It feels like there's a shade of negativity surrounding the Brooklyn Nets. No Kyrie Irving. James Harden has not been himself. Blake Griffin is out of the rotation. Joe Harris, ankle surgery, is out for the next two months. Kevin Durant is having to do too much. Meanwhile, the Nets have won 13 of their last 16, the latest against the Knicks in a 112-110 thriller Tuesday night.
For Brooklyn, the first half belonged to Harden, who put up 28 points through the first 24 minutes while Durant added just six. Then Harden, who finished with 34, was held to six points in the second half when Durant took over with 21 of his 27 points.
Add it up, and Durant and Harden combined for 61 points, 17 assists and 15 rebounds. That'll work.
On the game's deciding possession, the Knicks sent two defenders to Durant near half-court, leaving James Johnson in the soft spot to attack downhill. That's a win for the Knicks, who had Mitchell Robinson protecting the deep paint. Problem is, rather than going up straight to contest Johnson, which almost certainly wouldn't have been whistled, Robinson swiped down on Johnson's arm to get hit with a foul. Johnson's two free throws won it for Brooklyn.
It's unfortunate because Tom Thibodeau drew up a fantastic play on the previous possession to get Evan Fournier the game-tying 3-pointer. That had the energy in the building through the roof, as Knicks fans had taken over Barclays Center.
It's always a letdown to see such a high-strung game end on free throws, but it was fitting enough. Brooklyn got the line 25 times. The Knicks shot only 12 free throws. Thibodeau was not pleased with the discrepancy.
Randle, who got hit with a crippling technical foul late in the fourth quarter for losing his cool with the officials, claims he was told that the reason the contact he was absorbing wasn't being called was that it wasn't affecting him due to his superior strength, which, if true, is ridiculous.
Again, I'm not taking Randle's word for this. It's hard to believe an NBA official would say something so incriminating. That said, size and strength, unfortunately, do impact the way the whistles blow. Ask Shaquille O'Neal, who was fouled twice as much as he actually got rewarded for because what would be clear contact on someone else registered on Shaq would be like a flea landing on your leg.
For the Knicks, this was their first game since Kemba Walker was removed from the rotation entirely. Alec Burks, who took Walker's place in the starting lineup, finished with a team-high 25 points, but he was minus-11 in his 39 minutes. Julius Randle added 24, but was minus-8 for the game. Four of New York's five starters were a combined minus-32.
Thanks for signing up!
Keep an eye on your inbox.
Sorry!
There was an error processing your subscription.
That's in keeping with the season-long trend of the Knicks' bench digging out of the starters' holes. Derrick Rose, Immanuel Quickley and Obi Toppin combined for 36 points and were a collective plus-24 for the game.
With the win, the Nets improve to 15-6 and remain atop the Eastern Conference. The Knicks fall to 11-10.
"score" - Google News
December 01, 2021 at 11:40AM
https://ift.tt/3loKGNP
Nets vs. Knicks score, takeaways: Kevin Durant, James Harden combine for 61; Thibs, Randle call out officials - CBSSports.com
"score" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2OdbIHo
Shoes Man Tutorial
Pos News Update
Meme Update
Korean Entertainment News
Japan News Update
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Nets vs. Knicks score, takeaways: Kevin Durant, James Harden combine for 61; Thibs, Randle call out officials - CBSSports.com"
Post a Comment