Pacers vs. Knicks, Game 2: New York starters continue to be no match for Indiana’s first five

Pacers vs. Knicks, Game 2: New York starters continue to be no match for Indiana’s first five

NEW YORK — If you find yourself in a hole, you should probably stop digging.

The New York Knicks are in the Eastern Conference finals for the first time since 2000. They won 51 games this season — the most any Knicks team has won since 2011-12. They’ve won 50-plus in consecutive seasons for the first time since the 1993-94 and 1994-95 campaigns. On Friday, point guard Jalen Brunson and center Karl-Anthony Towns were both named to the All-NBA team — just the fifth time in franchise history that two Knicks earned selection in the same year.

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This has been, by virtually any measuring stick, the franchise’s best season in a quarter-century. The Knicks have gotten this far. Might as well stick with what got you here, right?

Well, about that:

The Knicks’ starting five — Brunson, Towns, Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby and Josh Hart — played more minutes than any other lineup in the NBA during the regular season, and it has played more minutes than any other lineup in the NBA during the playoffs. It is, very clearly, the group that head coach Tom Thibodeau trusts most … and for nearly six months now, it has been a net negative.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 23: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks battles for position against Myles Turner #33 and Aaron Nesmith #23 of the Indiana Pacers during the fourth quarter in Game Two of the Eastern Conference Finals of the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden on May 23, 2025 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

The Pacers made life tough for Karl-Anthony Towns in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals on Friday night. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

(Elsa via Getty Images)

New York’s starters got outscored by nine points in 379 minutes from January 1 through the end of the regular season. They got outscored by 24 points over 121 minutes in the Knicks’ six-game second-round win over the Celtics. They opened the Eastern finals getting outscored by 16 points in 26 minutes in what wound up being a three-point Game 1 loss.

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“We’re just putting ourselves in a deficit, and I told you how we can’t keep doing that,” Towns said Friday. “It’s not every time we’re gonna be able to fight back and find ourselves with a win, so, you know, just gotta execute and be more disciplined.”

And after Friday’s 114-109 loss to Indiana — a defeat that earned the visiting Pacers a road sweep at Madison Square Garden, and with it, total control of the best-of-seven series — the first five has been outscored by 29 points in just 43 minutes against Rick Carlisle’s club.

“Yeah, we just gotta keep looking at it,” Thibodeau said after the loss. “Gotta do better.”

Asked a follow-up question about whether, down 0-2, the time had come to more strongly consider a change, Thibodeau brusquely replied, “We always look at everything.”

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Thibodeau has fielded plenty of questions about the struggles of the starting lineup — about the inability to find consistent answers when teams cross-match their centers onto Hart and wings onto Towns, about whether swapping either more shooting (in the form of guard Miles McBride) or more size and paint protection (in the form of center Mitchell Robinson) in for Hart might better balance the group, about whether the current structure best maximizes the offensive production of Bridges and Anunoby, etc. He’s stayed the course, though, insisting before Game 2 that no matter how grim the plus-minus numbers seemed, he didn’t view them through that simple a lens.

“It’s hard to just look at it that way,” he said. “There’s a lot of mixing and matching. Sometimes they’re with the second unit, as well. So I think that you look at everything, and you also have to look at what happens when you bring the second unit in.”

And so: Thibodeau rolled with the same starting five on Friday … and got an up-close-and-personal look at more of the same.

The Pacers raced out to a 19-9 start in six and a half minutes against a Knicks team looking a step slow physically and tactically. And when Thibodeau went to his second unit — which is to say, Robinson and McBride, the two dudes off the bench who actually play — New York promptly ripped off a 10-0 run.

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An offensive rebound and tip-in by Robinson gave the Knicks a lead heading into the second quarter. They extended it in mix-and-match minutes featuring the double-big lineup of Robinson and Towns, who scored 12 points in the first 5:1 of the second to help New York open up a seven-point lead.

#Pacers #Knicks #Game #York #starters #continue #match #Indianas

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