Toronto Star

Resilience is their calling card

Knicks and 76ers have both had to overcome adversity

- BRIAN MAHONEY

Jalen Brunson and his New York teammates refused to let injuries knock them down. Joel Embiid of Philadelph­ia wouldn’t let his keep him down.

It was just days apart in January when the Knicks and 76ers were rocked by what could have been season-swinging blows. The Knicks were rolling through teams during one of the best months in franchise history when starting forwards Julius Randle and OG Anunoby went out of the lineup on the same day. Both needed surgery, with the allstar Randle unable to return.

Embiid then went down with a knee injury and soon his own surgery, sending the 76ers tumbling down the Eastern Conference standings not knowing when the reigning NBA MVP would be back. Yet not only did both teams recover, they are surging into a first-round series that begins Saturday night at Madison Square Garden.

“I just think that for us to be able to bounce back and do things when people think you couldn’t, that’s the nature of our team,” Brunson said of the Knicks, seeded second in the East. “A lot of people had doubted us in the past but we always find a way to prevail.”

The Knicks won their final five games to finish 50-32, moving past Milwaukee on the final day of the regular season for their best finish since winning 54 games and earning the No. 2 seed in 2012-13. They learned their opponent three nights later, when the 76ers rallied to beat Miami 105-104 in a play-in game to earn the No. 7 seed.

Embiid didn’t dominate like he can when healthy, but he finished strong and showed why the 76ers are more dangerous than the usual lower seed as long as he’s on the floor. They won their final eight games of the regular season, five with Embiid in the lineup after he returned April 2, to finish 47-35.

The seven-footer played in just one of the 76ers’ three losses to the Knicks in the regular season, but wasn’t available when New York won by 14 in February and 27 on March 12. The Knicks won by 36 in Philadelph­ia on Jan. 5 in the one game Embiid did play,

That was right after the Knicks added Anunoby following a trade with Toronto, kicking off a 14-2 finish in January.

“They play hard and physical, they’re tough, and that’s their identity,” 76ers all-star Tyrese Maxey said. “So, for us to go in there and try to get Ws and try to win this series, we have to match that. And not just match, but we have to overcome that and be better than that, and be extremely physical, as well. I think we know what we have to do. And they kicked our tail in the regular season, so it’s time to go in there and fight.”

The Atlantic Division rivals haven’t met in the post-season since 1989, when the Knicks swept the 76ers in what was then a bestof-five first round. But the current players know what to expect when the series starts at Madison Square Garden, just a short train ride from Philadelph­ia.

“The lights are super bright,” Philadelph­ia’s Kelly Oubre Jr. said. “They’re going to give those celebritie­s $100,000 free tickets just to be there and not care about the game, but that’s what they do and it’s going to be super fun and I look forward to it.

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