Tag Archives: tom thibodeau

Knicks’ Julius Randle thriving again because of these two factors

This isn’t the Julius Randle of two years ago. It’s more like Julius Randle 2.0.

He may be producing similar numbers to that fantastic season when the bruising yet athletic forward led the Knicks to a surprising fourth-place finish in the Eastern Conference, but he is doing so in a different manner.

“The year two years ago obviously he had a great year and a big part of that, I think, was his shooting,” coach Tom Thibodeau said on Tuesday after practice. “It opened up a lot of things for him. But then I think the league sort of caught up and now I think he’s caught up to what they were doing.”

A major part of that change was a different offensive philosophy under Thibodeau predicated on pace and ball movement, and the arrival of new point guard Jalen Brunson. It meant less isolation for Randle and a new focus on playing uptempo.

Randle is rarely bringing the ball up and pounding it into the floor. Instead, he’s getting transition opportunities, shots by moving without the ball and Brunson’s fast start has taken some of the defense’s focus away from Randle. He’s seeing fewer double-teams and getting more open shots.

Julius Randle has thrived early in the Knicks’ season because he’s playing faster, plus has the presence of Jalen Brunson (inset).
Getty Images; N.Y. Post: New York Post

“His approach has been totally different,” Derrick Rose said. “The way he’s reading the floor is totally different. His passing has been unbelievable, like getting to spots and not forcing shots and understanding that we’re trying to get up a certain amount of 3’s. He’s finding the shooters.”

He’s also made notable adjustments, in particular arriving for training camp leaner and more prepared to get up and down the floor faster. At the start of camp, Randle spoke of his excitement for this new offensive philosophy and teaming up with Brunson, and he has backed up that talk, producing 17 assists and just four turnovers in the preseason. In three regular-season games, he is averaging 21.3 points, 9.7 rebounds, 3.3 assists and only 1.7 turnovers.

“I’ll say this: Julius is a tremendous athlete and I know from having coached against him what you don’t want to see is Julius flying up the floor, attacking the rim, playing with speed like he’s playing,” Thibodeau said. “You’d rather defend him stationary with the ball. I think because of that, [since] he knows the different things he’s been through, he wants to play fast, and so I think that’s huge. He can help sell it to the rest of the team when he’s moving the way he’s moving. It gets the whole team moving that way.”

Late in Monday’s victory over the Magic the biggest change for the Knicks was on display. A 14-point lead had been cut to six with 4:28 left in the fourth quarter. In past years, it was obvious where the ball was going — to Randle in isolation. Not in this instance. The Knicks ran a high screen-and-roll with Brunson, and it resulted in a made Brunson jumper in which he also drew a foul that iced the game. The Knicks have become less predictable.

Julius Randle celebrates after a dunk during the Knicks’ win over the Magic.
N.Y. Post: Noah K. Murray

“For [Jalen] to take that pressure off me is huge,” Randle said. He added, in general about his play: “I’m just trying to lose myself in the team. Lean on guys like [Brunson], RJ [Barrett], just play for my team. The only thing that matters is winning.”

Brunson, an ego-less lead guard known for making the right play, has had a major impact on Randle. The two started to develop chemistry even before training camp, both of them spending plenty of time in August and early September at the MSG Training Center. It shows. They have played well together, registering a combined plus-30 rating this season.

Brunson recently had Randle and other teammates over to watch a big Eagles-Cowboys game. Brunson roots for the Eagles and Randle is a Cowboys fan. A recent press conference featuring the two players ended with them being asked who will win the NFC East. They both laughed and talked trash about the other’s team.

The only thing the two stars don’t see eye-to-eye on appears to be their favorite football teams.

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Jalen Brunson’s Derrick Rose connection may lead him to Knicks

Derrick Rose’s value may go beyond what he can produce on the floor for the Knicks. His presence alone could contribute to landing their priority in free agency.

The veteran guard is yet another link between the Knicks and coveted point guard Jalen Brunson, their bond tracing back to Brunson’s formative years in Illinois when Rose was the Bulls’ star point guard and Brunson had dreams of playing in the NBA one day.

“Jalen would go over to the Bulls facility and practice with the Bulls players,” Pat Ambrose, Brunson’s coach at Adlai Stevenson High School who remains close to him, told The Post in a phone interview. “That’s where he became good friends with Derrick Rose. So your story gets deep with the Knicks. Derrick saw that young Jalen was a very, very good player and Derrick was a Chicago kid, and really started to mentor Jalen basketball-wise.”

