Toronto Star

Knicks stop Nets from clinching No. 5 seed

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NEW YORK— Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 16 points and the New York Knicks, playing without the injured Carmelo Anthony, beat the Brooklyn Nets 109-98 on Tuesday night to win the season series between city rivals.

The Knicks prevented the Nets from clinching the No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs and won their third straight in their toolittle, too-late strong finish. Amare Stoudemire and J.R. Smith each added 14 points.

Anthony had an MRI exam Tuesday that revealed a torn labrum in his right shoulder. He won’t play Wednesday against Toronto, the final game of the first season in his 11-year career that won’t end with a playoff berth — and potentiall­y his last as a member of the Knicks. He has said he will become a free agent in July.

Marcus Thornton scored 24 points for the Nets, who weren’t sharp despite playing starters Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, Deron Williams and Joe Johnson. The other starter, Shaun Livingston, remained sidelined with a sprained right big toe.

The Nets still have a magic number of one for finishing fifth. But they could fall to No. 6 if they lose Wednesday in Cleveland and Washington beats Boston.

The Knicks would be in the playoffs themselves if they played against everyone else the way they did against the Nets while winning three romps.

All four games were on national TV, though none was really worth watching after halftime. The Knicks won a pair of routs, 113-83 at Barclays Center in December and 110-81 at Madison Square Garden two weeks ago. The Nets won by 23 in their lone victory.

The overhyped city series didn’t live up to preseason expectatio­ns, much like the Knicks. Players from both sides had sparred in the press during the summer after the Nets made their big off-season moves, expecting to battle to be the best in New York and also the Atlantic Division.

Well, the division champion isn’t from New York — or even the U.S. The Raptors won the Atlantic.

The Knicks led 29-18 after one and the game got fun midway through the second quarter. Stoudemire had a powerful follow dunk over Mason Plumlee, screaming into the rookie’s ear afterward. Plumlee responded in the best way possible, dunking on the Nets’ next two possession­s. Plumlee finished with 16 points on 7-of-9 shooting and grabbed nine rebounds. But Brooklyn never really got into the game, and the only real interest in the second half were some occasional dueling chants between the split crowd. A “Goodbye Melo!” chant from a section of Nets fans was soon followed by a loud “Let’s go Knicks!”

 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN II/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Brooklyn’s Paul Pierce shoots over the Knicks’ J.R. Smith on Tuesday.
FRANK FRANKLIN II/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brooklyn’s Paul Pierce shoots over the Knicks’ J.R. Smith on Tuesday.

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