From Ice-Cold to Red-Hot: Boston Finds Its Shot — and New York Doesn’t
After two dismal shooting nights to open the series, the Celtics exploded for a 20-of-40 night from three-point range, capitalizing on the Knicks’ sluggish perimeter defense.
The Knicks, meanwhile, couldn’t buy a bucket from deep — just 5-of-25 — and looked increasingly rattled as Boston widened the gap. Mitchell Robinson’s free throw woes (4-of-12) only compounded the problem as the Celtics tactically fouled him in key moments.
No Garden Magic: Knicks Flattened by Halftime
The Celtics didn’t just silence Madison Square Garden — they stunned it.
Boston opened the game with a barrage of threes and surgical ball movement, turning a 36-20 first-quarter lead into a 71-46 halftime cushion. New York’s offense stagnated, often resorting to isolation or last-second heaves.
Jalen Brunson’s 27 points and Karl-Anthony Towns’ 21 points and 15 rebounds came too late to matter — the game was out of reach before either found any real rhythm.
Déjà Vu All Over Again?
For Knicks fans, Saturday’s loss was a gut-punch of déjà vu. After blowing a 2-0 lead in last year’s second round, the franchise now faces an eerily similar scenario.
Game 4 on Monday is now a must-win. Lose, and the pressure shifts to a Celtics team that suddenly looks alive — and dangerous — heading back to Boston.
The Knicks dreamed of their first conference finals appearance since 2000. But dreams won’t get you there.
Execution will. Defense will. And right now, Boston has both.