Back then, Brunson’s father, Rick, was an assistant on coach Tom Thibodeau’s staff, the same role he now has with the Knicks. It’s yet another layer, on top of Brunson’s relationship with Thibodeau, president Leon Rose and executive William Wesley — in addition to the fact Rose’s son, Sam, is Brunson’s agent — that may work in the Knicks’ favor as they look to land the talented 25-year-old who is coming off a career year.

Jalen Brunson and Derrick Rose
Getty Images; AP

They began to create salary cap space on Thursday to pay Brunson big money, trading out of the first round and dealing Kemba Walker to the Pistons, creating what is now $18 million of room. There is still work to be done, with Alec Burks and Nerlens Noel potentially getting moved, so the Knicks can make the former Villanova star an enticing offer. Brunson grew up in southern New Jersey before moving to Lincolnshire, Ill., for middle school and still has roots in the area, owning a home on the Jersey Shore. His mother, Sandra, is a big Giants football fan.

“I’m sure Leon Rose will play up all those ties,” Ambrose said. “I would not be surprised [if he wound up with the Knicks]. … The positive thing for the Knicks is he chose to go back home one time [for college] and there was success. Maybe he chooses to go back home again.”

The coach later added: “He likes Dallas, I know he likes Dallas. But he’s a [New] Jersey/New York guy.”

Brunson’s priority remains to be seen. In picking a college, he opted for Villanova over Michigan State and Illinois for multiple reasons, according to Ambrose. As his coach said, Brunson liked the idea of returning to the northeast and joining a winning program. It didn’t bother him that as a McDonald’s All-American he initially would take a backseat to Ryan Arcidiacono and not have the ball in his hands from the jump, as he would’ve at other schools. That unselfishness could work against the Knicks, since they will be selling the two-time national champion on the opportunity for a bigger role.

The Mavericks, meanwhile, are in a far better spot as a franchise after reaching the Western Conference Finals with Brunson playing a major role, albeit as Luka Doncic’s wingman.

“Being the man I wouldn’t say would be a top thing for him,” Ambrose said. “Putting the ball in his hands, any NBA player wants that, but he wants to win. I know winning is important to him and I know that something he really prides himself on is causing wins and making wins. That’s always his focus.”

There obviously remains a lot of uncertainty a week before the start of the free agency period. The Knicks still need to clear more cap space. Though Ambrose said he wouldn’t be surprised if Brunson winds up a Knicks, his former star player also enjoys playing for the Mavericks, who can offer him five years compared to the Knicks’ four. In Dallas, the former second-round pick has developed into a strong NBA player and is coming off a long playoff run in which he was somewhat of a breakout star, averaging 21.6 points per game.

It is also unclear how much money the Mavericks are willing to pay to keep Brunson, if they would go the extra yard like the Knicks appear primed to do.

“Not so much that money talks, but how much more money?” Ambrose wondered. “If Dallas slightly insults him with a low ball offer and New York shows it really, really wants him, it could change things.

“He’s also a young man that knows that he can help build a winner, he can work on that, and the future in the NBA can be pretty fleeting, whether it be an injury or drafts and things like that. He obviously knows Tom Thibodeau real well and knows that guy knows how to build winners.”

The Knicks have reportedly added a second player on an Exhibit 10 contract in forward Garrison Brooks. The 6-foot-9 Brooks spent this past year at Mississippi State, where he averaged 10.4 points, 6.6 rebounds and shot 34.2 percent from 3-point range. He previously attended North Carolina.

Thursday night, the Knicks signed guard Jean Montero to an Exhibit 10 deal. The 6-foot-2 Montero comes from the new high school league, Overtime Elite, that pays players. An Exhibit 10 contract includes an invite to training camp and summer league.

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Kevin Durant sparks Nets to crucial comeback win over Knicks

Knicks fans are still bitter about Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving picking the Nets.

Then the two stars reminded them why, lifting Brooklyn to a much-needed 110-98 come-from-behind victory before a sellout crowd of 19,812 at the Garden.

At halftime the Nets had dug a 17-point hole, and Irving had even gotten into it verbally with a fan headed off the court into the locker room. But when they came out, Brooklyn outscored the Knicks 60-31 the rest of the way, their best defensive performance of any half this season.

Durant had 32 points, 11 assists and 10 boards, and Irving added 24 points, eight rebounds and seven assists. He also went back-and-forth with the fan at halftime, and waved goodbye to the Garden crowd afterward.

“Man I just needed to let loose some of that energy, honestly. Because we were in a hole throughout most of the game and I just kept telling our guys that this is our game, this is our game,” Irving said. “But waving to the crowd was just like, ‘Hey, we’ll see you guys next year.’ ”

Kevin Durant, who scored 32 points, goes up for a dunk during the second half of the Nets’ 110-98 win over the Knicks.
Jason Szenes

It was the Nets’ seventh straight win over the Knicks, and — after trailing 71-50 in the third — the second time they erased a 20-plus point deficit this year at the Garden.

