CHARLOTTE, N.C. — They were back-to-back plays in the worst offensive half of the season, a stretch emblematic of a problem Josh Hart is worried will become the blueprint to dismantle the Knicks scoring weapons.
With about 7:15 left in the second quarter, Jalen Brunson’s defender, Quentin Grimes, was screened by Karl-Anthony Towns. The screen was weak, almost nonexistent, but Grimes still switched to defend Towns as Maxi Kleber took care of Brunson on the ball.
The Knicks (10-8), naturally and predictably, hunted the size mismatch. Towns received a pᴀss at the top of the key and squared up against the much smaller Grimes, who is an apt defender and deceptively strong. Towns laboriously backed him down, using three dribbles to get to the paint before he was quickly met by a double-team.
The hook sH๏τ didn’t even touch the rim.
About 30 seconds later, the same mismatch developed after a switch. Hart threw the ball into the post to Towns, who backed down too forcefully on Grimes and was whistled for a charge.
Turnover.
The Knicks, in that moment, failed to score on six straight possessions. They followed up their lowest-scoring quarter in the first with their lowest scoring half.
“We’re giving teams the game plan,” Hart explained after the 129-114 defeat Wednesday.
It wasn’t the first time Hart voiced this concern. For all the scoring juice the Knicks have squeezed out this season, they’ve demonstrated a fairly consistent weakness to “teams that switch, teams that junk the game up,” said Hart, noting that the Rockets and Celtics also punished the Knicks with this strategy.
He predicted the Hornets, who the Knicks face on Black Friday afternoon, will do the same under rookie head coach Charles Lee, a former Celtics ᴀssistant.
Hart, in turn, offered two solutions: Either use himself more often in the pick-and-rolls, which would alter the rotations and defenders who switch on the screener; or, more simply, attack the switches with more pace.
“We have to adjust accordingly, whether that’s putting me in the actions and still getting the [center involved] and doing that. Or playing faster, playing with more thrust,” Hart said. “And causing teams to mess up on switches. We have a talented team. Guys who can shoot the ball. So when we’re playing slow, we’re easy to guard. Because we’re going against set defenses.”
To be clear, the switching wasn’t the only reason the Knicks were locked down in the first half against the Mavericks. They sH๏τ poorly across the board, including Hart, who flubbed a couple sH๏τs near the rim and tossed a one-armed turnover like he was Daniel Jones in the red zone.
But the Mavericks were also very comfortable throwing their defenders all over the court. There was little regard for ᴀssignments.
“There’s a new challenge every day,” Towns said. “I can guarantee you, [Mavericks coach] Jason Kidd’s a hell of a coach. He looked at the game and found ways he could play against us. He did a great job. They were ready.”
Hart recognized the problem. The Knicks devolved into an inefficient half-court set, rather than the motion offense that carried the Knicks to 145 points on 45 ᴀssists in a Denver win just two nights prior.