Forget another bid for Kidd. The New York Knicks ought to be down with Mike Brown. There was no elephant in the room, and it certainly wasn’t in North Texas either.
The New York Knicks are no strangers to playing with plenty of momentum during the NBA playoffs. Nor are the Cleveland Cavaliers unfamiliar with climbing back from discouraging losses.
The Knicks and Cleveland Cavaliers both have clear injury reports for Game 2, aside from the coach's ailment.
Mikal Bridges’ second regular season as a member of the New York Knicks was turbulent. While the wing himself remained soft-spoken, perhaps even moreso than his first year with the team, he was also benched down the stretch of several close games.
How many players to win the NBA MVP Award can you name in seven minutes?
Tuesday night saw a familiar sight play out for the Knicks: an opponent putting Mitchell Robinson on the free throw line, and him missing his shots more than making them.
As an NBA fan, it hits different when a team's best player is a guy the franchise nurtured from the very start. There's a greater attachment to stars who have been there since the start, who have bled the team's colors since the start of their careers.
Cavaliers star James Harden didn't have a good night with the Cavs.
New York Knicks guard Josh Hart downplayed his frustration with playing time in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals against the Cleveland Cavs. Hart sat in overtime of the Knicks’ 115-104 win against the Cavs, taking a 1-0 lead in New York’s best-of-7 series.
The New York Knicks appear to have a new “greatest of all-time” on their hands in Jalen Brunson. Jeff Teague already placed Brunson on the GOAT pedestal after spearheading the Game 1 comeback over the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Charles Barkley didn’t dance around it. Not even a little. But that’s the Barkley way, right? After the Cavaliers blew a 22-point fourth-quarter lead in a stunning 115-104 overtime loss to the Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals, Barkley unloaded on Cleveland during ESPN’s Inside the NBA coverage.
The Chicago Bulls and New York Knicks didn’t just play basketball in the 1990s; they went to war. And at the center of every battle was a man who made it his personal mission to ensure the Knicks never forgot their place.
If an NBA player ends a game with 30 points, that's generally a great night. 40 points is fantastic, and 50 points is an event. That's especially true when that type of scoring outburst comes from an unexpected source.
On Tuesday evening, the New York Knicks went up 1-0 in their Eastern Conference Finals series against the Cleveland Cavaliers with a thrilling comeback victory in Game 1.
The New York Knicks have been dominant in the postseason, and they continued their dominance in Game 1 against the Cleveland Cavaliers. After being down by as much as 22 points in the fourth quarter, the Knicks stormed back and forced overtime, and ended up winning the game.
The New York Knicks found themselves in a massive hole during the opening game of the Eastern Conference Finals. After sitting out for over a week following their second-round sweep, New York fell behind by 22 points late in the fourth quarter.
Mike Brown got plenty of experience going up against James Harden in the playoffs as a Golden State Warriors assistant. That informed how Brown's New York Knicks defended — and exhausted — Harden in their Game 1 win.
The Cleveland Cavaliers blew it. Up 22 points in Game 1 of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals on the New York Knicks with 7:52 left in regulation, they thought they could run QB kneel and walk to the finish line rather than running through to cross the tape.
The Knicks' needing a momentous comeback on Tuesday inherently means a ton went wrong to put them there in the first place. Some of this can be attributed to rust, but several players simply didn't do what New York needed from them for most, if not all, of Game 1.
On Tuesday evening, the Cleveland Cavs suffered a brutal collapse against the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals to fall behind 0-1.
When the final buzzer sounded at Madison Square Garden, Karl-Anthony Towns didn’t just celebrate with his teammates. He found Jordyn Woods, and the moment cameras caught, said everything about what this run means beyond basketball.
The Knicks don’t complete that ridiculous comeback Tuesday night without Landry Shamet. Simple as that. Shamet logged just 17 minutes in Game 1 against the Cavaliers, but 14 of them came during the fourth quarter and overtime, when everything flipped.
Jalen Brunson took center stage in Game 1, but the Knicks would not have completed that comeback without Mike Brown’s decision to trust Landry Shamet when the game needed a steady hand on both ends of the floor.
Tuesday was a bit of a roller-coaster for Knicks forward OG Anunoby. He began the day as probable to make his return from a hamstring injury, but ultimately was a true game-time decision, which created some concerns that he's not 100%.
The police already had to deal with Jersey burning, a fan climbing a billboard, and multiple arrests for disorderly conduct. All this is transpiring as the New York Knicks are on their path to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999.
Dave Portnoy tried to get an early dig in at the New York Knicks, but Game 1 turned his post into perfect comeback material. The Knicks looked finished when Cleveland built a huge fourth-quarter lead at Madison Square Garden, and Portnoy leaned into the moment with a backhanded message to New York fans.
Brunson helped spark an incredible Knicks rally that helped them steal Game 1.
New York Knicks forward OG Anunoby returned to action in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday. Anunoby has missed the past two games due to a right hamstring strain.
Knicks forward OG Anunoby (right hamstring strain) is officially considered probable to play in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday, tweets Steve Popper of Newsday.
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