“I hate being down. I hate even being that team [to] get down and fight back. I don’t like that s–t. I don’t want that to be a part of who we are,” said Durant, who said this has become a rivalry — ratcheted up after he and Irving picked Brooklyn in June 2019.

“We know how much Knicks fans don’t like us. Especially now this era, with us not choosing the Knicks, me and Kyrie. … Imagine the tweets I’ve been getting since I decided to come to the Nets. Knicks fans are still pissed off, little jabs here and there.”

Though Durant said it was all love from Knicks fans, Irving confirmed they ask him all the time why he picked Brooklyn over Manhattan.

“Of course,” said Irving, acknowledging he loves playing provocateur. “I really don’t give an explanation. … You guys know me. I throw darts in the air and just wait for people to assume whatever they want. Am I lying? What could he possibly be talking about? Is he talking about this?”

Kyrie Irving, who scored 24 points, looks to make a pass during the Nets’ win.
Jason Szenes

The Nets, who trailed by 21 in the third, used a 20-2 blitz that spanned into the fourth. And after the Knicks retook the lead, Brooklyn (42-38) closed on a 16-2 run to hold onto eighth in the East.

“The first half we didn’t we don’t play Nets brand of basketball, stuff that we preach about every day,” Durant said. “But the second half is who we are.”

Alec Burks led the Knicks with 24 and RJ Barrett added 23, seven assists and seven boards. The Knicks (35-45) outhustled Brooklyn in the first half, only to get out-talented in the second.

“Not much you can do against a 7-footer who can shoot jumpers over anyone,” Barrett said.

RJ Barrett, who scored 23 points, goes up for a layup during the Knicks’ loss.
Jason Szenes

Durant’s pullup put the Nets up 25-19 with 1:55 left in the first.

The Knicks reeled off a huge 19-0 run, capped by a layup from Obi Toppin (19 points). Brooklyn missed eight straight shots and saw the Knicks take a 38-25 lead. It was 17 at halftime and the cushion swelled to 71-50 on Barrett’s free throws.

The Knicks still led 82-67 after a Toppin fadeaway with 1:34 in the third. But Brooklyn used a 20-2 blitz to take the momentum and the lead.

A Durant midrange pullup put the Nets up 87-84.

Barrett put the Knicks back ahead 96-94 with 5:11 left, but Brooklyn ran off 10 unanswered points — part of a game-closing 16-2 spurt — to seal the victory.

After Durant found heretofore struggling Patty Mills (15 points) for a huge 3 and 101-96 edge with 2:48 to play, the Knicks never responded.

“It was very unsatisfying for a while. Proud of the group,” coach Steve Nash said. “We didn’t play well in the first half. We didn’t give the requisite fight, spirit, energy. … The second half though you could just see them take the challenge, and we needed all of it.”

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Julius Randle denies seeking trade from Knicks after hearing boos

Julius Randle heard a fair amount of boos during pregame introductions, but the Knicks’ highest-paid player forcefully denied suggestions that he is seeking a trade in the offseason or that he isn’t committed to the organization long term.

“That’s not true, bro. That’s just not true, simple as that, it’s not true at all,” Randle said Wednesday night. “If it didn’t come from me, it ain’t true.”

Randle scored 21 points with seven assists, but the Knicks couldn’t fully erase a 12-point deficit in the fourth quarter as their season-best winning streak was halted at four games in a 125-114 loss to the play-in bound Hornets at the Garden.

The loss dropped the Knicks’ tragic number for elimination from play-in contention to one with five games remaining, after the No. 10 Hawks’ blowout victory in Oklahoma City.

“Just keep concentrating on what we’re doing and get better, and then you’re not eliminated until you’re eliminated,” Tom Thibodeau said. “And then when you are, you assess what you want to get done.”

Randle’s intermittent frustration and unhappiness has been evidenced by various instances this season, including a thumbs-down gesture and profane quotes directed at fans and multiple blowups with officials.

Julius Randle
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

This year has been a far cry from the two-way love affair Randle enjoyed with New York one season ago, when he was named an All-Star for the first time in his career and the NBA’s Most Improved Player, earning him a four-year contract extension worth $117 million.

The Post reported Wednesday that there are some around the league who believe that Randle has been acting in a “James Harden type of way,” suggesting that he could attempt to force a trade in the offseason.

