These Knicks were built in Jalen Brunson’s image

SPORTIVO
Article arrow_drop_down

NEW YORK — Jalen Brunson’s trophy room is not robust. Somewhere, hanging around the home, is the game ball from his career-best 60-point performance last season. His parents collect the rest of his awards.

Brunson’s Clutch Player of the Year trophy — an elegant, glass prize that looks like a vase with a gold jump shooter floating in the middle — arrived from the NBA weeks ago with an error: His name wasn’t engraved in it. The New York Knicks had to send the award back to fix the mistake. Brunson has since received the corrected version of it, with “Jalen Brunson” properly etched onto the keepsake.

Advertisement

Of course, it’s unclear if Brunson will keep it. Even in its infancy, it’s already laying around, not displayed prominently at the Brunson household.

It is Brunson’s brand not to care about the awards. And yet, the two-time All-Star can identify one piece of prime memorabilia hanging on the wall at his parents’ place, an item that never actually belonged to him.

“Whenever I’m at the house I see the finals jersey hanging up on the wall,” Brunson said. “And it’s pretty cool to see.”

The proprietor of that jersey is Brunson’s father, Rick, a player for the Knicks the last time the team made the NBA Finals, an eventual loss to the San Antonio Spurs in 1999. Now, Jalen has the same organization four wins short of the playoffs’ last round. And once again, the same team stands in the way.

When the Knicks take the court Wednesday night against the Indiana Pacers, they will play their first conference finals game since 2000. That time, the Pacers beat them in six games. The season before, the year of Brunson’s finals jersey, remains a chapter out of Knicks lore: A six-game victory over Indiana that included the famed Larry Johnson four-point play to become the first No. 8 seed to make the Finals.

Today, Brunson is a series away from returning the Knicks, one of the league’s least successful franchises over the better part of two decades, to the big stage. This — not the Clutch Player of the Year or the fifth-place MVP finish in 2024 or the 40- or 50- or 60-point games — was the plan all along.

Brunson signed a three-year extension last summer not for the money. The new contract does not kick in until 2025-26, but had Brunson waited until the upcoming summer to re-sign after the expiration of his current deal, he could have received max money in free agency. Instead, he took a cheaper extension, which locked in long-term security for both sides.

Advertisement

The All-Star point guard could guarantee direct deposits for three seasons beyond this one, protecting against any extreme (though unlikely) circumstances that could have hurt his open-market value. Meanwhile, the Knicks hold onto the greatest free-agent signing in franchise history, the man who came over from the Dallas Mavericks in 2022 — and they do it on a team-friendly number.

Effects of the new collective bargaining agreement are already rippling across the NBA. The Denver Nuggets have struggled to build around their core because of second-apron fears. The Milwaukee Bucks and Phoenix Suns are too expensive to improve substantially, and are facing the prospect of potentially dealing off stars. The Boston Celtics, because of one injury to Jayson Tatum, have to rethink their entire future, just because of the severe restrictions on expensive teams nowadays.

The Knicks don’t have to worry about that, at least not for a couple of years.

Brunson pointed to reasons other than money after signing the deal. He had studied the CBA and understood its ramifications. New York’s best chance to win not just for a year or two but to extend a championship window would come if its top-tier contributors could provide financial relief. So he did that.

He received the title of team captain upon his re-commitment, an intuitive decision. The Knicks go as Brunson does. Somehow, each New York squad ends up absorbing bits and pieces of his personality.

In years past, the locker room has soaked up his attention to detail, his dedication to marginal value.

“He’s a great student of the game,” Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau said.

The Pacers, who beat an injured Knicks squad in the second round last season, won’t be an easy matchup. Indiana guard Andrew Nembhard is a physical, crafty defender used to manning tough assignments every night. Wing Aaron Nesmith is strong in the chest, long and battled Brunson after the Pacers started using him more on the point guard in Game 3 of last spring’s series.

Advertisement

Indiana doesn’t concede the 3-point arc. It plays with pace. Center Myles Turner is a chore in the paint.

