The Maui News

Knicks stave off eliminatio­n, beat Heat 112-103

- By BRIAN MAHONEY

NEW YORK — Jalen Brunson never talked to his coach about how many minutes he would play, or how many points he had to score.

In the situation the Knicks faced, there’s no need for talk.

“Nothing was said at all,” Brunson said. “Whatever it takes.”

It might take the same effort again in two nights.

Brunson had 38 points, nine rebounds and seven assists while playing all 48 minutes in a season-extending performanc­e, and New York beat the Miami Heat 112-103 on Wednesday night in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

The Knicks denied the Heat’s first attempt to become just the second No. 8 seed to reach the conference finals and sent the series back to Miami for Game 6 on Friday night.

RJ Barrett added 26 points and Julius Randle — his face a little swollen after getting hit by Bam Adebayo in the first quarter — had 24 for the fifth-seeded Knicks, who stayed alive in hopes of reaching the conference finals for the first time since 2000. They did that by getting by the Heat in seven games in the second round, a possibilit­y that still exists.

The Knicks built a 19-point lead in the third quarter, then hung on when the Heat finally got their 3-pointers to start falling and cut it to two with 2 1/2 minutes remaining.

“You’ve got to kind of scratch and claw and do whatever you can to win the game,” Barrett said.

Jimmy Butler had 19 points, nine assists and seven rebounds for the Heat, getting held below 25 points for the first time in this postseason. Bam Adebayo added 18 points and Duncan Robinson had 17.

The Knicks used a pair of huge quarter-opening runs — 18-2 to begin the second and 23-7 in the third — to build a 73-54 lead midway through the third quarter. The Heat got it all the way down to 103-101 before Isaiah Hartenstei­n — in the game because the Heat were intentiona­lly fouling starting center Mitchell Robinson — slammed home a follow dunk to start New York’s finishing kick.

Only once the Knicks had held on could Brunson finally get a break.

“You have to respect him as a competitor and then find a way to get the job done,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “And he was able to get the job done, make those big, important plays.”

Quentin Grimes also went all 48 minutes for the Knicks, finishing with eight points. Coach Tom Thibodeau didn’t rule out using both his starting guards the same way in Miami.

“We’ll see what Game 6 brings,” he said. “If it requires them to do that, then I’m not afraid to do it.”

 ?? AP photo ?? The Knicks’ Jalen Brunson drives past the Heat’s Caleb Martin during the second half of New York’s Game 5 win over Miami on Wednesday.
AP photo The Knicks’ Jalen Brunson drives past the Heat’s Caleb Martin during the second half of New York’s Game 5 win over Miami on Wednesday.

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