92-71, to the Connecticut Sun, during which rookie phenom Caitlin Clark struggled in her much-anticipated WNBA debut.

The Pacers returned to New York with the momentum of back-to-back victories in Games 3 and 4 in Indianapolis, evening the best-of-seven series at 2-2.

Indiana won Game 4 on Sunday in blowout fashion, steamrolling the Knicks, 121-89, in an outing decided so quickly that both teams rested their starters for the final quarter.

But the Knicks returned the favor Tuesday, routing the Pacers, 121-91, in a game they outrebounded Indiana, 53-29; forced 18 turnovers; scored 26 second-chance points; and shot 47-of-101 from the field.

“Very poor effort, obviously,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said afterward. “Lost every quarter. Got annihilated on loose balls and rebounds. Gave up 20 offensive rebounds and 29 more shots. We all own it, but very embarrassing. Very embarrassing and a hard lesson.”

The lopsided loss sends the Pacers back to Indianapolis down 3-2 for Friday night’s Game 6.

“They killed us on the glass better than they probably have any game all series,” said Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton, who scored 13 points on 5-of-9 shooting. “We just didn’t match that intensity level all night. Cut it to seven there, early in the second half, got some momentum going, but they answered right back.”

Clark, meanwhile, scored a Fever-high 20 points but shot 5-of-15 from the field and committed 10 turnovers. She picked up two early fouls and missed her first four shot attempts before scoring her first basket at the 5:24 mark of the second quarter.

“Obviously, I’m disappointed, and nobody likes to lose,” Clark said afterward. “That’s how it is, but I don’t think you can beat yourself up too much about one game. I don’t think that’s gonna help this team.”

Clark, who faced tough defense from Connecticut’s DiJonai Carrington, referenced the physicality of Tuesday’s game multiple times during her postgame press conference.

“I thought it took me a little while to settle into the game,” Clark said. “I thought the second half was a lot better, minus some of the turnovers, but just getting more comfortable, and that’s just gonna come with experience and getting to play with these girls.”

Selected first overall in last month’s WNBA Draft, Clark arrived with tremendous hype after a four-year collegiate career at Iowa, where she left as the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer.

Her home debut is set to take place Thursday night at Indianapolis’ Gainbridge Fieldhouse — the day before Game 6 between the Knicks and Pacers is scheduled at the arena.

“We’ve got to make some serious adjustments for Game 6,” Carlisle said, “and we’ve got to get out of here and get home.”

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7687545 2024-05-15T08:48:54+00:00 2024-05-15T08:50:02+00:00
Donte DiVincenzo on altercation with Myles Turner: ‘They were trying to be tough guys’ https://www.nydailynews.com/2024/05/15/knicks-pacers-donte-divincenzo-myles-turner-playoffs/ Wed, 15 May 2024 12:40:59 +0000 https://www.nydailynews.com/?p=7687551 Donte DiVincenzo’s message to Myles Turner and the Indiana Pacers?

You’re not as tough as you’re trying to make it seem.

That was the gist of the message DiVincenzo delivered in front of his locker after a mid-court altercation with Indiana’s starting center in the Knicks’ 30-point shellacking of the Pacers in Game 5 on Tuesday.

DiVincenzo soared through the air for a putback dunk to put the Knicks up 22 with four-and-a-half minutes left in the third quarter, and when he got back up the court on defense, Turner set a screen on him away from the ball.

DiVincenzo attempted to fight through the screen but ultimately got tangled with Turner, and the two exchanged heated words before a nearby official had to separate the two players.

The official’s attempt, however, failed, and DiVincenzo and Turner continued jawing with one another, with several of Turner’s teammates restraining him from continuing to pursue the Knicks guard.

“They were trying to be tough guys,” DiVincenzo said after the game. “That’s not their identity, and there was nothing more to that. I don’t agree with trying to walk up on somebody. Nobody’s gonna fight in the NBA. Take the foul, keep it moving. You’re not a tough guy, just keep it moving.”

Game 5 was one of the more physical games of this second-round series, a necessary prescription for a Knicks team that felt the Pacers attempted to assume their smash-mouth style of play.

After a 32-point loss to the Pacers in Game 4, the Knicks stuck it to the Pacers, out rebounding them, 53-29, and beating them to a large majority of 50-50 balls on the night.

“[We got back to] being ourselves,” said DiVincenzo. “They were talking, trying to be physical, basically trying to be our brand, our identity. And they were successful with it last game. And we regrouped, watched film and realized that’s not who we are. We came out tonight and that’s exactly who we are.”

The dust-up with Turner was one of two skirmishes DiVincenzo found himself a part of on Wednesday. On another play earlier in the game, Pacers center Isaiah Jackson was called for an illegal screen for launching his shoulder into DiVincenzo, only for Isaiah Hartenstein and Alec Burks to come to his defense.

“At the end of the day, they’re also family to me, so if something happens to them, it doesn’t matter what kind of situation it is: I’m always gonna stick up for them,” Hartenstein said after the game. “I mean, the last one, I was kinda hesitant because I didn’t want to get my second [technical foul], but in general, I think that’s what makes us stand up for each other.”

The Knicks faced a similar level of heightened physicality in the first round against the Philadelphia 76ers, who were left with little choice but to muck the series up when the Knicks took a commanding 3-1 series lead.

“There’s two teams that are just trying to move on,” said Jalen Brunson. “Regardless of what the situation is, there’s a lot of competitors out there. It is what it is. Obviously everyone wants to win. You don’t really think anything of it. We both want to win.”

Five players ended Game 5 with technical fouls: Turner and Jackson for the Pacers, and DiVincenzo, Burks and Hartenstein for the Knicks.

“For me I never really see [on-court altercations] and get riled up,” said Josh Hart. “I think we always have that and that’s just a side effect of coming out with energy and toughness and tenacity. So obviously we would have liked to not have some of the techs that we had, but that goes with the competitiveness and the toughness that we’re trying to bring.”

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7687551 2024-05-15T08:40:59+00:00 2024-05-15T08:44:14+00:00