The Bridges experience was choppy. He shied away from physicality all season, clanked too many jumpers and vacillated as a point-of-attack stopper before rising defensively against Detroit and Boston. Two of the greatest clutch steals in franchise history occurred at the ends of Games 1 and 2 versus the Celtics. Both were from Bridges. He played a hand, and sometimes was even the main catalyst, in the Knicks’ three 20-point comebacks during the postseason. But he backed off from physical play once again during the Pacers series.
His reliance on midrange jumpers benefited him but wasn’t conducive to creating advantages for his teammates. In March, Bridges violated one of the no-nos in playing for Thibodeau,
questioning the heavy minutes the starters played under the coach during a news conference with reporters. The comments rubbed the coaching staff the wrong way, sources said, and showed a disconnect.
Bridges may have been near the end of his first season with the Knicks, but he was still acting like the new guy, though the drama hardly led to anyone’s demise.
Thibodeau did not stop playing Bridges, who led the NBA in total minutes during the regular season.
The rest of the starting five endured their own search for answers.
Towns, one of the sweetest-shooting big men ever, attempted only 4.7 3s per game during the regular season. It was his lowest mark since 2019. Hart, despite his constant energy, struggled to shoot 3-pointers, which allowed defenses to guard him with centers and clog the paint. Anunoby would score in bunches, then sometimes revert into droughts. People around the team pinpointed that his enthusiasm was too often tied to touches on the other end.
“Sacrifice” became a buzzword around the locker room.
“We have to go out there with no egos,” Hart said in January. “We have to go out there with no individual agendas.”
The team
showed mental fortitude during the first-round series against Detroit, trailing in the fourth quarter of Game 1 before reeling off a 21-0 run to pull away. The Pistons brought physicality. The Knicks, against their reputation, matched and then exceeded Detroit’s. The final five games were all within one possession with under a minute to go. New York made enough plays close and late to move on.
During the playoff run, the coaching staff remained cautious of its future, understanding that a first-round loss to the Pistons or even a second-round defeat to the Celtics could mean changes, according to league sources. Thibodeau absorbed criticisms about heavy minutes for the starters, hardly a new critique, but New York’s roster was one of the NBA’s healthiest all season and
concluded the playoffs with no one injured. The coach has the backing of team president Leon Rose, league sources said, as well as full buy-in from Brunson, who signed with the Knicks in 2022 in part because he wanted to play for Thibodeau. But ultimately, owner James Dolan is the final decision-maker.
Thibodeau opted against using five 3-point shooters at once. He began experimenting with lineups more than ever once it was too late and the Knicks were already down 2-0 to Indiana.
The Knicks found ways to win more often than not during the regular season, in large part due to the individual talent in the starting lineup as well as late-game heroics from Brunson, who garnered the NBA’s Clutch Player of the Year award. But the offense, which roared at the start of the year, fell to the middle of the pack over the second half of the schedule, and they faltered against elite competition, going 0-10 during the regular season against the Cleveland Cavaliers, Oklahoma City Thunder and Celtics, the league’s top three teams in the standings.
In the middle of April, in the time between the end of the regular season and the start of the playoffs, Brunson was asked to reflect on the previous seven months. He called it “interesting” and acknowledged that it was a rollercoaster full of ups and downs, like most seasons are. On the surface, Brunson’s comments were vague – even harmless. However, the Knicks had just wrapped up their best record in over a decade. Those descriptors Brunson used don’t usually follow success of that magnitude.
Karl-Anthony Towns had some standout moments during the playoff run, amid other spots of uncertainy. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
High expectations weren’t just grand outside of the locker room, they were permeating inside of it, too. New York’s ability to be connected as one rarely matched the individual talent on the floor. The latter was just so great that it covered up the team’s flaws on most nights.
Publicly, Knicks players made veiled comments all season about poor communication causing their inconsistencies. Behind the scenes, they and coaches expressed frustration with Towns’ defensive habits — less concerned with his talent level and more with his process on that end. Too often, Towns executed incorrect coverages without communicating why he did it. After it became a theme, players worried Towns didn’t grasp the importance of the matter.
The ability to constructively critique became a point of emphasis.
“They all talk to me,” Tucker said after Game 1 of the Boston series when asked what he witnessed with a set of fresh eyes. “But they didn’t talk to each other in real-time, in those situations.”
Some people in the organization wanted to use the 15th roster spot to sign a player who could contribute on the floor, while others wanted a veteran who would be OK with not playing and helping behind the scenes, per league sources. The latter group won out and Tucker signed with the team near the end of the regular season to be a veteran voice.