The Knicks lost Game 3, and the autopsy is everywhere: the ball stuck, the stars iso’d, and the beautiful motion offense from their 13-game winning streak vanished. The take splitting New York fans is whether that’s a fixable cold night or proof the Spurs have cracked the code.
A Knicks-focused breakdown captured the concern, noting that for long stretches New York “looked nothing like the team that spent the last month and a half steamrolling opponents,” with “the ball stuck” and “players stood around.”
The case that it’s a real problem
San Antonio made specific, smart adjustments. Castle’s size disrupted Brunson, and Wembanyama spent less time chasing pick-and-rolls and more time lurking as a help defender erasing shots at the rim. When a 7-foot-4 eraser sits in the paint daring you to shoot over the top, offenses do tend to stagnate into hero ball, and the Knicks obliged. If that’s a structural answer the Spurs have found, it travels to Game 4.
The case that it’s noise
The counter is that New York still generated quality looks and lost by four despite a poor shooting night, which is the opposite of being schemed into oblivion. Cold shooting from good shots regresses upward, and the Knicks have spent two months proving the offense hums when the ball moves. A team this good doesn’t forget its identity in 48 hours; it has an off night and corrects.
The verdict
The honest answer sits in between, and Game 4 will sort it. If New York comes out moving the ball and attacking Wembanyama’s help responsibilities with cutters and quick swings, Game 3 was a cold night they fixed. If the offense stalls into isolations again with Wembanyama erasing everything inside, the Spurs really have solved something, and a 2-0 series suddenly feels very different. The shot quality says fixable. The film says pay attention.
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