Thibodeau was incredulous when asked about a further claim by a local radio host this week — which was couched as an “unconfirmed rumor” — that Randle already had expressed that he wanted out following Monday’s victory over Chicago at the Garden

Asked directly if he believes that Randle “wants to be here,” Thibodeau replied: “Yeah. So as a coach, you coach the players that you have. And you love them all. And I do. If you play for me, I love you. It’s really that simple. The challenge for us is to bring the best out of each other.”

Randle previously had asserted his commitment earlier this season, but he stressed after the game: “My answer ain’t changing, bro.”

“My goal and what I work hard for is to make the city proud and make the fans proud,” he said. “I play for my teammates; I play for my family, and it is as simple as that. It is nothing more than that. From the inside looking out, it is what it is, and I understand that a lot of times you have to do your game, do the talking, but I love this city, my family loves it here and I love being a Knick.”

Julius Randle
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

Randle has been fined over $100,000 by the league this season for various infractions, including for saying “shut the f–k up” in a January press conference to explain his use of a thumbs-down gesture to booing fans at one game at the Garden.

Randle also threw the ball away and walked directly into the locker room following Monday’s win. He scored five points on 1-for-9 shooting in that game, and fans had chanted once again for understudy Obi Toppin.

Randle admitted the boos and chants have been toughest on his 5-year-old son, Kyden, and his family.

“That’s probably where most of my frustration comes from. I have my 5-year-old son that’s there, who is obsessed with the game of basketball, loves the game of basketball and he doesn’t understand what’s going on,” Randle said. “That’s probably my biggest frustration — coming from him.

“But at the same time, you have to understand it comes with the territory. The narrative can always flip. I understand that. I understand it’s New York City. I understand how passionate our fans are. You just kind of have to live with the good and the bad.”

Following the pregame boos, Randle seemingly got the home crowd back on his side by nailing two early 3-pointers, and the Knicks shot 61.9 percent from the floor in trailing 31-29 through one quarter. RJ Barrett finished the first half with 17 points to keep the Knicks within three, 58-55 at intermission

The Knicks trailed by a dozen, 95-83, with 10:31 remaining, but a dunk by Barrett and a converted three-point play by Immanuel Quickley (16 points) pulled them within two with just under six minutes to go. But a windmill slam and a corner 3 by Bridges extended the Charlotte cushion back to 11 in the closing minutes.

“I thought we were a step behind all night, and I thought the ball got where they wanted it to,” Thibodeau said. “We didn’t feel good about the way we were playing defensively all night.”

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Knicks blow huge lead to Trail Blazers, end trip on sour note

PORTLAND, Ore. — Another game out west. Another double-digit lead choked away, this one the most shameful.

The Knicks gagged on a 23-point advantage in the second half Saturday as the Trail Blazers pounded them into submission in a shocking 112-103 come-from-behind victory at Moda Center.

The Blazers made a 40-16 run in the second half and outscored the Knicks 35-11 in the fourth quarter from hell. That left the Knicks facing a looong redeye flight home after this horrible defeat. They shot 3-for-18 in the fourth quarter and were obliterated 19-7 on the boards.

Coach Tom Thibodeau questioned his team’s toughness afterward.

“We’ve just got to find a way to get that done,’’ Thibodeau said. “That’s what toughness is about. That’s why competitiveness, toughness, all that matters. Discipline.’’

The Knicks went 1-4 on their Western swing. In three of those losses, the Knicks had double-digit leads, including a 21-point bulge against the Lakers on Feb. 5 to open the trip. With the loss Saturday, they fell to 25-32 on the season, wasted one of Kemba Walker’s best recent games and couldn’t build on their stunning win Thursday at Golden State.

Josh Hart, who scored 23 points, grabs a rebound during the Knicks’ 112-103 loss to the Trail Blazers
NBAE via Getty Images

“It just fell apart,’’ said Walker, who finished with 23 points, shooting 7-for-12 with four 3-pointers. “Tough trip for us, it wasn’t good. We had one good win. We were hoping to build off that win [Saturday] but unfortunately we didn’t. Obviously, it just wasn’t a really good trip for us.’’

The Blazers (23-34) are coming off a trade-deadline fire sale, but they still have the young Anfernee Simons, who finished with 30 points. The newly acquired Josh Hart scored 23 in his Blazers debut.

Randle continued a Western spree, scoring 28 points, 16 rebounds and six assists, but it was all for naught. He scored just four points in the fourth quarter.

“It was bad,’’ Randle said. “We were rolling pretty much the whole game. We have to finish the trip off. End of story. I don’t care what it is. Up 20-plus in the third, got to finish it off.

