Browsing: Towns

The Knicks (16-7) defeated the Orlando Magic (14-10) by a final score of 106-100 on Sunday afternoon at Madison Square Garden.

Here are the key takeaways…

— The Knicks were without Karl-Anthony Towns, as the big man was ruled out before tipoff due to calf tightness. Towns, who went for 35 points and 18 rebounds against Charlotte on Wednesday night, is the teamâ€s leading rebounder and second-leading scorer, so the Knicks were obviously missing a very important piece.

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With Towns out, Mitchell Robinsonstarted alongside the usual starting group.

Franz Wagner,Orlandoâ€s leading scorer on the season averaging 23.4 points per game, went down hard in the first quarter. On an alley-oop attempt, Wagner was fouled by Ariel Hukporti and landed awkwardly, appearing to injure his left knee or ankle. Wagner had to be helped to the locker room, putting no weight on his left leg.

The Knicks then suffered an injury scare of their own in the third quarter, when Miles McBride went down and ended up limping off the floor. Shortly after the game, the Knicks announced he hurt his left ankle and they would share more information on his status Monday. McBride, who has been an absolute spark for the Knicks this season, had four points and two assists in 21 minutes.

— Coming off a 33-point night against Utah, Jalen Brunson led the charge for the Knicks once again. Playing at an MVP-level this season, Brunson had 16 points and five assists in the first quarter alone, attacking the rim and playing well in the mid range. The Knicks led by four points at the end of the first quarter. After getting a rest to start the quarter, Brunson ended up going scoreless in the second frame, as both teams dialed up their defense.

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After a back-and-forth first half, the Knicks started the second half on a 9-0 run and went on to outscore the Magic 28-18 in the quarter, with Brunson scoring 10 points.

The All-Star guard finished with 30 points and nine assists.

OG Anunoby, playing in his second game back from injury, once again had his minutes limited. But when he was on the floor, he was in All-Star form, finishing with 21 points, seven rebounds, and three assists in just under 28 minutes. His fourth three of the game came early in the fourth quarter, pushing the Knicks’ lead to 16 points. Anunoby was a difference-maker on both sides of the floor.

–The story of the game for Orlando, even before Wagner left the game, was attacking the Knicks in transition. Orlando players beat the Knicks down the floor after made baskets multiple times early on, but the Knicks’ defense adjusted and stifled the Magic, holding them to 38.3 percent shooting on the game. Jalen Suggs, Desmond Bane, Anthony Black, and Paolo Banchero all finished in double digits, but it wasn’t enough.

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— With Towns out and Robinson dealing with some foul trouble, Josh Hart stepped up and was all over the glass. The veteran finished the game with 17 points and 12 rebounds. Hukporti also gave the Knicks some strong minutes off the bench, finishing with six points, seven rebounds, and three blocks.

— The Knicks have now won eight of their last nine games, and are now 2.5 games behind Detroit for the top spot in the Eastern Conference.

Game MVP

Anunoby, whose two-way play, even in limited minutes, played a huge role in the New York victory.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Knicks will take on the Raptors in Toronto on Tuesday night at 8:30 p.m.

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The New York Knicks won’t have Karl-Anthony Towns when the team takes on the Orlando Magic on Sunday. Towns — who was initially ruled questionable due to a calf injury — was ruled out for the contest, head coach Mike Brown revealed Sunday.

Following Friday’s game — a 146-112 win over the Utah Jazz — there was some uncertainty over Towns’ injury. Brown was asked about Towns receiving treatment on his calf during the game. Brown said he was unaware of that situation, and said no one mentioned it to him during the game. Towns’ minutes were limited in the contest, but that was likely due to the Knicks jumping out to a big lead over Utah.

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He finished Friday’s game with 18 points and nine rebounds in just over 22 minutes. Towns is averaging 33 minutes to per this season.

On Saturday, Towns was deemed questionable to face the Magic due to left calf tightness.

He was able to put up some shots ahead of Sunday’s game, but will ultimately be held out of the contest due to the injury.

Towns, 30, is out to yet another strong start and is averaging 22.5 points and 11.9 rebounds in 22 games with the Knicks. His contributions have New York out to a 15-7 start, good for second in the Eastern Conference.

The Magic are also out to a decent start, and are sitting at 14-9 entering Sunday’s game.

