New York Daily News

QUICKLEY STEPS IN

Immanuel takes over with Brunson out as Knicks run streak to 9

- BY STEFAN BONDY NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

BOSTON — The streak is so strong it didn’t need Jalen Brunson.

Against an Eastern Conference elite and with an injured Brunson in street clothes, Immanuel Quickley took the reins as the Knicks remained the NBA’s hottest team with another thriller, a 131-129 victory in double overtime Sunday night. Quickley was the hero and Energizer Bunny, scoring a career high 38 points – including seven in the second overtime – while dancing and prancing his way through 55 minutes.

The Knicks (38-27) have won nine in a row, the longest streak in the league. They also won three of their four matchups this season against the Celtics (45-20).

Julius Randle added 31 points in the rollercoas­ter of the game.

At different critical points, it was won then lost, then won then lost – until it was won for good when Al Horford’s potential game-winning 3-pointer clanged off the rim at the final buzzer.

The Knicks absolutely flubbed the end of regulation. They led by seven with 1:23 remaining but found every way to blow it, including Quentin Grimes fouling Jaylen Brown on the Celtics’ and-1 shot with 12.9 seconds remaining.

Up by 3 and with Brown dribbling near the paint, Grimes would’ve been better off just allowing a layup. Instead, he was caught reaching and the Knicks never got off a potential game-winner on the following possession because Randle was stripped. The Knicks went to overtime for the second time this season at TD Garden.

The first extra period was highlighte­d by a tying runner in the lane by Quickley with 12.9 seconds left. Tatum, who finished with 40 points, bricked the winner on a contested layup at the buzzer. The Celtics shot just 39% on the night.

It appeared the Knicks were unraveling early in the third quarter. Randle was frustrated by a flop from Marcus Smart and shoulder-bumped the referee, drawing his seventh technical of the season. The visitors trailed by 14.

But then the Knicks took control with a 30-7 run between the third and fourth quarters, a stretch keyed by Quickley.

Brunson was ruled out before the game because of a sore left foot, the point guard’s first absence since December.

According to Tom Thibodeau, Brunson woke up Sunday morning with pain – two days after he logged 35 minutes in a victory over the Heat. The coach claimed he was unaware if Brunson underwent an MRI.

“They’ll reevaluate him (today), the medical people,” Thibodeau said. Brunson had turned his right ankle in Friday night’s game against Miami and received treatment in the locker room. The Knicks, who declined to make Brunson available to the media, claimed the latest injury is unrelated.

It was a strange timeline since Brunson wasn’t listed on Saturday’s injury report.

“They’re looking at it. Hopefully, I don’t think it’s anything serious,” Thibodeau said. “He just woke up with soreness. So we want to make sure he’s good.”

The Knicks started Quickley and gave the backup point guard minutes to Miles McBride, who played just right minutes.

The Knicks started well enough without Brunson but malfunctio­ned at the end of the first half, which the Celtics finished on an 11-0 to take a 61-54 lead at the break. The turning point was a questionab­le foul call on Mitchell Robinson, which sent him to the bench with his third personal.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? AP ?? Al Horford drives to basket as Immanuel Quickley defends in Knicks’ victory Sunday night in Boston.
AP Al Horford drives to basket as Immanuel Quickley defends in Knicks’ victory Sunday night in Boston.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States