Knicks 142, Nuggets 103: “A complete demolition!”

On Thursday, the Nuggets (39-25) played a hard-fought game against the Lakers. The after-effects were apparent tonight, as they were far more winded than the visiting Knicks (41*-23). Add to their woes a Jamal Murray injury in the first half and a scorching performance by OG Anunoby, and the Nuggets were waving a white flag with plenty of time remaining in the third quarter. With traffic-beaters leaving the Ball Arena in the fourth, the Knicks fans got rowdy in the house, cheering the final score: 142-103. That’s the Knicks’ largest margin of victory over Denver ever, and they did it against the NBA’s top-rated offense. Quoth AL_Joe.NY, “A complete demolition!”
Anunoby scored a career-high 40 points at Ball Arena last season. He stood a good chance of matching that, if this game didn’t become a blowout early in the fourth. Playing 32 minutes, OG finished with season-high 34 points, seven boards, five assists, four steals, and a block on 11-of-17 shooting, 6-of-11 from deep. He didn’t destroy Denver alone, however. Karl-Anthony Towns helped, with 17 points and 13 boards in just 27 minutes; Mitchell Robinson posted 13 points and five rebounds in 14 minutes; and the team finished with a season-high 44 assists, 15 of which came from Jalen Brunson.
The game didn’t start so hot, however. Just 1:47 into the game and two Nuggets baskets prompted coach Mike Brown to call a timeout. The Knicks were slow on rebounds, and the timeout didn’t help. They missed six straight shots while watching Denver romp on an 11-0 run.
Gradually, the Knicks assembled a tidy run of their own, cutting the deficit to four on a Robinson three-point play. Mohamed Diawara (4 PTS) replaced Anunoby midway through the quarter and hounded Jamal Murray (12 PTS). Denver continued to crash the glass, though, creating second looks for themselves and denying them for the Knicks. Nikola Jokić (38 PTS, 8 RBS, 7 AST) steadily produced as usual, racking up 10 points, four boards, and four assists in the frame. The visitors fell behind by nine again before Josh Hart (18 PTS, 5 RBS), who was questionable with back spasms, pushed the pace for a layup with three minutes left. The contingent of Knicks fans at the Ball Arena gave their full-throated approval.
After a timeout, Coach Brown tried an assortment of Brunson (9 PTS, 3-of-13 FG), Jose Alvarado (4 PTS, 3 AST, 11 MIN), Landry Shamet (10 PTS), Anunoby, and Robinson. A Shamet triple, an Anunoby steal, and a Robinson buzzer beater cut the score to 29-27 going into period two. Nine points and three boards for Mitch in six minutes!
The Knicks started the second frame with a 7-4 run. Neither team could make their three-pointers, with New York making 2-of-10 and Denver making 2-0f-17 with four minutes gone in Q2. Switching tactics, the ‘Bockers began hammering the paint, with drives by Towns, Shamet, Anunoby, and Bridges all paying dividends and putting the Knicks ahead by five on a 10-1 run.
Aaron Gordon, playing his first game since reinjuring his hamstring on January 21, had minimal impact. He finished with three points and three boards in 17 minutes.
New York’s defense intensified. Towns and Shamet drew offensive fouls on Jonas Valančiūnas. Anunoby hit back-to-back triples to extend the lead to nine. Denver coach David Adelman tried zone defense, but crisp passing found Robinson easily under the cup. Then Mikal Bridges (9 PTS, 3 BLK) blocked Murray from behind, sprinted downcourt, and finished Hart’s pass with a running dunk.
With a minute left in the half, Murray backpedaled onto Jokić‘s ankle, badly twisting it and forcing the All-Star from the game. The Knicks finished the half strong, taking a 65-52 lead into intermission.
The secret to the Knicks’ first-half success was physicality. The teams shot essentially the same (47% to 45%), but New York bullied Denver in the paint (42-28) and on the glass (28-19), and committed just two turnovers. Both sides were atrocious from three: New York 4-for-18, Denver 2-for-19. Jokić led the first-half scorers with 21, while Anunoby topped the Knicks with 14.
After two giveaways in the first half, the Knicks coughed up the rock twice in the first two minutes post-intermission. They redeemed that sloppiness with treys from KAT, Hart, and Anunoby, who was on fire. And their defense continued to stonewall the Nuggets in the paint, with Mikal standing especially tall among a lot of bodies. When OG laced another three-pointer midway through the frame, Adelman needed a timeout to discuss his team’s 15-point hole. Two minutes later, the Knicks were up by 19, and the vexed coach called for time again. Two minutes after that, the differential was 23, and Adelman started thinking about his postgame meal options.
With a minute to go, Brunson converted from deep to take a 26-point lead. Then OG deflected a Bruce Brown pass and received a dime from Diawara for a reverse flush at the rim for a 28-point advantage. When the buzzer sounded, the visitors were ahead, 105-80.
With 8:30 left in the contest, Coach Brown emptied the bench. Tyler Kolek, Alvarado, Pacome Dadiet, Jeremy Sochan, and Diawara came on to close out the dub. Usually there’s not a lot to report from garbage time, but take a look at Dadiet, making the most of his handful of minutes by making X three-pointers and a dunk for 11 points. And check out Tyler Kolek with eight assists in eight minutes! The Knicks played top-notch defense against the league’s top offense, someone other than Brunson scored 30 points, and they were able to rest the starters for most of the final period? Doesn’t get much better than that.
Our heroes visit Los Angeles to challenge the Lakers on Sunday. Safe travels, Knickerbockers
* Should be one more. We wuz robbed.