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After failing to ward off the Celtics in Boston on Tuesday, the Knickswere not going to let the same happen against the Hornets at home the next day.

Although the Hornets pulled within three after a one-sided second quarter, the Knicks hunkered down and took care of business, defeating Charlotte 119-104 on Wednesday night.

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New York started the second quarter up 15 points, but by the end of the first half, they had just a six-point lead. On the second of a back-to-back, the Knicks could have let the Hornets’ get to them, but Jalen Brunsonand Karl-Anthony Towns weren’t going to have it. Brunson scored 26 points on 56 percent shooting, a nice bounce back from his season-low performance against the Celtics.

While the Knicks big man scored a game-high 35 points and added 18 rebounds.

“JB draws a lot of attention. Our team did a good job of utilizing the gravity when he was on the court and getting some good looks, getting some turnovers,” Towns said of the team’s effort. “I thought we did a great job defensively, making them speed up their game and playing Knicks basketball, which is translate turnovers to offense.”

“We could have easily chalked it up and said we tried,” Brunson added. “Continue to fight, continue to stick together. Find a way to make plays defensively, got out in the open court, a good way to bounce back tonight.”

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Towns shot 13 of 23 from the field (3-for-7 from three) and often dominated the smaller Hornets lineup. But gave credit to the Knicks captain for his offensive outburst.

“When you got one of the best players league like JB, like I said, the gravity he attracts, it allows us a chance to do something special,” he said. “Taking opportunities the defense was giving me, while doing that, being aggressive, whether it was scoring or passing to my teammates.”

Dec 3, 2025; New York, New York, USA; Charlotte Hornets guard Collin Sexton (8) and New York Knicks guard Josh Hart (3) fight for a loose ball in the second quarter at Madison Square Garden

Dec 3, 2025; New York, New York, USA; Charlotte Hornets guard Collin Sexton (8) and New York Knicks guard Josh Hart (3) fight for a loose ball in the second quarter at Madison Square Garden / Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Reason for Josh Hart starting

Wednesday was Hart’s sixth straight game starting. With OG Anunoby out of the lineup due to a hamstring injury, head coach Mike Brownhas decided to shift Hart into the starting lineup, but it took some time for the first-year Knicks coach to pull the trigger.

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Hart started most of the games last year, but began the season as a bench player. The combo guard/forward has accepted whatever role Brown gives him, but the Knicks coach said the decision was thanks from a push by his staff.

“I rely on my staff. I had reasons why I started [Hart on the bench], but my staff, all of them, was like ‘hey, these are the reasons why it would be better,— Brown explained. “The reality of it is, I just listen to my staff. If Iâ€m the only one thinking it would be better at that time, then maybe Iâ€m wrong.

“Iâ€ve been wrong before and Iâ€ll be wrong again in the future. Thatâ€s what I love about my staff, we have guys who are not afraid…to tell me what they think. Iâ€m not always going to listen to them, but if my whole staff is telling me something, I better open my eyes and ears and figure out what they are really trying to say and maybe follow their lead instead of my lead all the time.”

Hart scored 15 points on 4 of 11 shooting with eight rebounds and eight assists in 36 minutes on Wednesday. He’s averaging 17 points per game since he was inserted into the starting lineup, while he scored just 12.5 points per game while on the bench this season.

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Yabusele’s changing role

Guerschon Yabuselehas been a solid bench piece in his first year in New York, but his role has seeming changed as the season has gone along. Brown was asked about Yabusele not being used as a ball-screener like he was in the beginning of the season, and the head coach had an explanation for it.

“Our five is usually the one thatâ€s setting the screens. Heâ€s playing the four right now,” Brown said. “Thereâ€s a lot of ways he can get involved as the four. For instance, on a made bucket, if he takes it out heâ€s going to be involved in the action right away. It all depends on where he is and where heâ€s sprinting to as weâ€re going down the floor determines how much heâ€ll be involved. Itâ€s hard to get pick-and-pop stuff with the way we play if youâ€re not playing that center spot.”

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The Knicks’ offense is off to a hot start under head coach Mike Brownâ€s new system, producing over 120 points per game and ranking third in efficiency, en route to an 11-6 start despite multiple missed games from key starters and reserves. However, there is a lone, striking fault in the early returns: Karl-Anthony Towns†struggles.

