New York Knicks Hold On Against the Miami Heat Because Of Jalen Brunson’s Heroics
If youโre a Miami Heat fan hoping for an early Christmas miracle, you might want to look away. Walking into Madison Square Garden is never a walk in the park, but Sunday night was rough. The Heat, now losers of seven of their last eight, ran Jalen Brunson and a Knicks team that simply couldn’t miss.
The final score was 132-125, but the emotional toll felt heavier. This wasn’t just a loss; it was a reminder that in a shootout, Miami just doesn’t have the firepower, or the defense right now, to keep up.
The Knicksโ Offense Was Simply Too Much
Letโs call a spade a spade: Brunson put on an absolute clinic. Dropping 47 points isn’t just a “good game,” it’s a statement. Brunson dismantled the Heat’s perimeter defense, getting whatever he wanted, whenever he wanted it. He wasn’t alone, either. The Knicks were launching from deep with frightening accuracy, at one point hitting 20 of 38 from three-point land.
It felt like every time Miami tried to claw back into the game, the Knicks would respond with a demoralizing three or a Brunson drive that left defenders looking at each other in confusion. Mikal Bridges chipped in 24 points, twisting the knife further. When you allow 132 points in regulation, you aren’t winning many games in this league, regardless of how much heart you show in the fourth quarter.
Ware Shines, But Itโs Not Enough To Beat the Knicks
If there is a silver lining to this cloud, it is Kelโel Ware. The rookie played like a seasoned vet, putting up a stat line that would make fantasy owners weep with joy: 28 points and 20 rebounds. He was aggressive, he was efficient (5-of-7 from deep), and he was the only reason Miami stayed within shouting distance early on.
Ware was dominating the glass and spacing the floor, doing everything youโd ask of a modern big man. Norman Powell finally woke up in the second half, pouring in 22 points, and Jaime Jaquez Jr. added a spark off the bench with 23. But basketball is a cruel game. You can have three guys play out of their minds, but if your defense is leaking oil and your All-Star center, Bam Adebayo, is quiet offensively for three quarters, youโre going to have a bad time.
Whatโs Next After Falling To the Knicks?
This loss stings because it fits a frustrating pattern. The Heat hang around, they fight, they get a monster performance from an unexpected source, and then they collapse defensively in crucial stretches. The team is now sitting at 15-14, staring down a holiday break that feels more like a lump of coal than a vacation.
With Tyler Herro still sidelined with that toe injury, the margin for error is razor-thin. They head back to the Kaseya Center to face Toronto before Christmas, desperately needing a win to wash the taste of this New York trip out of their mouths. But if they don’t figure out how to stop the bleeding on defense, it is going to be a long winter in South Beach.