“We have to have more of an awareness throughout the game,’’ Randle added. “As the leader I have to have more of an awareness of what’s going on. When they’re making a run like that, we have to make sure we get a good shot on the offensive end and be more aware when Simons has it going.’’

Julius Randle, who scored 28 points, goes up for a shot during the Knicks’ loss.
USA TODAY Sports

The Knicks looked spent during the final-period collapse, with the grind of their 10-day, five-game trip catching up while the Blazers were coming off a three-day break. But Thibodeau said there are no excuses.

“Sometimes it’s in your favor, sometimes it’s not,’’ Thibodeau said of the schedule. “Everyone goes through long road trips. It’s part of it. The toughness is you’re on the road a long time; maybe there is some fatigue, but to still have the ability to do all the things that are necessary, even though you may not be feeling your best.

“We’re counting on each other to get the job done. So, it’s five guys tied together on offense and five guys tied together on defense. If one guy is choosing not to do — even if it’s not going his way, then it’s gonna hurt the group.’’

The Knicks were rolling along with Walker sizzling and Randle dominating, as he had all trip. But Randle, facing hard double-teams, went quiet, and he committed two straight turnovers during the fourth-quarter blitz — bouncing a ball off his foot and out of bounds, then firing a pass that was intercepted.

The bold Blazers finally took the lead with 3:20 left on a dunk by Jusuf Nurkic as they dominated inside and the Knicks looked exhausted.

The Knicks got no help from Evan Fournier, who was 1-for-13 for four points. Mitchell Robinson had an injury-ravaged nightmare, finishing with two points and no rebounds before leaving with an ankle injury in the third quarter.

The Knicks, already without Nerlens Noel, struggled at center with Randle needing to play the position at one point.

“Rebounding was problematic,’’ Thibodeau said.

As is their season.

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Julius Randle got into computer incident with Knicks assistant

SALT LAKE CITY – Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said the computer altercation between Julius Randle and assistant coach/video coordinator Scott King against the Lakers on Saturday  has been “resolved’’ and “taken care of.’’

The incident against the Lakers was caught on video by a fan and posted on social media where it caused a stir because of Randle’s recent emotional behavior.

During a timeout, King came up to Randle in the huddle with his laptop and Randle slapped at the screen and started jawing angrily at him.

Assistant coaches Kenny Payne and Johnnie Bryant separated the two. King was likely showing him a defensive lapse against the Lakers in a game the Knicks ultimately lost in overtime after blowing a 21-point lead.

“When you have competitive people, you’re gonna have stuff like that,’’ Thibodeau said. “That’s normal. Every team has it. It’s competitive people, heat of the moment. They’re good. They’ve got a great relationship. Everyone is trying to win. So, it’s all part of it.’’

Julius Randle had a heated showdown with Knicks assistant Scott King
Twitter

It is unusual for a coach to bring the laptop into the NBA huddle to show video. Usually a coach will just tell the player tidbits. Thibodeau said the computers, though, are taking over. 

In addition, the way Randle carried on for several seconds illustrated his recent temper that has been seen with referees. He picked up two technicals vs. Memphis last week leading to an automatic ejection in the final seconds. Randle also staged a recent media boycott and the NBA fined the Knicks $25,000. Randle did not talk to beat writers after the morning shootaround in Utah on Monday. 

Randle and the Knicks lost in overtime in Los Angeles
USA TODAY Sports
Julius Randle slapped a laptop away and had words with Knicks assistant Scott King.
Twitter

The NBA trade deadline is Thursday and Randle reacted combatively when this reporter asked him Friday his reaction to rumors the Knicks are open to a deal.

Asked if it was unusual for a computer to be brought to Randle like that, Thibodeau said, “(Computers), that’s the modern NBA. Hey look, the technology has been great. To be able to look at plays — we see it more in football because there’s a break in play — but when guys come out or timeouts, you always have that interaction. And often times, the player wants to see it. It might be how he’s being defended. It’s might be a situation that occurred. It’s very helpful. It was heat of the moment. It’s normal stuff. 

“There’s a lot of interactions over the course of the season. There’s heat of the moment. There’s competition. There’s competitive people involved. And then there’s great respect for Julius, the coaches, so it’s normal. You fix it. Immediately, it was taken care of.’’

Randle failed to earn his second All-Star berth last week and has looked off with his body language during losses. The Post reported Thibodeau has had trouble getting Randle to play with the same selflessness he showed last season.

Randle had to be held by other Knicks coaches
Twitter

There’s been other videos on social media showing Randle not helping up teammates who have fallen to the ground. Against the Clippers two weeks ago, Randle strolled away from the huddle to talk to his wife Kendra sitting behind the baseline.