The former No. 1 overall pick is off to a slower offensive start, averaging 22.4 points per game on 51.7 percent shooting from two and 32.6 percent shooting from three. Those shooting numbers, percentage-wise, would be career lows by a longshot if sustained, which naturally has fans concerned about the teamâ€s second option.

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Towns has put up some major performances in contrast — 39, 37 and 33 points in wins against the Heat, Nets and Wizards, respectively — but heâ€s had many more snoozers. So, is this just a rough shooting patch, an adjustment to the new offense, or something more?

Letâ€s dive into his two-point conversions first. Towns should be benefitting from the increased spacing this season, yet hasnâ€t converted in the paint to his usual standards.

The good news here is that Towns was playing through a Grade 2 quad strain to start the year, and that appears to be the likely culprit. His first six games, he shot sub-40 percent from two, and has been at a career-average mark of 57 percent since.

Itâ€s apparent when comparing the film between the first games and more recent ones: Towns was moving with real discomfort and generally looked grounded. Now his explosiveness on drives and leaps to the rim has returned, and the numbers have backed it up.

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With the inside scoring seemingly solving itself with time, that leaves Towns†normally deadeye three-point shooting, which has not bounced back similarly. Heâ€s seen an uptick in volume, but just compared to last year, this is a normal amount of attempts for him, and theyâ€re coming from largely the same geography.

Though he is an especially rough 1-13 on the right wing, heâ€s shooting worse consistently from every spot. Opponent pressure doesnâ€t appear to be the case, first with the new rules protecting shooters†hands, second as heâ€s getting a higher frequency of wide open shots than last year, per NBA.com stats data.

They havenâ€t fallen at the same rate, dropping from 46.7 percent to a staggering 26.2 percent clip. These looks, however flawed in their classification, make up about half of Towns’ threes and should be his easiest buckets, yet they arenâ€t going down.

There was nothing reported about Towns tweaking his jumper nor does it look like he has. Heâ€s not taking a material amount of threes from further out, and has always been comfortable with deep range anyway.

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Could Brownâ€s new offense be putting Towns in some discomfort thatâ€s affecting his shooting? Towns did have a quote about figuring out his role earlier in the year, but heâ€s looked in sync otherwise and increasingly been put in beneficial positions.

Itâ€s possible his workload has changed a bit, with the Knicks†pace increasing 3 percent year over year and Towns potentially setting more screens. Neither of these would make such a huge dent in his shooting, and would theoretically impact him as the season went on, not right out of the gates.

With a shooter and scorer like Towns, sometimes the simplest answer is also the correct one. Heâ€s going through a random shooting rut and will shortly shoot his way out of it.

Knicks fans are quick to ring alarm bells, especially in a season with stakes like this one. But among the many valid issues to worry about, Towns turning his scoring around is not one of them.

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The Knicks’ offense is off to a hot start under head coach Mike Brownâ€s new system, producing over 120 points per game and ranking third in efficiency, en route to an 11-6 start despite multiple missed games from key starters and reserves. However, there is a lone, striking fault in the early returns: Karl-Anthony Towns†struggles.

The former No. 1 overall pick is off to a slower offensive start, averaging 22.4 points per game on 51.7 percent shooting from two and 32.6 percent shooting from three. Those shooting numbers, percentage-wise, would be career lows by a longshot if sustained, which naturally has fans concerned about the teamâ€s second option.

Advertisement

Towns has put up some major performances in contrast — 39, 37 and 33 points in wins against the Heat, Nets and Wizards, respectively — but heâ€s had many more snoozers. So, is this just a rough shooting patch, an adjustment to the new offense, or something more?

Letâ€s dive into his two-point conversions first. Towns should be benefitting from the increased spacing this season, yet hasnâ€t converted in the paint to his usual standards.

The good news here is that Towns was playing through a Grade 2 quad strain to start the year, and that appears to be the likely culprit. His first six games, he shot sub-40 percent from two, and has been at a career-average mark of 57 percent since.

Itâ€s apparent when comparing the film between the first games and more recent ones: Towns was moving with real discomfort and generally looked grounded. Now his explosiveness on drives and leaps to the rim has returned, and the numbers have backed it up.

Advertisement

With the inside scoring seemingly solving itself with time, that leaves Towns†normally deadeye three-point shooting, which has not bounced back similarly. Heâ€s seen an uptick in volume, but just compared to last year, this is a normal amount of attempts for him, and theyâ€re coming from largely the same geography.

