New York Daily News

KNICKS STUNG BY KP INJURY

With Porzingis sitting again, lose to Hornets

- BY STEFAN BONDY

CHARLOTTE – Basketball without Kristaps Porzingis and Tim Hardaway Jr. went well against the Thunder.

Two days later, it was an utter embarrassm­ent.

Porzingis was a gameday scratch again because of a sore knee and the Knicks were run out of the gym Monday by the Hornets, 109-91.

The Knicks (16-14), who had a four-game winning streak snapped, came out sluggish and paid for it, succumbing to a 43-14 Hornets run between the first and second quarters and fell in a 25-point hole.

Unlike the previous two games — victories over the Nets and Thunder — the absences of the Knicks’ two best players proved insurmount­able. They shot just 42 percent, missing wide open runners, jumpers and layups from all over the floor. They also struggled on the glass while getting out-rebounded, 47-37, and outscored in second-chance points, 18-0.

Prior to the game, Porzingis said he’s still dealing with pain – or “a pinch” – in his left knee. Monday represente­d Porzingis’ second straight DNP after sustaining the injury in a victory over the Nets on Thursday. Just like he did Saturday, Porzingis went through the morning shootaroun­d before determinin­g he shouldn’t play.

“You deal with (injuries). You deal with it,” Jarrett Jack said. “You step up and you figure it out. That’s what the NBA season is all about. Nobody is going to feel sorry for us. It’s a very unforgivin­g league. They’re not going to feel sorry for us and we can’t feel sorry for ourselves. That’s not how we going to get this thing going. We’re going to chalk this one up, come back and try to get this next one.”

The defeat dropped the Knicks to 2-9 on the road, an ominous sign since they start a stretch of 25 games with 19 on the road after Christmas.

Charlotte (11-19), winners of just three of its last 13 games, took a 20-19 lead nine minutes into the first quarter and never relinquish­ed the advantage. The Hornets have struggled this season but are still much more talented than this version of the Knicks.

Dwight Howard (11 points, 10 rebounds), Kemba Walker (nine points, six assists), Frank Kaminsky (24 points, 10for-13 shooting) and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist (15 points, nine rebounds) paced the home team. Beasley, who started in place of Porzingis at power forward, led the Knicks with 23 points but required 20 shots to get there and was a liability on defense. Still, Hornacek went to Beasley often because no other Knick could create his own shot. Turns out, Beasley couldn’t come close to making up for Porzingis’ rim protection on defense and ability to draw double teams on offense.

“My night doesn’t really matter. We lost bad, that’s what I think about,” Beasley said. “I do think about what I couldn’t do or what I could have done better. I’m not really gonna know the answers to that until I watch film, sit down and think about it.”

Jeff Hornacek said Porzingis’ knee pain hasn’t changed since the team’s shoot-around on Saturday.

“He said he felt the same thing (in his knee),” Hornacek said.

What exactly is wrong with Porzingis – or what he risks by playing – is largely a mystery. After diagnosing it as a sore knee, the Knicks did not give Porzingis an MRI. The 22-year-old said he wanted to play Saturday in Carmelo Anthony’s return to the Garden, but the team doctor convinced him otherwise.

“Doctors checked me out. I trust the doctors,” he said. “I don’t think it’s necessary to do a test. It’s a sore knee and a little bit of swelling.”

The Knicks have two off-days before their next game Thursday at home against the Celtics, but Hornacek said the opportunit­y for extended rest didn’t factor into the decision. The Knicks are now 1-5 without Porzingis.

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