New York Knicks Lose a Heartbreaker To Atlanta Hawks On CJ McCollum’s Late-Game Heroics To Fall Down 2-1
Listen, New York. We need to talk. If you thought blowing a 12-point lead in Game 2 was the absolute peak of your playoff pain, Game 3 just politely asked you to hold its beer. The Atlanta Hawks have officially snatched control of this first-round series, taking a 2-1 lead after a chaotic, gut-wrenching 109-108 victory on Thursday night. And for the Knicks, the way this one ended is going to sting all the way to Saturday.
The Final Seconds Of Pure Chaos
Let’s set the scene. You’re down by one. There are 12.5 seconds left on the clock. You have Jalen Brunson, your captain, your closer, the guy who practically breathes ice water in these moments. The play is drawn up, the floor is cleared, and all he has to do is go to work.
Instead, the Hawks flipped the script. Jonathan Kuminga, who was an absolute menace off the bench all night, peeled off his man and trapped Brunson on the baseline. The Knicks scrambled, the ball got loose, and before anyone wearing blue and orange could even get a prayer up at the rim, time expired. No shot. No foul. Just the deafening roar of the State Farm Arena crowd.
CJ McCollum: The Villain New York Deserves
We have to tip our hats to CJ McCollum. The 34-year-old veteran is out here looking like he found the fountain of youth, and he’s pouring it all over the Knicks’ playoff hopes.
After dropping 32 points and ripping New York’s heart out in Game 2, McCollum came right back and delivered the ultimate dagger in Game 3. With the Knicks up late, McCollum calmly pulled up over the outstretched arm of Josh Hart and buried the game-winner. He finished with 23 points, proving once again that he is a certified, undeniable Knick-killer.
The Disappearing Act Of Mikal Bridges
While McCollum was busy building his statue in Atlanta, a few key Knicks essentially no-showed. We need to have a serious conversation about Mikal Bridges. The man the Knicks traded a mountain of first-round picks to acquire put up a stat line that belongs in a rec league: 0 points, 1 rebound, two assists, and 4 turnovers in 20 minutes. He was so ineffective that Head Coach Mike Brown effectively glued him to the bench for the entire second half.
And then there’s Karl-Anthony Towns. Yes, KAT finished with 21 points and 17 boards, but he sleepwalked through the first half yet again. In a series where the Hawks are running small, Towns needs to be punishing people in the paint from the opening tip, not waiting until the third quarter to remember he’s an All-Star.
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