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Immanuel Quickley provides spark in Knicks’ blowout loss

The Knicks were without noted Celtics killer Evan Fournier on Saturday night, but the teammate who replaced him in the starting lineup at least attempted to assume that role.

With Fournier sidelined with a contused left hip, Immanuel Quickley moved into the starting lineup and scored 12 of his 18 points in the first half to provide one of the few positive performances in the Knicks’ lowest scoring game of the season, a 99-75 blowout loss to the Celtics in Boston.

“I thought he played really well. The first half he had us organized and had real good looks,” coach Tom Thibodeau said of Quickley. “It was a good start for him and then I want him to take more control in the second half, and I think he will. He’s done a good job for us.”

Fournier had netted a season-high 41 points and matched J.R. Smith’s franchise record with 10 made 3-pointers in the Knicks’ buzzer-beating win Thursday over the Celtics at Madison Square Garden. He had averaged 35 points with 20 3-pointers in three games against his former team this season before sitting out Saturday night.

Immanuel Quickley, who scored 18 points, drives past Marcus Smart.
AP

Making only his second start of the season, Quickley nailed all three of his attempts from long distance and played all 12 minutes in the first quarter, when the Knicks grabbed a 26-21 lead.

With guards Derrick Rose (ankle) and Kemba Walker (knee) also still out of the lineup, Quickley remained on the floor to start the second quarter, logging nearly 15 minutes overall before Thibodeau replaced him with RJ Barrett. Quickley’s 12 points in the half paced the Knicks, who trailed by two, 44-42, at intermission.

The 22-year-old former Kentucky star knocked down three midrange jumpers in the third quarter to boost his total to 18. But he didn’t score thereafter and the Celtics extended their lead to as many as 18 before carrying a 76-60 advantage into the final period.

“[Thibodeau] just talked to me one-on-one about [taking control] and I’m still learning,” Quickley said. “I’ll be the first one to tell you I’m not perfect. I want to be, as much as I can be. But just trying to take command of the team and put guys where they need to be whether it’s offense or defense.

“Just going through things like this, it helps out a lot. I’ll be better, we’ll be better next game.”

Though Julius Randle, Barrett and Alec Burks shot a combined 29.4 percent from the field (15-for-51), Quickley finished 7-for-11 and added four assists over 37 minutes, including 3-for-5 from 3-point land.

Other than Quickley and Mitchell Robinson (5-for-5, 11 points), the Knicks posted an aggregate .270 shooting percentage.

“I think our team is our team. … I feel like whoever we play, we can get a win,” Quickley said. “Whoever steps in can help us win, we just have to be better as a team.”

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RJ Barrett and Julius Randle propel Knicks past Pacers

Julius Randle was back from COVID-19 protocols and RJ Barrett was back to being an efficient force.

That Batman and Robin tandem of a season ago exploded on the undermanned Pacers as they combined for 62 points in a 104-94 victory Tuesday at the Garden.

It was the 30-30 club and felt like retro night from the 2020-21 campaign.

Barrett scored 32 points — 24 in the first half — while Randle punished the Pacers all night with his physicality, going 12-for-20 and racking up 30 points. He also had 16 rebounds.

Barrett was 12 of 20 from the field and hit six of his eight free throws. The pair hit just two 3-pointers each, showing a relentless spirit in attacking the basket.

“The big thing is for RJ, it was incredible for him to start the game,” Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said. “With both guys, it’s them attacking the rim. The game will tell you what to do. If we settle for shots, it’s going to cause problems. If we’re attacking the rim, it makes us different.”

RJ Barrett, celebrating with a teammate, and Julius Randle combined for 62 points in the Knicks’ 104-94 win over the Pacers.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg (2)

The Knicks were 0-2 when Randle was out with COVID-19 after taking a lot of heat in the media and on social media that he wasn’t living up to his superstar form of a season ago.

Interestingly, Randle did not talk to the media after the game. He had treatment and left in a sign he could be ticked off at the recent negative coverage.

“For Julius to do what he did today was just remarkable — to come off safety protocols, travel, get here and play,’’ Thibodeau said. “We had no idea what he’d be like. Unbelievable effort. Unbelievable all the things he did … physicality was huge for us. His rebounding was the difference in the game.’’

Julius Randle, who scored 30 points, goes up for a layup during the Knicks’ win.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

Randle isolated in Oklahoma, then was permitted to drive to Dallas, his hometown, before flying in Monday after testing negative. He spent New Year’s Eve at home.

Thibodeau said he was unsure if Randle would play Tuesday until a very late-night call from him on Monday.