Then again, Brunson rejoices in chores.

He lives in tight spaces, able to slither out of them with a pivot or a hesitation. He can barely dunk and isn’t an end-to-end sprinter but stops as fast as anyone else in the league, planting on a foot and changing directions as inertia carries defenders in other directions.

When the Knicks need a bucket, Brunson tends to walk into it.

Over the past month, this version of the Knicks has reclassified itself. A group that was inconsistent throughout the regular season now defines itself with an in-your-face mental fortitude, the same one that drips from Brunson.

During a hard-fought, first-round series against the Detroit Pistons, a six-gamer that felt like it went seven, the Knicks fought back from fourth-quarter deficits in all four of their wins. Come the final stretch, they rely on Brunson, who averaged a league-leading 41.5 points per 36 minutes during close-and-late situations (defined as games within five points with five-or-less minutes to go) in the regular season and has somehow upped that average to 46.1 in the playoffs.

“It’s great we have someone who has a calming demeanor like that, especially in those moments you’re talking about,” Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns said. “J.B. was the Clutch Player of the Year for a reason.”

But that’s not the trophy Brunson cares about most.

He drained the first-round, series-winner over defensive menace Ausar Thompson against Detroit, crossing Thompson into Flint, Mich., before strolling into a 3-pointer. The Knicks throttled back from down 20 points during each of Games 1 and 2 against Boston. In Game 4, they overcame a 14-point, second-half deficit. Brunson caught fire that night, matching heroic shot for heroic shot with Tatum. But those Boston comebacks and the 38-point shellacking to end the Celtics’ season weren’t only because of Brunson’s late-game valiance.

Advertisement

Mikal Bridges has taken over crunch time. OG Anunoby has locked in defensively. Josh Hart has made games ugly, just how he likes it, hustling after every loose ball in existence. Mitchell Robinson is back to full health with an exclamation point. Miles “Deuce” McBride is a point-of-attack defender and shooter.

The Pacers are exhausting, owners of a top-10 defense since early December. They never stop moving, don’t turn the ball over, cut until they’ve fully scrambled a defense, boast depth down the bench and just wrecked the Bucks and Cleveland Cavaliers to race to the conference finals. But as Celtics lead executive Brad Stevens said in his end-of-season news conference this week, the Knicks are “peaking,” too.

They have a chance to make a physical win over Detroit and a persistent one over Boston matter even more.  And if they do, maybe Brunson can keep a jersey for his wall.

(Photo illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Tim Nwachukwu / Getty Images)

This news was originally published on this post .

About the author

About the author call_made

SPORTIVO

More posts

trending_flat
Oilers out of their depth as Matt Duchene and Stars’ other scorers finally step up

DALLAS — Less than four minutes into the Western Conference final, Connor McDavid received a pass at center ice at full speed, blew through a Mikko Rantanen stick check and turned Esa Lindell inside out, going straight through the Dallas Stars, straight to their net and straight for their hearts.Jake Oettinger made the save, but it was clear right away in Game 1 that McDavid was rested, raring to go and in rare form — a half-step quicker than usual, if that’s even possible. So was Leon Draisaitl, who commanded the puck whenever he was on the ice and was dangerous every time he got it.AdvertisementMan, the Edmonton Oilers were flying in this one, and the Stars looked, well, star-struck.“It’s definitely a different game than the last series,” Dallas coach Pete DeBoer said.The Stars don’t have a Connor McDavid. Or […]

trending_flat
Stars vs. Oilers scores, schedule, odds, where to watch as Dallas rallies for come-from-behind Game 1 win

Getty Images The Dallas Stars looked dead in the water for the first 40 minutes of Game 1 of the Western Conference final against the Edmonton Oilers on Wednesday. But in the final 20 minutes, the Stars unleashed a five-goal barrage for a 6-3 win to take a 1-0 series lead.In the first two periods, the Oilers were clearly the better team, and they took a 3-1 lead into the final frame. Unfortunately for them, there was one period remaining, and it belonged to the Stars.Just 32 seconds into the third, Miro Heiskanen gave the Stars life with a power play goal from the point to make it a 3-2 game.That kicked off a parade to the penalty box for Edmonton, and Dallas took advantage. The Stars scored on three consecutive power plays with Mikael Granlund tying the game just […]

trending_flat
Caitlin Clark’s viral reaction captures wild Pacers comeback in Game 1 thriller