Though he is an especially rough 1-13 on the right wing, heâ€s shooting worse consistently from every spot. Opponent pressure doesnâ€t appear to be the case, first with the new rules protecting shooters†hands, second as heâ€s getting a higher frequency of wide open shots than last year, per NBA.com stats data.

They havenâ€t fallen at the same rate, dropping from 46.7 percent to a staggering 26.2 percent clip. These looks, however flawed in their classification, make up about half of Towns’ threes and should be his easiest buckets, yet they arenâ€t going down.

There was nothing reported about Towns tweaking his jumper nor does it look like he has. Heâ€s not taking a material amount of threes from further out, and has always been comfortable with deep range anyway.

Advertisement

Could Brownâ€s new offense be putting Towns in some discomfort thatâ€s affecting his shooting? Towns did have a quote about figuring out his role earlier in the year, but heâ€s looked in sync otherwise and increasingly been put in beneficial positions.

Itâ€s possible his workload has changed a bit, with the Knicks†pace increasing 3 percent year over year and Towns potentially setting more screens. Neither of these would make such a huge dent in his shooting, and would theoretically impact him as the season went on, not right out of the gates.

With a shooter and scorer like Towns, sometimes the simplest answer is also the correct one. Heâ€s going through a random shooting rut and will shortly shoot his way out of it.

Knicks fans are quick to ring alarm bells, especially in a season with stakes like this one. But among the many valid issues to worry about, Towns turning his scoring around is not one of them.

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It took a decent chunk of time — perhaps 15 games, in an attempt to quantify the stretch — for Karl-Anthony Towns to discover his purpose and play with confidence in a reworked Knicksoffense under new head coach Mike Brown.

But the veteran superstar finally found what he was looking for.

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While the Knicks didn’t need Towns to assert much dominance in order to clinch a 12th straight win over the city-rival Nets on Monday night, he immediately commanded the spotlight and delivered welcomed efficiency. Not only did he score a game-high 37 points with 12 rebounds in their 113-100 win at Barclays Center, he shot 14-of-20 from the floor.

Towns didn’t rely on three-point attempts this time. Yes, he still took a few jumpers from beyond the arc, making three on four tries, but the big man’s attack plan sparked a breakout effort. He attacked the rim instead, asserting his dominance in the paint as the Knicks’ go-to weapon. He was an aggressor, not a settler.

“I’ve had slumps before, experience teaches me a lot. Keep shooting, keep trusting the work,” Towns said after the win. “I know it’s disappointing, especially for me who puts so much time in the gym and you’re not seeing the results every day you’d like at the standard you anticipate. But never change the grind.”

The Knicks fell just short of attempting 40 threes in Brooklyn — they were five off from the number Brown hopes the team averages this season — but high-octane offense can be displayed in different ways. And what the team received was Towns contributing in all spaces.

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Of course, Towns exploited weaker competition. It shouldn’t matter to the Knicks, though. They’re allowed to be pleased this version of him showed up. They’re allowed to believe this performance returns and lifts the offense to an even higher level.

“He was really good. Again, trying to move him around quite a bit,” Brown said of Towns. “Tried to have him at the elbow, in the post, in the pick-and-roll game. You can see his comfort level is starting to get there… Great game by KAT, picking his sports to drive it, shoot it, spray it.”

Towns is averaging 21.7 points, 12.5 rebounds, and 3.4 rebounds with nearly one-fifth of the regular-season in the books. He’s still searching for that valuable groove from three, though — his shot percentage of 31.4 is currently a career-low.

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Karl-Anthony Towns auctions Yoshinobu Yamamoto card for 72 thousand dollars