“I had no idea,’’ Thibodeau said. “Then I talked to [him] last night, he told me how great he felt. I’m like ‘OK, that’s good news.’ It came at a good time. We were working on how we were going to match up with them. A late-night call. One of the best late-night calls I ever had.”

In a sign of the distorted times, even as Randle was rolling in the second half, the fans chanted Barrett’s name when Randle, their lone All-Star, stepped to the free-throw line. Last season they chanted “MVP’’ anytime Randle shot free throws.

Barrett heard chants much of the evening as the Knicks (18-20) were able to survive a scoreless night from free-agent signee Evan Fournier as he missed all four of his shots in 22 minutes.

“It’s cool,’’ Barrett said. “Definitely in the Garden, hearing the Garden chanting your name is a lot of fun.’’

Obi Toppin, whom many fans wish would cut into Randle’s minutes, scored two points in nine minutes after starting the past two games at power forward.

Barrett erupted for 17 points in the game’s first seven minutes and had 24 by halftime. Despite his relentless attacks on the basket and fancy, spinning finishes, the Knicks couldn’t even come out of the first half with the lead.

“I was just trying to be aggressive,’’ Barrett said. “When you get in the paint, you either finish or kick out if the defense collapses.’’

Julius Randle and RJ Barrett share a moment during the Knicks’ win over the Pacers on Tuesday.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Barrett credited Randle for his rebounding “and the intensity he had. He’s always ready.’’

It was hardly an easy win, though. Sparked by their emergency starting guard Kiefer Sykes and his 16 points, the Pacers were even with the Knicks at 55-55 at intermission. The Knicks no longer have any players in COVID protocols. The Pacers have eight.

Undrafted in 2015, Sykes had 12 points in his NBA career in just three previous games. His anonymous career has been spent in the G-League, Turkey, Italy and Australia.

And Sykes became a sterling shotmaker, drilling 4 of 8 3-pointers and finishing with 20 points.

In the revolving door at point guard, Thibodeau started Alec Burks instead of rookie Miles McBride who had started the previous two.

With Randle back, Barrett took ownership of the game, driving relentlessly, drawing fouls and also hitting his first two 3-pointers.

Throwing in all his moves, Barrett finished 8 of 12 and made 6 of 7 free throws in his best half of his young career as the Knicks went on a 16-0 run to erase an 18-10 deficit.

Barrett had a big second season but has regressed in Year 3. But this could be the start of something for both players.

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Kemba Walker ‘last-minute scratch’ after pregame warmup mishap

OKLAHOMA CITY — Kemba Walker has gone from a sweet comeback story after his demotion to a New Year’s Eve mystery.

One hour before the Knicks were to face the Thunder on Friday, Walker was ruled out with left-knee soreness. This wasn’t load management but a mishap that happened during pregame warm-ups, with no timetable for his return or a grasp on what may be new with his arthritic left knee.

Walker was not on the bench in street clothes as the Knicks were beaten 95-80 by the rebuilding Thunder to end 2021 on a low note. Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said he’ll be tested further.

“It was last minute,’’ Thibodeau said. “He was warming up, and something didn’t feel right. So, I haven’t talked to the trainers yet. It was a last-minute scratch.’’

Walker played both ends of a back-to-back in Minnesota and Detroit this week — something he did not do last season with Boston.

Kemba Walker
USA TODAY Sports

Asked if this was serious, Thibodeau said, “I don’t know, because he started his warm-up, and then he stopped. And then [trainer] Anthony [Goenaga] was looking at him and just felt, let’s get him examined, and then we’ll go from there.’’

The mishap ruined Walker’s return to OKC where the fans never got to know him. And the fans still didn’t get to see Walker as Miles McBride started.

Oklahoma City general manager Sam Presti traded for Walker in June, obtaining him from Boston ostensibly to get rid of his own bad contract in Al Horford and pick up an extra first-round draft pick in the deal. That’s how desperate Brad Stevens was to remove Walker and his arthritic left knee from the Celtics when he took over as team president.

The deal went down on June 18, and speculation immediately arose that the rebuilding Thunder would peddle Walker’s two-year, $74 million contract by the season opener.

According to an NBA executive, Walker spent about a week in OKC after the trade with physicals, meeting staff, working out with a Thunder trainer and posing for promos in a light blue Thunder jersey. In fact, a Google search shows different editions of Walker’s Thunder jerseys can be bought online.

Thanks to diligent work by his agent, Jeff Schwartz, once free agency began, Walker got back home to New York. According to a source, Walker’s reps at Excel Management helped broker an arrangement in keeping in contact with both the Knicks and Thunder.