Caitlin Clark may be just starting her professional career with the Indiana Fever, but she's already become an invested figure in the state's wider sports scene. On Wednesday night, as the Indiana Pacers stunned the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, Clark couldn't help but share her excitement with fans on social media.The Pacers rallied from a late deficit to force overtime, eventually defeating the Knicks 138-135 in one of the most electrifying NBA postseason finishes of the year. Tyrese Haliburton dropped 31 points and 11 assists, and Aaron Nesmith erupted with 30 points, including eight three-pointers on nine attempts. Their clutch performance helped Indiana erase what appeared to be a sure Knicks victory, stunning the Madison Square Garden crowd.Indiana Pacers vs. New York Knicks - Game HighlightsClark, watching the madness unfold, posted a simple […]

trending_flat
Pacers’ shocking comeback over Knicks creates result that’s never been seen before in NBA playoffs

Getty Images If the New York Knicks' fourth-quarter collapse in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals was unbelievable that's probably because it was the first of its kind, dating back to the start of the play-by-play era in 1997.With 2:45 remaining in the fourth-quarter, just six seconds after Jalen Brunson knocked down a 3-point attempt, the Knicks led the Indiana Pacers by 14 points. That lead looked pretty safe, especially since teams in that exact scenario in playoff games were 994-0 in the play-by-play era.They are now 994-1. The Knicks could only watch as Aaron Nesmith sank four 3-pointers — and added a pair of free throws — in the final 2:04 of regulation. Things only got worse for New York when Tyrese Haliburton knocked down a circus shot to tie the game at the buzzer before hitting the […]

trending_flat
Charles Barkley calls on NBA, Pacers to let Tyrese Haliburton’s dad return to games after Giannis Antetokounmpo incident

At least in the eyes of Charles Barkley, John Haliburton has more than served his punishment.Barkley, after the Indiana Pacers’ overtime win against the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals on Wednesday night, called on NBA commissioner Adam Silver to let John attend Games 3 and 4 of the series in Indianapolis.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementJohn, the father of Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton, hasn’t attended a Pacers game since his on-court confrontation with Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo in the first round of the playoffs.“Hey, my man paid his dues,” Barkley said on TNT. “He did something really, really stupid. But he’s been punished. I’m asking you and the Indiana Pacers to let Mr. Haliburton back in the building for Games 3 and 4. Listen, he paid his dues. It shouldn’t be indefinite. He’s been punished enough, he will […]

Related

trending_flat
Oilers out of their depth as Matt Duchene and Stars’ other scorers finally step up

DALLAS — Less than four minutes into the Western Conference final, Connor McDavid received a pass at center ice at full speed, blew through a Mikko Rantanen stick check and turned Esa Lindell inside out, going straight through the Dallas Stars, straight to their net and straight for their hearts.Jake Oettinger made the save, but it was clear right away in Game 1 that McDavid was rested, raring to go and in rare form — a half-step quicker than usual, if that’s even possible. So was Leon Draisaitl, who commanded the puck whenever he was on the ice and was dangerous every time he got it.AdvertisementMan, the Edmonton Oilers were flying in this one, and the Stars looked, well, star-struck.“It’s definitely a different game than the last series,” Dallas coach Pete DeBoer said.The Stars don’t have a Connor McDavid. Or […]

trending_flat
Stars vs. Oilers scores, schedule, odds, where to watch as Dallas rallies for come-from-behind Game 1 win

