Daily Press

Knicks must respond after Sixers hit back

- By Mike Lupica

A lot of things in sports can be true at once, including about what is turning into a rock fight between the Knicks and 76ers, starting here:

The Knicks have been hit now, mostly by Draymond Embiid, not just low where Embiid got Mitchell Robinson’s legs, and not just in a place slightly higher, where Embiid hit Isaiah Hartenstei­n with his knee. The Knicks all got hit Thursday night when they had the chance to bury the Sixers and did not.

That is one truth as we look ahead to Game 4 in Philly on Sunday afternoon. Another is that Joel Embiid, if he had the kind of priors Draymond Green does, would have gotten Flagrant 2’d and gotten ejected for pulling Robinson down the way he did. The Knicks, and their fans, have a right to yell their heads off about dirty play, and how the refs blew it. But so, too, did the refs blow it at the end of Game 2. No fouls, including flagrant ones in Game 2, lots of harm.

But perhaps the most lasting truth of what we’ve seen in this series so far is that on Thursday night, when the Knicks really could have finished off the Sixers, they let a guy with a bad leg use his good one to kick them from one end of Broad Street to the other in the second half of Game 3, a half that included the 76ers rolling the Knicks for 43 points in the third quarter.

New York coach Tom Thibodeau was remarkably subdued Thursday (despite doing a tremendous job with his messaging) about Embiid and the free-throw disparity his team encountere­d on the road, a lament as old in the playoffs as the Jersey Turnpike.

When the subject of flagrant fouls and Embiid was raised, Thibodeau drily asked, “Which one?” But then Thibodeau told a truth of his own when he simply said, “We gotta do better.”

To his team’s credit, it did not simply start looking ahead to Game 4 after Embiid and the Sixers seemed to make every shot they took in the third quarter. Jalen Brunson was back to doing Brunson things, on his way to a 39-point night. Josh Hart contribute­d 20 more points, six rebounds, six assists, continuing to play like a star. And the Knicks got the lead down to eight before some bad turnovers, one committed by Brunson.

But the story of this game, in all ways, was Embiid: Because what was clearly the cheapest of shots on Robinson; because Adrian Wojnarowsk­i of ESPN reported that Embiid has been suffering from a case of Bell’s palsy; mostly because the former MVP of the league, even as he still looks as if he’s sometimes walking in a swimming pool, became only the third player in history to score 50 or more against the Knicks in a playoff game. Michael Jordan was the last to do it, 31 years ago (Sam Jones of the Celtics did it in 1967). Was Embiid helped mightily by getting to shoot 21 free throws, and making 19? If you saw the game, you know that he was. It doesn’t change the fact that he got to 50 and, for one night, one his team desperatel­y needed, he looked like the guy who could get an MVP award away from Nikola Jokic.

And, just like that, everybody moved on from one of the best playoff endings, in Game 2, any Knicks team ever had, and one of the worst the Sixers have ever had — the Knicks scoring the last eight points, in the last half-minute, to win.

One thing is for certain: When this thing does return to New York and to Madison Square Garden next week, Embiid will hear it from the crowd the way Reggie Miller did in the old days, when he became Public Enemy No. 1 with Knicks fans.

The 76ers got hit at the end of Game 2, especially with a huge call, in plain sight, not made against Tyrese Maxey, and the timeout the refs didn’t give Nick Nurse that might have changed everything. An ending like that, even in Game 2, could have ended the 76ers if they let it. They did not. They got back up when they got back home, though they were still trailing the Knicks at halftime.

Then a great player who had made a dirty play in the first half simply did great things in the second. The Sixers and their fans stopped by the outrage factory after Game 2. Knick fans made the same stop after Game 3.

 ?? TIM NWACHUKWU/GETTY ?? Philadelph­ia star Joel Embiid, right, and New York’s Isaiah Hartenstei­n clash during Thursday’s first quarter of Game 3 of their NBA first-round playoff series. Embiid later appeared to knee Hartenstei­n in the groin, and the Sixers won to cut the Knicks’ series lead to 2-1.
TIM NWACHUKWU/GETTY Philadelph­ia star Joel Embiid, right, and New York’s Isaiah Hartenstei­n clash during Thursday’s first quarter of Game 3 of their NBA first-round playoff series. Embiid later appeared to knee Hartenstei­n in the groin, and the Sixers won to cut the Knicks’ series lead to 2-1.

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