The Knicks had a league-high cap space available and no obvious point guard to spend it on once free agents Chris Paul, Kyle Lowry and Spencer Dinwiddie were spoken for. (The Knicks were not interested in Lonzo Ball.)

By giving up $20 million in a buyout package, Walker was able to recoup a lot of it by signing a two-year, $18 million deal with his hometown team to fulfill a Bronx dream.

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Knicks need to start giving Obi Toppin more minutes

Alec Burks saved the Knicks from an unmitigated disaster in Detroit, because he is a pro’s pro. He has seen it all over 11 years in the NBA, and he could tell his team was prepared to lose to a decimated Pistons club that would have struggled to win a Big Ten game on Wednesday night, never mind a G-League game.

So Burks calmly, stoically, and surgically delivered a career night off the bench with 34 points, 19 in the fourth quarter, to lead the Knicks to a comeback victory that spared them as embarrassing a defeat as they’ve had in a long, long time. Taj Gibson was a huge second-unit help, too, because he has 13 years of NBA experience and he saw where this night was heading as clearly as Burks did.

The Pistons had lost 17 of their previous 18 games, and at 5-27 they were the league’s worst team even before COVID protocol and injury claimed their best players and forced them grab a half dozen guys out of the local Y. And yet they somehow scored 25 of the first 29 points of the third quarter, taking a 14-point lead, before Tom Thibodeau was bailed out by his bench.

Before his Knicks could fly off to Oklahoma City for a chance to get back to .500 for the first time in more than three weeks.

“We knew it was going to be a challenge,” said Thibodeau, citing the stress of back-to-back road games exacerbated by travel issues and a late arrival in Motown.

But a quick review of the “talent” Detroit put on the floor tells you that no, this never should have been a challenge at all. Remember the Bad Boys Pistons of Isiah Thomas, Bill Laimbeer and Chuck Daly? These were the Bad News Boys Pistons who played a center, Luka Garza, with a vertical leap that makes Laimbeer’s look Jordanesque, and a 27-year-old G-Leaguer making his NBA debut.

Obi Toppin slams one home during the Knicks’ 94-85 victory over the Pistons.
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So this was not a victory as much as it was a heart-stopping escape. The Knicks’ starting five, which included Quentin Grimes in place of late scratch Evan Fournier, finished with a combined plus/minus of minus-116. The Knicks’ second five, which played the entire fourth quarter, finished with a combined plus/minus of plus-161.

And when it was over, Thibodeau and Gibson made it a point to say that the benched and overmatched starters were enthusiastic in their support of their backups. That’s a good thing, no doubt. You need your players to root for one another during a regular-season grind made more exhausting by a pandemic that just won’t quit.

But 35 games deep into a season that was supposed to be a worthy sequel to last year’s gift from the basketball gods, and that was supposed to represent the next step toward legit contention, it’s clear the Knicks need something to elevate them.

It’s clear they need to cut Obi Toppin loose, and give him a lot more minutes than he’s been getting to date.

Even if those minutes are taken from Julius Randle, the closest thing the Knicks have to a franchise player, and the star they signed over the summer to a four-year, $117 million deal.

Wednesday night, after his 5-for-20 outing against Minnesota, Randle missed 9 of 11 shots and scored five points in 26 minutes. He did contribute 10 rebounds and five assists, but all in all, he hasn’t been nearly the force he was last season, when he single-handedly took the Knicks on their version of a magic carpet ride.

The magic is gone, at least for now. “Jules is still trying to find himself,” Gibson conceded. And that might happen next week, next month, or at least by playoff or play-in time. But if the Knicks want to climb the ladder back into the Eastern Conference’s top six seeds, they need to turn more to the player who climbed the ladder a few minutes into the fourth to dunk home Burks’ lob pass to give his team a lead it never relinquished.

Toppin returned the favor with 1:52 left, refusing to force a shot and instead dishing an underhand pass to the corner to Burks, who put the game out of reach with a four-point play. Toppin’s numbers were modest in 22 minutes (nine points, four rebounds, an assist and a steal), but he played valuable defense, provided nonstop energy, and posted a plus-36 to Randle’s minus-27.

Once upon a time, when Thibodeau was an assistant on the ’99 Knicks, Jeff Van Gundy waited too long on another long and athletic riser, Marcus Camby. Thibs and Van Gundy are very good coaches, but hey, it happens to the best of them.

Toppin has his flaws for sure, yet his pros far outweigh his cons. He needs to start playing 25-plus minutes every night, even if that means more pine time for Randle.

If the Knicks are to grow into a serious playoff contender, they’ll need a lift. And Obi Toppin lifts off like no other New Yorker.

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