It was hardly an artistic masterpiece of a game for the Knicks, but when the buzzer sounded, it was recorded as a 113-111 win over the Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday, their first road victory of the season.
“Finally. Finally,” Jalen Brunson, who scored a team-high 28 points, said about snapping the four-game losing skid. “We’re happy, but we got a lot of work to do.”
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In the beginning, it was anything but beautiful: 9-for-25 from the floor, including 3-for-11 from behind the arc. Down the stretch, it looked like New York was going to squander the hard work put in on the defensive end – holding Dallas to 16-for-42 (38.1 percent) from the floor in the first half to stay in the game – and a three-point edge Landry Shamet provided when he knocked down back-to-back threes with 31 seconds remaining. Why? Because of free-throw line ineptitude: 19-for-35 (54.3 percent) for the game and 3-for-10 in the fourth quarter.
After Brunson made 1-of-2 at the line with 3.8 seconds remaining to put the Knicks up a pair, Dallas’ inbound to mid-court quickly found the speedy Brandon Williams driving on Shamet. After a little contact, his off-hand hooked the Knicks defender as he went up for the lay-up. The ball went in, but the referee whistled for an offensive foul with 0.7 seconds left.
“Tough call,” Mavs head coach Jason Kidd said. “He had a good look, but they called a foul.”
Mike Brown said Shamet was the team’s defensive player of the game for doing a “fantastic job on the ball” all night.
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“I give [referee JT Orr] credit, it was a hook,” the Knicks coach said of the call. “And a lot of people would not have called it down the stretch, but it was the right call. And Landry busted his behind to get down there to create that.”
“I mean, chaos,” Brunson said of the game’s final moments.
Shamet acknowledged it was a tough way for a game to end.
“That was a good call by the officials,” he said. “Tough way to see the game end on a call like that, but I think they made the right call. I want that one, as a defender, I want that one.”
But even in victory, Shamet focused on…
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