“,”providerName”:”Instagram”,”providerUrl”:” who often posts video of himself ripping packs on his YouTube channel and his Bigbodegacards Instagram account, was floored back in September to pull a 1-of-1 MLB Logoman card of Yoshinobu Yamamoto out of a Topps Inception box. And of course, the Dodgers ace proceeded to raise his profile and presumably the cardâ€s value by winning World Series Most Valuable Player.\n\n(Towns†reaction, by the way, is fantastic: “This luck is the *greatest*!†And heâ€s not wrong, the 1-of-1 was not even the only Yamamoto autograph card heâ€s pulled recently. Even his girlfriend, Jordyn Woods, appears to have a magic touch.)\n\nTowns, who pitched a bit growing up in New Jersey and estimates he can crank it up to about 85 mph, happens to be a dedicated Yankees fan. As such, he decided to give the Logoman card a new home via an auction on Fanatics Collect, where it went for $72,000 – the highest price for a Yamamoto card to date.\n\nWill KAT use the found cash to chase more super-duper-rare baseball cards? Will his insane run of luck continue? Can he spare some for us? Weâ€ll definitely be refreshing his socials to find out …”,”type”:”text”}],”relativeSiteUrl”:”/news/karl-anthony-towns-auctions-yoshinobu-yamamoto-card-for-72-thousand-dollars”,”contentType”:”news”,”subHeadline”:null,”summary”:”Karl-Anthony Towns has racked up achievements during his decorated basketball career: He was the No. 1 overall Draft pick in 2015, he won Rookie of the Year, heâ€s been All-NBA three times and is in the conversation as one of the best-shooting big men of all time.\nBut all that”,”tagline({\”formatString\”:\”none\”})”:null,”tags”:[{“__typename”:”InternalTag”,”slug”:”storytype-article”,”title”:”Article”,”type”:”article”},{“__typename”:”ContributorTag”,”slug”:”bryan-horowitz”,”title”:”Bryan Horowitz”,”type”:”contributor”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”offbeat”,”title”:”offbeat”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”apple-news”,”title”:”Apple News”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”baseball-cards”,”title”:”baseball 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New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns had a birthday to remember — thanks to one especially thoughtful gift.

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On the 7-footer’s 30th birthday last Saturday, his girlfriend Jordyn Woods went above and beyond to surprise Towns with a black 1990s Isuzu Trooper.

But the SUV wasn’t just any vehicle — it was the car Towns’ late mother, Jacqueline Cruz-Towns, drove when he was a kid.

In an Instagram caption, Woods recalled a conversation that she and Towns had during the summer when he asked her if she “could drive any car for a day, which one would it be.”

After Woods answered, Towns had a simple reply: “I wouldn’t pick anything crazy. I just really loved my mom’s car she had when I was a kid.”

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After the conversation, Woods said she went on a mission to find the vehicle his mother drove, ship it across the country to the East Coast and fix it up just in time for Towns’ birthday. The last model of the vehicle was made in 2002, and then it was replaced by the Isuzu Ascender and Axiom.

“This s— is so fire. This is the best thing ever,” Towns said while driving the vehicle.

Towns’ mother died in April 2020 due to coronavirus complications. She was 58.

Woods and Towns began dating in May 2020 before officially announcing their relationship on social media in September 2020, according to People.

Towns is currently averaging 21.8 points, 12.5 rebounds and 3.3 assists for the Knicks.

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    Tim BontempsNov 14, 2025, 08:24 PM ET

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      Tim Bontemps is a senior NBA writer for ESPN.com who covers the league and what’s impacting it on and off the court, including trade deadline intel, expansion and his MVP Straw Polls. You can find Tim alongside Brian Windhorst and Tim MacMahon on The Hoop Collective podcast.

NEW YORK — The Knicks entered Friday night’s game at Madison Square Garden against the Miami Heat without Jalen Brunson, who sprained his ankle against the Orlando Magic on Wednesday. Then, five minutes into the first quarter, OG Anunoby exited because of a left hamstring strain and was ruled out a short time later.

But it was not a problem thanks to Knicks star Karl-Anthony Towns and reserve guard Landry Shamet.

Towns scored 31 of his 39 points in the first half, and Shamet poured in 30 of his career-high 36 in the second half, helping New York cruise to a relatively comfortable 140-132 victory in the second NBA Cup group stage game for both teams.

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“JB was missing today,” Towns said of Brunson, “so we all had to step up and contribute to our team.”

The Knicks had to find ways to run their offense without Brunson, who left MSG on Wednesday night in a walking boot after turning his right ankle in the closing moments of a 124-107 loss to Orlando.

Entering Friday’s game, New York had a 123.1 offensive rating with Brunson on the court, tying the Houston Rockets for the best mark in the NBA. With Brunson off the court, the Knicks’ rating dropped to 110.3.

Towns, though, more than picked up the slack in the first half. He went 11-for-16 from the field, including 6-for-10 from 3-point range, to stake New York to a 78-68 halftime advantage.

