Knicks embarrassed by Thunder in boo-filled loss

If the Knicks’ first Thunder test spiraled into a collapse, then this was a flop. A shellacking.

A “terrible” game, Jalen Brunson said. 

The Knicks never possessed a 14-point lead — or anything larger than four — to hand back to the Thunder.

They trailed by as many as 30.

They were booed back to the locker room after an opening 24 minutes in which they managed just 43 points, their second-fewest in a first half this season.

Jalen Brunson reacts during the Knicks-Thunder game on Jan. 10, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

They were booed back down the tunnel after the 126-101 loss ended.

Fans who packed the Garden started filing out midway through the fourth quarter. 

With another chance to make a statement against the top team in the Western Conference, the Knicks didn’t even come close.

Oklahoma City Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein is all smiles between New York Knicks guard Josh Hart and center Karl-Anthony Towns during the third quarter on Friday night. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Mikal Bridges missed all nine of his shots.

The Knicks tied their season low with four 3-pointers for the second time in a week.

Mikal Bridges had a night to forget for the Knicks on Friday. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The Thunder, which entered the night with the NBA’s best defensive rating, suffocated offensive possessions and forced the Knicks to shoot just 38.5 percent from the field.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (39 points) looked like an MVP hopeful, but the Knicks made Isaiah Joe — averaging 8.1 points — look like he belonged in the conversation, too, after a 31-point eruption. 

“I get it,” Bridges said of the booing. “The missing shots, that’s something you really can’t control. Just keep making them, keep getting them up. But … defensively, a lot of miscues, lack of communication, which is very boo-worthy.” 

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had an MVP performance on Friday night against the Knicks. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The embarrassment continued a concerning stretch for the Knicks after their nine-game winning streak, with four losses in the last five games starting to unwind that progress.

It took more than four minutes before the Knicks managed their first field goal against a stout Thunder defense.

They collected just 17 points in the first quarter and shot 31.8 percent from the field — while making only one 3-pointer — across the opening 12 minutes.

And, during that time, Gilgeous-Alexander flashed the offensive instincts dotting his MVP résumé. 

Isaiah Hartenstein, making his return to the Garden, blocked Karl-Anthony Towns early in the first quarter and finished with six points, nine rebounds, six assists, two blocks and two steals.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shoots during the Thunder-Knicks game on Jan. 10, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

To a degree, it served as a reminder of the Knicks’ past center depth — what Hartenstein called a “luxury” pregame — that they no longer possess.

But Friday, that wouldn’t have mattered. 

It got ugly, too.

Karl-Anthony Towns reacts during the Knicks-Thunder game on Jan. 10, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Aaron Wiggins soared in after the Thunder missed a 3-pointer to convert a put-back shot with no one on the Knicks even close.

Then, with the shot clock winding down near the end of the first quarter, Joe chucked up a deep 3 from the Chase logo and watched as the result of a broken possession sank through the net.



And after Brunson hit a free throw in the closing minutes of the first half, the Knicks were late getting down the court, and Cason Wallace perched in the corner and sank an open 3. 

“If you have a lull where there’s three or four bad possessions,” Tom Thibodeau said, “well, they can go on a run during that, and that’s what they did.” 

Thibodeau’s defense was torched for 70 points — to the tune of 60 percent shooting by Oklahoma City — in the first half, and his offense didn’t possess the necessary firepower to respond, either.

Isaiah Hartenstein reacts during the Thunder-Knicks game on Jan. 10, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

At one point during the third quarter, Gilgeous-Alexander tried to drive baseline against Towns, elevated for a shot anyway and hit the baseline jumper while fading out of bounds.

He then picked Brunson’s pocket to feed Joe in transition for an easy dunk before Hartenstein’s steal ended with Gilgeous-Alexander feeding Jalen Williams for a layup. 

“When the shots aren’t falling, that means you’ve got to get stops,” Josh Hart said. “We didn’t get stops. We didn’t get out in transition. We didn’t play fast. We didn’t make shots. We didn’t do really anything we were supposed to do.” 

Josh Hart reacts during the Knicks-Thunder game on Jan. 10, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson reacts to a call along side a referee during the third quarter in Friday’s loss. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Twice in the last eight days, the Knicks stared down measuring sticks.

Chances to show that the Thunder didn’t pose too daunting of a challenge, that they could survive a rough 3-point stretch, an ugly four-game run, even the lingering holes on the roster. 

But the Knicks didn’t come close to quashing those concerns.

Instead, they were greeted with recurring boos that only fueled them.

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