New York Post

AUSTINSANI­TY!

Rivers torches Jazz for 14 straight points late as Knicks rally for 5th win in 6 games

- By MARC BERMAN marc.berman@nypost.com

Austin Rivers elevates over Donovan Mitchell on a night he carried the Knicks to victory. The Knicks trailed by 18 before Julius Randle got hot in the third and Rivers caught fire in the fourth quarter on his way to 23 points in a 112-100 win.

Austin Rivers is becoming the Knicks’ Mariano Rivera — an elite closer with ice water in his veins.

No lead is safe against these Knicks. And Rivers.

Two days after rallying from 15 points down in Atlanta, the Knicks came home and roared back from an 18-point hole to wipe out the Jazz, 112-100, at the empty Garden with more late fourth-quarter magic from Rivers.

In his first game as a Knick at the Garden, Doc Rivers’ son scored 14 straight points down the stretch that included four straight 3-pointers and a floater with the shot clock winding down.

The Knicks moved to 5-3 after winning their fifth game in six outings. It’s their best record after eight games since the magical 2012-13 season.

Rivers finished with 23 points on 9 of 14 shooting. Rivers has been sensationa­l in the fourth quarters of the last three games after missing all preseason and the season’s first five games with a groin pull.

“I love this stage,’’ Rivers said. “I know every player says that when they come here, but I really do. I thrive on it. You have to be OK with missing a shot, making the wrong play. If you have the ball in your hands at the end of the game, you can’t worry about the makes and misses. You have to trust yourself and live with the outcome.”

Coach Tom Thibdodeau said he watched Rivers grow up, as an assistant coach under Doc Rivers when Austin was in high school. So this insane spree isn’t shocking Thibodeau.

“I’ll tell you one thing,’’ Thibodeau said, “he’s never lacked confidence.”

Thibodeau recalled Rivers would attend Celtics practice during their 2007-08 title season.

“He wanted to play them oneon-one, including Kevin Garnett,’’ Thibodeau said. “Rivers wanted to play [Kevin]. Austin really thought he could beat him.’’

“In my crazy mind, I thought I was better than them at the time,’’ Rivers confirmed.

Nothing’s crazier than Julius Randle’s start. In continuing an All-Star-level season, Randle looked weary in the first half before leading the charge and logging another 39 minutes with the Knicks decimated up front. He registered 30 points, 16 rebounds and seven assists.

“It’s a lot of fun, honestly,’’ Randle said. “It’s unfortunat­e we can’t have fans in here to experience this team. It’s amazing the growth of this team. The fans will be here soon. We all signed up for a rocking Garden.’’

Rivers, who played the past two seasons with the Rockets and before that with the Clippers, knows what a winning team feels like. And he feels it here despite seven straight losing seasons.

“I’ve been on bad teams before and this isn’t one,’’ Rivers said. “I promise you that. I don’t know where we wind up. But I do know the spirit is there, the willingnes­s to work and learn is different. The coaching is different. This is not the Knicks team y‘all have been covering. We have a whole different thing here.’’

Randle and Rivers got plenty of assistance. Starting shooting guard Reggie Bullock, a game-time decision with a sore knee, registered 12 points, hitting 5 of 8 shots and made a big hustle play in grabbing a loose ball at midcourt in the final two minutes.

Point guard Elfrid Payton got into the paint and added 22 points and eight assists, and Mitchell Robinson added nine points, pulled down 13 boards with three steals and three blocks.

Payton and Rivers were the closers with rookie star Immanuel Quickley sitting on the sidelines.

“He’s extremely confident, he’s hit tremendous­ly big shots down the stretch,’’ Randle said. “I’m so happy for him. I want him to continue playing with that energy and confidence. He’s been amazing.’’

“There was no panic,’’ Rivers said. “We just talked about hunting them down and everybody started having fun.’’

It wasn’t fun for Randle, who picked up three offensive fouls in the first half and began 3 of 10 before powering the third-quarter comeback.

“He’s our engine,’’ Thibodeau said. “It tells you the importance of being in great shape is. To win games late, you have to be in great shape.’’

 ??  ??
 ?? Getty Images; AP ?? WHAT A NIGHT! Austin Rivers, who finished with 23 points and went 5-for-7 from 3-point range, scored 14 straight points to lead the Knicks to a 112-100 victory over the Jazz. Julius Randle (right), who scored 30 points and grabbed 16 rebounds, dunks over Rudy Gobert during the first half.
Getty Images; AP WHAT A NIGHT! Austin Rivers, who finished with 23 points and went 5-for-7 from 3-point range, scored 14 straight points to lead the Knicks to a 112-100 victory over the Jazz. Julius Randle (right), who scored 30 points and grabbed 16 rebounds, dunks over Rudy Gobert during the first half.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States