Fun fact: Jesse Itzler, who wrote “Go New York Go” is both a Knicks fan and a minority co-owner of the Hawks. Mr. Itzler must have felt some conflicted feelings as he sat down to watch the Knickerbockers host Atlanta in Game One of the Eastern Conference First Round. And it must have been a special kind of sting to watch a raucous crowd chanting his most famous song as the home team closed out a 113-102 victory.
An electric Madison Square Garden looked sold-out from the cozy confines of this Binghamton
abode. To our delight, Mikal Bridges drew first blood, leading the home team to a 7-4 lead.
From there, Atlanta crept into the lead thanks to buckets by veteran CJ McCollum (26 PTS). It wouldn’t last long. The Brunson Burner was lit from the jump, and Jalen scored 19 in the quarter while shooting 8-of-11 from the field. The captain set the Knicks franchise record for first-quarter points—beating the record that he and Towns set in the last playoffs. He and Bridges combined for New York’s first 22 points.
We knew it would be a game of runs. Answering with a 10-2 stretch, led by a stretch of perfect shooting by Jalen Brunson (28 PTS, 7 AST), New York leapfrogged ahead by six. Quoth LOB14: “We have the better Jalen.” Cap didn’t have a stellar shooting night (9-22 FG), but he made 75% of his longballs, had a 7:2 assist-to-turnover ratio, and set a winning tone from the start. The better Jalen, indeed.
Dyson Daniels (4 PTS, 11 AST, 9 RBS, 3 STL) picked Josh Hart’s (10 PTS, 14 RBS, 3 STL) pocket, which turned into a Jalen Johnson (23 PTS, 7 RBS) triple. Johnson scored eight in the quarter, including a perfect 2-of-2 from beyond the arc, to keep the Birds competitive. The visitors briefly regained a lead thanks to Onyeka Okongwu (19 PTS, 7 RBS) connecting from deep, but the ‘Bockers were laser-focused. By winning the boards and the paint, going 12-of-20 from the field, and holding their guests to 39% shooting, our heroes survived four turnovers and took a 30-24 advantage into the second quarter.
Whoever represents Blake Griffin deserves Agent of the Year honors. Not a single commercial break passed without at least one appearance by Blake’s narrow-eyed noggin. Good for the big fella, I say—he’s likable enough and deserves a Purple Heart for being groped by Donald Sterling.
To start the second quarter, Mitchell Robinson (3 PTS, 4 RBS, 2 BLK) was a blocking machine. With his team continuing to dominate the glass, they pushed out to an 11-point lead early in the period. When the Peaches played at their pace, though, the Knicks had trouble catching up. Steadily, the bad guys clawed their way back with balanced scoring, getting contributions from multiple guys. When McCollum hit a nine-foot floater with 3:43 on the clock, logging his 15th point of the contest, the score was knotted at 48 apiece.
After scoring zilch in the opening quarter (although he did run some nifty pick-and-rolls with J.B.), Karl-Anthony Towns (25 PTS, 8 RBS, 3 BLKS) began to score in the second. The All-Star center committed four turnovers in the first half, but redeemed himself with a block at the rim on Nickeil Alexander-Walker (17 PTS, 6-17 FG). Alexander-Walker was quiet through the first half, logging seven points and a team-worst -11 plus-minus.
KAT and Cap got to the charity stripe, the Knicks crashed the boards, and packed on a small lead again. With the clock running down, Johnson pressured New York’s defense and, at the last second, dished to Okongwu for a buzzer-beating three. Halftime score: Knicks 57, Hawks 55.
Through the first half, New York won the glass (27–18), owned the paint (26–20), and shot a touch more efficiently overall (49% to 45%). Despite Atlanta’s three-point shooting (50% on 16 attempts), our heroes led for 83% of the game thus far. Brunson led all scorers with 22. For the Hawks, McCollum had 17, and Daniels already had three steals.
The broadcast crew said something about Fat Joe performing at halftime. Once again, I was pleased to be watching from home. (No offense to the big guy.)
Twenty seconds into the third quarter, McCollum travelled while attempting a three-pointer. On the nullified shot, the veteran Hawk kicked his foot into the groin of Brunson, dropping Cap to the floor and earning himself a flagrant-one foul. McCollum and Okongwu comprised the Hawks’ offense for a while, while the Knicks went on a 10-2 run, capped by a Josh Hart pick-six steal.
What would a Knicks game be without anxiety? Around the 7:30 mark, OG Anunoby—who was having a quietly effective evening for the Knicks—turned his ankle on a drive and was relieved of his duties. To our surprise, he checked back into the game after a short break, and the tri-state area breathed a sigh of relief.
As the Knicks built up a 10-point lead, capped by a dunk by Bridges, Atlanta’s skipper Quin Snyder tried to get Johnson into the action to mixed results. The team’s top scorer hit a couple of buckets for eight points in the quarter. Meanwhile, KAT continued to have a confusing game, scoring seven points in the period but also coughing up the ball again—before blocking another shot.
Despite getting a scant seven points from their bench through three quarters (Shamet 1-of-5 from deep; McBride 0-3 FG), the Knicks held the Hawks to just 19 points in the third and took an 83-74 lead into the fourth.
Jordan Clarkson added a jolt of electricity to start the final frame, connecting with Robinson for an alley-oop. And Deuce McBride finally hit a shot, swishing a triple to give New York its largest lead of the night at 12 points. The bench crew picked up the pace and gave the Hawks a taste of their own medicine. At the other end, Alexander-Walker connected from deep (just his second of the night), only for McBride to answer with another dinger from beyond the arc.
Neither team got many stops, content instead to trade buckets. The 34-year-old McCollum continued to impersonate a spring chicken, and off the bench, Gabe Vincent scored on a drive. For New York, Clarkson answered with a dynamic layup. And so on. When Towns stomped into the lane to score at the cup, though, his efforts goosed New York’s lead to 13 with half a quarter to go. When Clarkson scored on another thrilling contested layup, the lead reached 16. With five minutes left, the young Hawks (those other than McCollum) looked out of sync and rattled.
Out of a timeout, Towns cashed in from 25-feet, crowning a 13-2 run and putting our heroes in a 19-point catbird seat with under four minutes remaining. McCollum missed two free throws at the opposite end as nothing was going right for Snyder’s boys.
But not so fast. After that swish by Towns, the Hawks went on an 11-0 run that included deep balls from Okongwu, Johnson, and Alexander-Walker. With a huge lead slashed to eight in just two minutes, the Birds were knocking on the door with a minute and a half left.
After a timeout, Brunson missed on the next possession, but Hart corralled a defensive board on a Johnson miss. KAT came through with a pounding payup, and N.A.W. cancelled that with one on the other end. With 40 seconds left, Hart made two free throws that essentially sealed the game. Knicks go ahead, 1-0.
Up Next
Game Two will be played at MSG on Monday. Rest up, Knickerbockers.