Getty Images The Dallas Stars looked dead in the water for the first 40 minutes of Game 1 of the Western Conference final against the Edmonton Oilers on Wednesday. But in the final 20 minutes, the Stars unleashed a five-goal barrage for a 6-3 win to take a 1-0 series lead.In the first two periods, the Oilers were clearly the better team, and they took a 3-1 lead into the final frame. Unfortunately for them, there was one period remaining, and it belonged to the Stars.Just 32 seconds into the third, Miro Heiskanen gave the Stars life with a power play goal from the point to make it a 3-2 game.That kicked off a parade to the penalty box for Edmonton, and Dallas took advantage. The Stars scored on three consecutive power plays with Mikael Granlund tying the game just […]

trending_flat
Caitlin Clark’s viral reaction captures wild Pacers comeback in Game 1 thriller

Caitlin Clark may be just starting her professional career with the Indiana Fever, but she's already become an invested figure in the state's wider sports scene. On Wednesday night, as the Indiana Pacers stunned the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, Clark couldn't help but share her excitement with fans on social media.The Pacers rallied from a late deficit to force overtime, eventually defeating the Knicks 138-135 in one of the most electrifying NBA postseason finishes of the year. Tyrese Haliburton dropped 31 points and 11 assists, and Aaron Nesmith erupted with 30 points, including eight three-pointers on nine attempts. Their clutch performance helped Indiana erase what appeared to be a sure Knicks victory, stunning the Madison Square Garden crowd.Indiana Pacers vs. New York Knicks - Game HighlightsClark, watching the madness unfold, posted a simple […]

trending_flat
Pacers’ shocking comeback over Knicks creates result that’s never been seen before in NBA playoffs

Getty Images If the New York Knicks' fourth-quarter collapse in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals was unbelievable that's probably because it was the first of its kind, dating back to the start of the play-by-play era in 1997.With 2:45 remaining in the fourth-quarter, just six seconds after Jalen Brunson knocked down a 3-point attempt, the Knicks led the Indiana Pacers by 14 points. That lead looked pretty safe, especially since teams in that exact scenario in playoff games were 994-0 in the play-by-play era.They are now 994-1. The Knicks could only watch as Aaron Nesmith sank four 3-pointers — and added a pair of free throws — in the final 2:04 of regulation. Things only got worse for New York when Tyrese Haliburton knocked down a circus shot to tie the game at the buzzer before hitting the […]

trending_flat
Charles Barkley calls on NBA, Pacers to let Tyrese Haliburton’s dad return to games after Giannis Antetokounmpo incident

At least in the eyes of Charles Barkley, John Haliburton has more than served his punishment.Barkley, after the Indiana Pacers’ overtime win against the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals on Wednesday night, called on NBA commissioner Adam Silver to let John attend Games 3 and 4 of the series in Indianapolis.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementJohn, the father of Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton, hasn’t attended a Pacers game since his on-court confrontation with Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo in the first round of the playoffs.“Hey, my man paid his dues,” Barkley said on TNT. “He did something really, really stupid. But he’s been punished. I’m asking you and the Indiana Pacers to let Mr. Haliburton back in the building for Games 3 and 4. Listen, he paid his dues. It shouldn’t be indefinite. He’s been punished enough, he will […]

Be the first to leave a comment

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sportivo bridges the gap between talent and opportunity.

About SPORTIVO

Sportivo Network is a dedicated social platform for sports enthusiasts, athletes, and scouts. Whether you’re an aspiring athlete looking for opportunities, a coach searching for talent, or simply a sports lover wanting to connect with like-minded people, Sportivo is your go-to network. With features like direct messaging, profile showcasing, and talent scouting, Sportivo bridges the gap between talent and opportunity. Here, you can share your achievements, interact with professionals, and open doors to the next level in your sports journey. Join Sportivo Network – because every great athlete deserves to be discovered!
Copyright © 2025 SPORTIVO News. and SPORTIVO Network. All rights reserved.

Login to enjoy full advantages

Please login or subscribe to continue.

Go Premium!

Enjoy the full advantage of the premium access.

Stop following

Unfollow Cancel

Cancel subscription

Are you sure you want to cancel your subscription? You will lose your Premium access and stored playlists.

Go back Confirm cancellation