New York Post

Barrett out again with sore knee

- By STEFAN BONDY

MILWAUKEE — RJ Barrett, arguably the Knicks best player through the opening couple weeks, missed his second straight game Friday with a sore knee and a “day-to-day” timetable.

“You’re always concerned when people are out,” coach Tom Thibodeau acknowledg­ed.

Barrett said last week that he hurt his left knee in the season opener and had been managing it since. The small forward played just 25 minutes in his last appearance — a victory over Cleveland on Halloween — and was spotted postgame that night with a wrap over his knee.

“I think something that at this point kind of everybody in the league is going through the same thing,” Barrett said at the time. “Back-tobacks, all the playing and stuff. Just got to be mentally tough through it.”

Barrett was not with the team Friday night in Milwaukee.

Josh Hart again started in Barrett’s place and struggled offensivel­y, missing 7 of 9 shots. Two nights earlier — with Hart at small forward — the Knicks were dropped by the Cavaliers at MSG.

Barrett entered Friday as the Knicks’ leading scorer, averaging 21 points on over 45 percent shooting. He logged heavy minutes in the summer for Team Canada at the World Cup but, unlike his teammates Jalen Brunson, Hart and Julius Randle, played through much of the preseason.

“It’s soreness. Trust the medical people, trust RJ,” Thibodeau said. “We have more than enough. Next guy get in there, get it done.”

➤ Coaches can collect prize money in a new wrinkle to the In-Season Tournament, with Thibodeau and Milwaukee’s Adrian Griffin now eligible for a $500,000 bonus if they guide the championsh­ip squad.

“I just want to win,” Griffin, the rookie head coach, said. “Obviously I’m not going to turn down any money. But we’re all competitor­s. If there’s a trophy, we want to win. The money is a good external incentive.”

Assistants will also share 75 percent of the head coach’s bonus, according to ESPN. The head coach of the runner-up squad — along with each player — gets $200,000. Semifinali­sts ($100,000) and quarterfin­alists ($50,000) are also rewarded.

Thibodeau doesn’t know what to make of the In-Season Tournament other than he likes the thought. Friday’s game was New York’s first matchup in pool play. It also counted as a regular-season game.

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