“When he’s aggressive like that and has things flowing for him early … good luck,” Shamet said.

“Him doing that opens up so much for us.”

And though Towns didn’t do much after the break, taking several minutes to register his first points of the second half, Shamet stepped up.

Shamet had 30 points on 10-for-14 shooting after the break, scoring 15 each in the third and fourth quarters, to give New York the scoring boost it needed.

Karl-Anthony Towns reacts after making a 3-pointer vs. the Heat at Madison Square Garden on Friday. Towns finished with 39 points, including 31 in the first half. Elsa/Getty Images

“It was huge, him coming out, being aggressive, knocking down shots, playing off the dribble,” said Josh Hart, who finished with 12 points, 12 rebounds and 10 assists. “He was amazing for us today. That’s something that was big for us. We need him to keep that confidence and continue to be rolling.”

After the win, the focus shifted to the health of Anunoby, who quickly exited the game at the 6:52 mark of the first quarter shortly after missing a layup. He headed to the locker room and was ruled out of the game a short time later.

Anunoby, 28, entered Friday’s game averaging 17.1 points and 5.8 rebounds. He played 74 games last season to tie his career high — the second time he has eclipsed 70 games in a season.

The Knicks said they would see how Anunoby feels Saturday, though it’s expected he will get an MRI to reveal the extent of the injury.

Considering New York’s lack of depth, losing Anunoby would be a problem under normal circumstances. But that’s compounded by the loss of Brunson. ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Thursday that Brunson has a Grade 1 sprained ankle and is day-to-day.

Before Friday’s game, Knicks coach Mike Brown didn’t provide further details regarding Brunson’s status. But, as Friday’s win showed, the Knicks believe they can withstand injuries and continue to produce. Now, they’ll find out if they’re right.

“It’s what it’s about,” Brown said. “It’s about the next man up. Who is that next man going to be? I don’t know.

“I just know we all go out and play the right way. We have a standard we’ve all bought into, and we’ve all embraced. If we stay within that, good things will happen.”

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Karl-Anthony Towns had his strongest performance of the season in Monday’s 119-102 win over the Washington Wizards, dropping 33 points with 13 rebounds and five assists over 30 minutes of action.

It’s the first time Towns has scored 30-plus points in a game this year and under new head coach Mike Brown, who called the big man a “monster” that’s only going to improve as the season continues.

“KAT was a monster,” Brown said after the win. “He was a monster on the glass, he was really good defensively. He was a monster inside, outside. He’s starting to feel and find his rhythm in what we’re trying to do.

“But I’m telling you, there’s still a lot of room there to grow. Not just for him, but for us to learn him, starting with me, and us to continue to learning the different parts of we’re trying to do offensively. He was a monster.”

Matched up against 2024 No. 2 overall pick Alex Sarr, Towns went right to work in the first quarter. He scored or assisted on the Knicks’ first 13 points of the game (eight points, two assists) and grabbed six rebounds (four offensive), finishing the first half with 15 points, 11 rebounds, and five assists.

After the game, Towns was asked about his mindset heading into the matchup and what contributed to the noticeable aggressiveness.

“Just win the game,” Towns said. “Got us chances tonight to get some good shots up so I just went and capitalized on it.”

He had a number of one-on-one matchups with Sarr while the Washington defense focused on guarding Jalen Brunson and knew it was a chance to help lead the team. Towns took eight more shots against the Wizards than he had in any game this season, despite playing the least amount of minutes so far.

“I saw opportunities to get some shots up and be aggressive and I just wanted to take advantage of the opportunity,” Towns said. “JB requires a lot of attention obviously, so take what the defense gives us and thought tonight I saw that I had an opportunity to do something.”

Towns previous season-high in scoring came in New York’s second game of the season against the Boston Celtics when he had 26 points. He followed that performance up with two tough outings in losses to the Miami Heat and Milwaukee Bucks, scoring only 15 and eight points, respectively.

The Knicks have now won back-to-back games after dropping three straight. Towns, like Brown, acknowledged the team is still a work in progress and believes they will continue to improve in a new system.

“We are all figuring it out,” Towns said. “Getting better every day, understanding what our roles are and what we got to do. It’s good, we got two wins in a row but we’re obviously still a work in progress.”

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